Usagi Yojimbo #129
Written and Drawn by Stan Sakai
Published by Dark Horse Comics
Review by Kyle DuVall
Usagi Yojimbo is a book whose overall character very much reflects that of its long-eared protagonist. Humble, understated, yet full of skill, Usagi Yojimbo, Like all great examples of the cartoonist’s art, is engaging because it gives the reader so much, yet requires so little. One can praise Stan Sakai for simplicity, but the compliment of “simplicity” unlike Usagi’s blade, is a double edged-sword. It’s better to regard Sakai’s long-running labor of love as a masterpiece of clarity. Like a mountain stream in a Japanese painting, the book just flows, moving so naturally and leisurely, one seldom notices just how much has actually happened in each issue.
Issue 129 is a great example. In just over 20 pages, Sakai runs his samurai rabbit through a wonderful comedic aside that doesn’t really move the plot along, throws in some quiet moments of characterization, embroils Usagi in a gang swordfight, and resolves a conflict and subplot that has been bubbling in the background for a few issues. Despite all of this “crowded” or “frenetic” are the last adjectives that anyone would use to describe this issue or any other issue of Usagi Yojimbo.
Sakai has a knack for leaving so much narrative space in his saga that there is always room for playful interludes or genre crossing stand-alone segments, yet, when plots cross multiple issues, the reader never seems tangled in threads of continuity.
The only drawback of Usagi Yojimbo is that in the era of $3 comics, it may be hard for some fans to justify scraping up the funds for such an airy, inconspicuous book. That, and Usagi Yojimbo seems like the type of tale that would be best read in a phonebook-thick collected tome that one could just get lost in on a lazy weekend afternoon. Nevertheless, Sakai’s venerable book is recommended for anyone who appreciates superior craft and the sort of magic that happens when the subtly different sensibilities of the comic artist and the cartoonist are combined.
UY #129 (reviews)
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UY #129 (reviews)
Newsarama
phonebook-thick collected tome.........
Dear Readers,
Of course we would all like a phonebook-thick collected tome.....
Ultrajump but Usagi Yojimbo only...UltraUsagi! Presented weekly while I am wishing.
Was anyone else reminded of Incident at Blood Pass with Mifune Toshiro and Katsu Shintaro?
Thank you Sensei Sakai for this wonderful story.
Best wishes to all!
go
ps. I especially enjoyed the "Notes from the designer". I want that job!
Of course we would all like a phonebook-thick collected tome.....
Ultrajump but Usagi Yojimbo only...UltraUsagi! Presented weekly while I am wishing.
Was anyone else reminded of Incident at Blood Pass with Mifune Toshiro and Katsu Shintaro?
Thank you Sensei Sakai for this wonderful story.
Best wishes to all!
go
ps. I especially enjoyed the "Notes from the designer". I want that job!
- Steve Hubbell
- Taisho
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- Joined: Thu Sep 19, 2002 15:25 -0700
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Can never have too many reviews!
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Dark Horse Reviews: Usagi Yojimbo #129
Aron White
July 2, 2010
Usagi Yojimbo #129
Publisher: Dark Horse Comics
Writer/Art/Cover: Stan Sakai
Pages: 24
Price: US $3.50
Release Date: June 30, 2010
***CAUTION: This Review Contains Spoilers!***
In May, Usagi Yojimbo took a break, and we were left without a fresh tale. Here at Comic Attack we didn’t let that put a pause on our awesome Usagi Yojimbo coverage, as we took an in depth look into Usagi Yojimbo #123, which is up for a 2010 Eisner Award for “Best Single Issue (or One-Shot).” Fresh from vacation, the rabbit ronin has returned!
For the Usagi newbies, like myself, let’s start with a little back story….
Caught in a battle between two gang bosses, Usagi had assured victory for one side by buying off a formidable swordsman, Kato. But the victorious boss cheated Kato out of the money, blaming Usagi, and Kato has been looking for revenge ever since.
As usual, Usagi-san is wandering from town to town on his warrior’s pilgrimage. He stops in a town that is not so quick to offer him a place to stay, a meal to eat, or even a kind “hello.” This treatment strikes Miyamoto as odd, and he has no other choice but to keep on keeping on to the next town. On his way out of town, he bumps into a strange little character that seems over excited to see him, but the weirdo scampers off before Usagi can ask him what is going on in this town.
The stranger rushes back to Kato, who has a bounty of 20 ryo on Usagi’s head. Kato gives the snitch half the reward and promises him the rest after he has validated the information. However, the rabbit has already moved on to the next town. Kato ventures that way, too.
In the next town, Usagi finally finds a place to eat. Albeit the food service is laced with double meanings from an annoyingly senile old man, until the establishment’s owner, the crazy old man’s granddaughter, returns and sets Usagi up properly. Usagi fills his belly and heads on with his journey.
Kato just misses Usagi and begins to ask around. Of course, the crazy old man he questions hasn’t seen any long-eared samurai come though town, so Kato asks around some more. Another group of samurai catch wind of Kato asking around and are aware of Kato’s bounty. If this guy has that kind of money on him, the five of them could easily out number the one Kato and just take the money off him. They catch up to him and jump him.
Usagi sees these men attacking Kato and rushes in to help him. Kato, however, makes quick work of the oncoming samurai and then keeps his blade drawn on Usagi. Kato wants the double-crosser to pay up. Kato’s demand catches Usagi off guard. Does Usagi draw his blade and enter a duel to the death, or does he use his sharp skills of reason and set things straight?
Stan Sakai is the man. Period. He delivers a mix of quirky humor and sword-swinging action yet again, and it’s all drawn out beautifully on the page in crisp, clean black and white imagery. It is no wonder Sakai has won Eisner Awards in the past and is up for another this year. The only question is, why isn’t everyone reading Usagi Yojimbo? He’s more than just that rabbit dude from Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles!
Sigh! That was good review right up until the end. The guy just had to mention TMNT in his review.
This kinda thing always rankles my nerd-sensibilities. When was the last time Usagi was connected to the Turtles, the 80's? The title has stood on it own for over 25 years now!
To me this is just like the sudden 'changes' in Wonder Woman. The world only knows the silly TV show and so when they see the direction JMS is taking WW they believe it is somehow new. Any fan knows it isn't and that the changes wont last. And so this reviewer had to reference Usagi to something the casual reader would understand, but has no bearing on the present.
I'm not trying to be stick in the mud here, but I am a nerd and we all have our quirks.
Ah well...any press is good press.

This kinda thing always rankles my nerd-sensibilities. When was the last time Usagi was connected to the Turtles, the 80's? The title has stood on it own for over 25 years now!
To me this is just like the sudden 'changes' in Wonder Woman. The world only knows the silly TV show and so when they see the direction JMS is taking WW they believe it is somehow new. Any fan knows it isn't and that the changes wont last. And so this reviewer had to reference Usagi to something the casual reader would understand, but has no bearing on the present.
I'm not trying to be stick in the mud here, but I am a nerd and we all have our quirks.
Ah well...any press is good press.


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He's been in the most recent TMNT series I believe, so not quite the 80s...estee wrote:This kinda thing always rankles my nerd-sensibilities. When was the last time Usagi was connected to the Turtles, the 80's? The title has stood on it own for over 25 years now!
With a breeze comes a storm, but then you'll all be washed away...
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Here is another review via Comics Worth Reading:
http://comicsworthreading.com/2010/07/0 ... jimbo-129/
Thanks to Tom Spurgeon at comicsreporter.com for pointing this out.
http://comicsworthreading.com/2010/07/0 ... jimbo-129/
Thanks to Tom Spurgeon at comicsreporter.com for pointing this out.
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