Monday, September 26, 2011

A Post About Manga

I finally got With the Light Volume 8 in the mail this morning and I just finished reading it.

The series is over! I'm just gonna go be sad for a bit now.

I loved this volume, the ending isn't as final as I would like it to be but I liked it. But more on that some other time.

Is it weird that I still get surprised when I find out that other people read manga?

I was listening to an episode of Weekly Manga Recap yesterday and one of the guys mentioned that a friend of theirs (Benzaie) also read manga. I did a double take and was all like "he reads manga too?". And I'm not quite sure why.

I only really started reading manga when I was about 11 or 12, maybe younger. I would look through the Shounen Jump magazines in the grocery store. I didn't really know anyone else that read manga at the time, I don't think anyone I knew read manga then (or if they did they certainly didn't tell me about it).

I think I'm still stuck in this mentality that I am the only one that reads manga (which I know is untrue). I know my friend Meaghan reads manga (or she did, I'm not sure if she still does), but we never really talk about it. I don't talk about manga with anyone, really.

That's why I'm grateful for the Internet and this blog and livejournal and all that. Manga and anime are really big in my life and I have no one to talk with about them. I read a lot of books, and I can sometimes talk about them to others, but manga and anime seem to be a taboo subject around here.

I know I sometimes go on and on about manga on this blog, but if I didn't do it here, where else could I? I grew up being looked down on for even being interested in manga and anime. It's kind of a big deal for me to go from keeping all this a secret to actually having discussions about it.

Like today, I got WTL8 in the mail, and I've been excited about this day for almost a year now. No one really seems to care. All I get are the weird looks like "you're still reading that stuff?", and then sometimes people ask me why I'm reading stuff from Japan like it makes a difference where I get my reading material from.

It's weird.

Monday, September 19, 2011

'Bout that furnace I mentioned

I mentioned in a previous post that when I was a baby I lived in a trailer that had a furnace right there in the kitchen.

Here's a picture of it.

I've never even once gotten burned by that furnace. That's because my parents took the proper precautions to keep me away from it. They never left me unsupervised in the kitchen and if I had to be left alone in a room for any length of time, I was in the livingroom either in the playpen or with a baby gate in the doorway to the kitchen.

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Baby Bait



Yeah, I'll always go for the book.

It's like the equivalent of waving keys in front of my face, only it's a book.

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Memories of Europe

I have a deviantArt account. I've had one for about five years now, I actually got it a few months before I started this blog.

Anyway, in May 2007 I went to Europe on a school trip and I was gone for 10 days, and then I came back, and I haven't really spoken about it since (except to say that it was fathoms better than my Ottawa trip). So I went through the pictures I took while I was there and I picked out a bunch of them and I'm in the process of editing them on picnik and uploading them to deviantArt under a series title of 'Memories of Europe'.

They're pictures I took, mostly of scenery and buildings and stuff, and in the artist's comment (underneath the picture) I'll sometimes include a little anecdote from the trip related to the picture.

It should be interesting and I have quite a few things to talk about.

The deviantArt folder is here and it's all organized backwards so that the first picture is at the end of the gallery.

So go over there and check it out if you're interested in what went on in Europe and to see some pretty cool pictures.

Monday, September 5, 2011

With the Light Volume 6

With the Light 6

For Sachiko and Masato, it seems like only yesterday that their children, Hikaru and Kanon, were little. But these days, Kanon is about to start elementary school, while Hikaru is getting out into society and going to junior high by bus. However, in the outside world, some of Hikaru’s insistences that were acceptable when he was younger are not so anymore. When one such habit creates chaos during the morning commute, Sachiko has to find a way to clear up a serious misunderstanding with Hikaru’s fellow commuters and take steps to curb any behaviour that might stand in the way of Hikaru living in the world as a “cheerful, working adult.” Furthermore, dealing with the negative perceptions that others – including her mother-in-law – have about Hikaru begins to take its toll on Sachiko, especially with Masato occupied at work. Will the stress of facing new challenges presented by Hikaru’s autism drive a rift between the two? (from the back of the book)


[SPOILERS AHEAD]

Hikaru in a junior high uniform everyone! He’s gotten quite big over the course of 6 volumes; he’s already 12 years old.

This volume doesn’t really bring up Hikaru’s schooling. He’s in the hands of competent staff now and he’s progressing fairly steadily, so there really are no problems there. It’s the same pattern from earlier volumes, not much is shown if everything’s going well. It’s sad that he can’t be with his childhood friends, who attend Shichigatsu Junior High, but they do get together every now and then (karaoke fun, yo).

Strangely enough, this volume seems to put a lot of focus on health problems. This wouldn’t be a problem except that when the characters talk about it they all sound like doctors. Seriously, Sachiko’s mother gets heart surgery and suddenly everyone is an expert on clogged arteries.

