Rabu, 15 Januari 2014

[I834.Ebook] PDF Ebook Ôoku: The Inner Chambers, Vol. 8, by Fumi Yoshinaga

PDF Ebook Ôoku: The Inner Chambers, Vol. 8, by Fumi Yoshinaga

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Ôoku: The Inner Chambers, Vol. 8, by Fumi Yoshinaga

Ôoku: The Inner Chambers, Vol. 8, by Fumi Yoshinaga



Ôoku: The Inner Chambers, Vol. 8, by Fumi Yoshinaga

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Ôoku: The Inner Chambers, Vol. 8, by Fumi Yoshinaga

In this 17th Century Japan the Shogun is a woman...and the harem is full of men.

In Edo period Japan, a strange new disease called the Redface Pox has begun to prey on the country's men. Within eighty years of the first outbreak, the male population has fallen by seventy-five percent. Women have taken on all the roles traditionally granted to men, even that of the shogun. The men, precious providers of life, are carefully protected. And the most beautiful of the men are sent to serve in the shogun's Inner Chamber...

Yoshimune has secured her place in history as a cunning and capable ruler, but the time has come for her to officially declare an heir. Many in her court hope she will pass over her oafish older daughter Ieshige in favor of the urbane Munetake. Yoshimune has never been one to bow to convention, but this time the future of her country is at stake!

Reads R to L (Japanese Style) for mature audiences.

  • Sales Rank: #307607 in Books
  • Published on: 2013-09-17
  • Released on: 2013-09-17
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 7.50" h x .70" w x 5.00" l, .75 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 256 pages

About the Author
Fumi Yoshinaga is a Tokyo-born manga creator who debuted in 1994 with Tsuki to Sandaru (The Moon and the Sandals). Yoshinaga has won numerous awards, including the 2009 Osamu Tezuka Cultural Prize for Ôoku, the 2002 Kodansha Manga Award for her series Antique Bakery, the 2006 Japan Media Arts Festival Excellence Award for Ôoku. She was also nominated for the 2008 Eisner Award for Best Writer/Artist.

Most helpful customer reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Maternal Pride Is The Weakness
By Talvi
Viz's Signature Line Series Ooku, the Inner Chambers, continues with Volume 8 (the publishing company suggests this will be about 10 volumes total).

As with the previous volumes, we are given chapter-length vignettes which explore a character's history - and that then tie into the overall history of an alternate universe Japan. Fumi Yoshinaga's work is definitely known for its attention to detail and underlying pathos rather than straightforward linear storytelling.

The story in Volume 8:

Shogun Yoshimune has ruled Japan effectively and efficiently. But she is in her twilight years and needs to choose a successor. Her two eldest, Ieshige and Munetake, are her strongest candidates. But Ieshige suffers from a birth defect that affects her ability to control her body (but not necessarily her mind). Meanwhile, Munetake is gracious, intelligent, and accomplished - an attractive candidate over her older sister. As in the real history of Japan, Yoshimune's choice of Ieshige as his heir created considerable controversy within the shogunate Tokugawa Munetake appeared to be far more suitable candidate. Yoshimune continued to insist on his decision, favoring the Confucian principle of primogeniture; and Ieshige continued in the role of formal head of the shogunate. In the book, mangaka Fumi Yoshinaga comes up with a novel way of showing why Yoshimune chose the debilitated older child as heir.

Meanwhile, inn cook Zenjiro is chafing at not being able to pursue his culinary talents - all because he is a man and that avenue is not allowed to males. He takes a job in the Inner Chamber as an apprentice cook - but is soon attached to entice an Ooku harem, prisoner Sir O-kou,to eat again. A former concubine of Shogun Ieshige and disgraced for carrying a sword, cook Zenjiro will devise a model way to get his charge to take up food again and not starve himself to death.

The next chapter are moments of reflection for former Shogunate and now titled "venerable" Yoshimune. Her cheeky granddaughter gives her worry and, in a beautifully revealing story with her retainer, the real reason she was able to rise from a lowly country baronet position into become Shogun is revealed. And she will make an unorthodox request before she dies - sending a young retainer of her daughter's to find the cure for the red pox that decimated the male population.

Finally, a half Dutch/half Japanese doctor almost dies of the red pox - but miraculously, the plague doesn't ravage the city this time. Could it be changing? He will be called into the Shogunate's inner chamber to find the cure.

In all, the story continues to be fascinating and well worth reading, if only to have a glimpse into Japanese history - but with a matriarchal twist. The art continues to be cleanly and beautifully drawn - a good reason why this was such an award winner and chosen for Viz's select signature line.

Received as an ARC from the publisher.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Engrossing alternate history of Japan where women rule
By Johanna Draper Carlson
The premise — an alternate history of Japan in which most of the men have died, causing the women to take over leading the country — can be complicated for most readers, who don’t have any knowledge of Japanese history. Yet it’s so well done! I adore Fumi Yoshinaga’s art, with its thin-line detail and expressive characters. She builds a rich, full world, transporting us to another place and time where courtesy could be life-threatening (if the wrong person is accidentally insulted). And of course, she illustrates the gorgeous kimono fashion that was such an important marker of one’s place in the hierarchy.

It has been a while since I read the series, but Book 8 was a great refresher, since it contains shorter stories focusing on specific individuals trying to navigate this changed world. First, there’s the problem of succession to the shogun, as her oldest daughter is disabled. She can’t speak or move properly, although later events reveal that she’s not stupid, just handicapped by a body that won’t obey her. The challenge of such a condition in a world without modern medical care or understanding isn’t one that had previously occurred to me, and Yoshinaga makes her story quite affecting.

Next comes a question of discrimination. Zenjiro is an accomplished chef, but many guests at the inn where he cooks don’t want a man in the kitchen. Some of his coworkers similarly find his presence an annoyance. So he enters the inner chambers, where he finds that he’s at the bottom of the hierarchy, there for the other men to play tricks on and haze until he demonstrates his skill. Given Yoshinaga’s love of food, I wasn’t surprised to see discussion of a recipe in this section.

Zenjiro has a more important role to play, though. One of the shogun’s concubines has been put under house arrest, and he refuses to eat. Zenjiro is tasked with creating dishes that will prevent him from starving himself. The resulting story is one of deep feelings, exploring the nature of jealousy over the men’s meals. As a result, it’s almost the quintessential Yoshinaga story, combining food, male relationships, and emotional exploration.

The following section picks up the political threads, as the kingdom is threatened by peasant revolts, seeking the rice that is used as capital to eat. The matter-of-fact mentions of assassinations for positioning of favored candidates to ascend to power reinforces the historical nature of the story.

The last chapter introduces two new, fascinating characters. Gennai is a motormouth, sent to find an interpreter and scholar for the chambers. He returns with Gosaku, a half-Japanese young man who can speak Dutch — the only connection Japan has with the outside world is through traders of that nationality — and has been studying medicine. The redface pox, the disease that has taken so many of the Japanese men, is unknown outside the country, and Japan has tightened its borders so that other nations won’t learn its secret. However, the shogun wants more study of the plague in order to eventually counter it and raise the male population. (Review originally posted at ComicsWorthReading.com.)

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
Excellent book in the series
By Todd
We see how first child becoming shogun can cause issues, even as a mother's love is determined to make sure her daughter rules properly. The first change in taxes has been decreed, now we just have to wait until book 9 for the results.

See all 3 customer reviews...

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