I saw a hot topic about the Saga Manga Series Award on Twitter - each collection of graphic novels seems to have gained some. Sometimes it feels like a year-round topic (actually, my only favorite manga is Marvell, according to the record I like it as well). I finally noted that it was inevitable, especially when I realized that women's expressions were good and that premise was 'space travel'. I chose Saga in the first volume of Brian R. Vaughn, and after reading a lot of the contents of the Book Riot mailing list I explained it to Fiona Staples, so I now know all the fuss.
Brian K. Vaughan has created an adult-oriented cartoon suitable for science fiction, interstellar love, and action adventure (YA is my default expectation for this field, so I am an adult It is necessary to clarify). Volume 1 has a lot of content: birth, death, violence, intertype conflict, sexual planet, ghost, crazy spacecraft, and a romantic novel that changes life (it makes me laugh) (in a good way)
This manga did a lot of good: the story doubles through rare intelligent narrator, exciting visual effect, star-studded love for survival, and the whole humorous dialogue Clues are the main plot It is bound to the line. It is also a wide epic setting, but the volume has enough skirmishes, close range calls and surprises to make it as independent, satisfying, fun things
In other words, the dialogue of the main actress Nana left a deep impression on me. I do not know whether it is suitable for role in family environment. When other things that are more interesting (and life threatening!) Happen at the same time, I'm disappointed with the page that reads my wife's cliche. This amuses me - I skip reading more volumes. One of the plot clues that truly drew my attention was Prince Robot - I think the robot's royal character is really creative and suitable for comic media.
If you think "do try" cartoons like science fiction and do not want to care about superheroes, Saga is a good starting point. There is no hit in this first volume. It is R level. If you seem more like a fantasy fan, I suggest you start with Bill Willingham's fable.
Recommendation: Beginners and veterans of cartoons - basically everyone is interested in the complex adventures of the universe, there is enough movement to keep the story moving, and it is deep enough to appeal to most readers for a long time
Brian K. Vaughn's "Paper Girl" (Vol.1) - Chiff Chiang is one of my favorite artists and I went to ConicCon in New York because it was sold as a "new legend" from a boys' boy. Saga - I do not like retro style, but the intrusion of girl gang and future aliens is very attractive to me. The appearance of Zachary Sergi's hero (1-3) - For the time being this year I was sitting and concentrating on the book. How useful are these "choice" game series on the iPhone which is a bit "Please choose your own adventure" in a fixed story. This feeling is exactly the war meets the strength
As a lover of the comic series "Vinland Saga", I have a record. This is wonderful. And this year, another comprehensive name was added. "Vinland Saga Vol 8" is another excellent member of this series. It began to fall apart but I did not read any of the titles when this appeared in my Amazon subscription. I am very excited, I just came in secretly. I like this series and I dislike having to wait one year to get these comprehensive headlines. I am really surprised at the relationship with the "country of the country". During the election cycle, this title appeared in my feed, and I made a leaflet for it. It is not very personal here, and what I got when I read this book has plenty of things to grow in my life. The author did an excellent job to reproduce the images and emotions raised in an unstable and difficult environment, and the dichotomy they felt when trying to do something better.