So, Sachiko’s mother gets heart surgery. This new development doesn’t come completely out of nowhere (very unlike Aoki-sensei and Wakabayashi-sensei’s romance) because it’s been mentioned a few times before in earlier volumes that Sachiko’s mother has weak veins, or something. Because of her mother’s health problems Sachiko has to go be with her in the hospital and help her father out at home. Can I just mention the fact that Sachiko’s father is practically incapable of running a house? I mean, he can’t even hang up clothes to dry. I know that his wife’s the one who took care of the house, but didn’t he help or learn anything at all? Didn’t he ever live on his own? Is this normal?

Anyway, Sachiko has a lot on her plate these days. She has to take care of Hikaru and Kanon, be a housewife, work, help her parents, and volunteer at Sunshine House. She’s running around a lot, probably trying to do too much at once, and is tired and stressed out. Then she thinks that Masato is cheating on her.

Yeah, this comes completely out of nowhere. The only thing that would ever even suggest this is a remark Sachiko’s mother makes one day when Sachiko visits the hospital without make-up on. We all know that Masato isn’t the cheating kind, and Sachiko says as much, but he does pick the wrong time to start giving advice to a young female co-worker. Funny thing about all this is that it was a big enough event to get mentioned in the book’s summary, but nothing really came from it. Sure Sachiko was slowly heading towards a melt-down and Masato was helping out a co-worker for quite a bit, but I can’t believe that all that was building up to a small fight that only lasts for a few pages half-way through the book, and then never comes up again past Masato receiving a New Years postcard from the co-worker (like, the next day).

… glad we had this unnecessary drama.

There are a lot of things that happen in this volume that happen in the other volumes: little glimpses of life in the Azuma home, some small scenes from school, Hikaru doing this and that, the usual. Hikaru goes to karaoke with some friends over winter break, and while that happens there’s a cute story where Oota visits Tanaka in the hospital (appendicitis). Also, Kanon graduates from daycare and starts first grade at Shichigatsu Cho Elementary.

One thing that’s fairly new in his volume is that we see a lot of Azuma-san (Masato’s mother). There are a lot of Kanon-centered things going on (daycare graduation, starting elementary school, some kind of festival) so it probably isn’t so surprising that she’s showing up a lot.

I don’t know if I mentioned this before, but I really don’t like Azuma-san. It’s bad enough that she’s a snob that puts image above everything else (people like that are a pet peeve of mine), but she does it at the expense of Sachiko and Hikaru. She does love Hikaru, I’m sure of it, but I’m also sure that she’s ashamed of him. She doesn’t say it outright but it’s pretty obvious by the way she acts, especially in public. I won’t go into much detail, but I’m pretty sure she’s of the opinion that Sachiko should keep Hikaru away from the general public. She was really starting to come around a bit when Hikaru was younger, but she changed her tune when Kanon was born. It’s almost like she was ‘settling’ for having Hikaru because she had no other options (since her other granddaughter, Noa, lives far away), but then Kanon was born and all her attention was focused on her. Now that Kanon’s getting older and is able to do more things, we’ll probably be seeing a lot more of Azuma-san next volume.

Another new things in this volume are the two small scenes that happen from Hikaru’s point of view. One is when he’s cleaning during New Years, and the other time happens while being babysat by Masato’s mother (which actually went pretty well despite, well, Masato’s mother). The one at Masato’s mother’s house is pretty funny and I often refer to it as ‘The Marvellous Misadventures of Hikaru Azuma’ (the face he made after drinking a special soup he thought was barley tea was just hilarious).

These scenes are interesting because they are the only times I can remember seeing Hikaru with his own thought bubbles. Hikaru can communicate verbally so he has plenty of speech bubbles, but it’s not until we suddenly see thought bubbles that we realize that we know very little of what exactly goes on inside Hikaru’s head. From what little we see, Hikaru’s thoughts seem pretty simple: mostly one or two words long, sometimes longer if it’s something he memorized. Also, the panels depicting what (I’m assuming) he’s looking at are fairly simple, showing only specific things (wipes, a garbage bag, pudding cups, whatever he’s focused on at the time).

I really wish there were more of these scenes throughout the series, I would’ve loved to see things through Hikaru’s eyes.

Well, that’s Volume 6. Hikaru’s getting older now and, because of that, his autism and any problems it may cause are starting to get easier to deal with. Hikaru is learning more about the world around him and it’s easier for him to communicate with people now. The series would get boring and repetitive if all it showed was Hikaru going through life doing the same things over and over without any obstacles, so that’s probably why we’re given stories that focus primarily on other characters.

Something I’d like to mention that isn’t exclusive to Volume 6: I love the relationship between Hikaru and Kanon. It’s probably more noticeable now that they’re older, but I’ve always thought that Hikaru and Kanon’s relationship was completely normal. You can really tell that they’re brother and sister. It’s obvious that they love each other but they also fight a lot, as siblings often do, further proof that Tobe-sensei can write realistic children.

Hikaru is autistic and Kanon is neurotypical, there are so many ways in which this relationship could go wrong because of bad writing. Luckily, Tobe-sensei made both children normal. Hikaru is autistic, but he isn’t a savant and he doesn’t have any crazy special skills that leave people in awe of him. Kanon is a very normal little girl and is neither saint-like nor ‘wise beyond her years’. Because of this, they’re interactions with each other are believable and fun to read.

Hikaru knows that he is the big brother and he does have a special relationship with his sister (I think she’s the only one who can argue with him and deliver blows to his ego). On her part, Kanon is seven years younger than Hikaru and living with him is all she knows. I’m pretty sure that Hikaru is the only autistic person Kanon knows, but she doesn’t find him at all strange or weird (even though the things he does are sometimes unusual). To her, he just is, but that’s not to say that he doesn’t annoy Kanon at times and when he does she lets him know. That’s what I think Tobe-sensei did really well: she wrote Kanon as a very realistic character.

Kanon is only a little girl; she’s six years old in this volume. She understands that Hikaru sometimes needs leniency on certain things and that there are some things that he may not understand, but she also doesn’t let him get away with everything. They’ve been fighting and arguing on a fairly regular basis since Kanon was born. They get in each other’s business and they annoy each other, and that’s what makes it so great. A real child isn’t going to let another child get away with bothering them, even if the other child has disabilities, and the same goes for Kanon.

When they get along it’s sweet and funny to see, but sometimes they get on each other’s nerves (which can also be pretty amusing, come to think of it). Luckily there isn’t too much of one or the other. That’s all I have to say on that subject unless something comes up in the next volume.

Friday, September 2, 2011

Cast Round Up

Pretty soon I'll be finished talking about the With the Light manga, after that's finished (or probably before, who knows) I'll be talking about the With the Light drama.

I already have a post on here about the differences between the manga and the drama, but now I'll be doing recaps/reviews of the episodes one by one.

The drama is 11 episodes long and each episode is about 40-something minutes long since they were intended for an hour-long television time slot.

Anyway, this isn't a post for talking about the show. It's a post for talking about the cast/characters of the show... some of them.

Onward, ahoy!

Here we have the school staff that work closely with Hikaru. These four are pretty much the only faculty we actually see during the drama but they aren't the only teachers working at the school (I hope).

The principal (who is a woman in the manga) is played by Watanabe Ikkei and is the Mr Awesomesauce of the show. The music teacher is played by Ichikawa Mikako. The manga didn't have a music teacher so I'm not really sure why one was included in the drama but, whatever. I also don't know the reason why they switched the genders of the next two teachers. Sakura-sensei is played by Takeda Shinji and is the drama version of Wakabayashi-sensei, who was a woman in the manga. Sakura-sensei teaches the mainstream class. Rio-sensei, played by Kobayashi Satomi, is the drama version of Aoki-sensei (male) and Hikaru's Special Education class teacher.

I don't know what the actress' name is, but in the drama this girl's name is Moe. The best way to describe her is that the writers of the drama took Moe and Eri from the manga and made them one person and called her Moe.

Masato's mother is played by Takahashi Keiko and Sachiko's mother is played by someone else whose name I don't know. The two of them show up a lot in the drama and this is the version of Masato's mother that I like the best. Sachiko's mother is awesome in both versions, but I don't hate Masato's mother in the drama like I do in the manga.

Wataru and Kenta are two of Hikaru's classmates and friends (along with Moe). Wataru is the drama version of Ishida-kun and Kenta is the drama version of Oki-kun. Despite the changes made to the names and ages, the characters' personalities are pretty accurate.

And here we have Miyu, whose name in the drama has been changed to Hotomi. Hotomi's character is just as if the writers took Hiroaki, changed him into a girl, and gave him to Miyu's parents.

Hikaru's father Masato is played by Yamaguchi Tatsuya. He's a pretty awesome character, I like him a bit better than the manga version because I find him a bit more realistic and... three dimensional, I guess?

Shinohara Ryoko is Hikaru's mother Sachiko, slightly less preachy and slightly more reserved than the manga version.

And last, but not least, we have Saito Ryusei as Hikaru himself. If I have one problem with the drama version of Hikaru it's that he almost never shows any emotion. See the picture of him there? That's pretty much the way he looks for the whole show. Aside from that, though, I have no complaints.

Look forward to episode reviews/recaps/whatever coming in the near future. Also keep an eye out for reviews of the last three With the Light manga volumes.

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Going way back

I guess I've always been a reader.


I've known my letters and numbers since I was about 15 months old and I started reading when I was about three or four years old.

I've always been big into reading, which is strange because my parents don't really read much and neither do a lot of my relatives. But I've had books around since I was a baby (as you can see above), and I still have loads of books around now.

I love reading.