Reviews

Fallen Words by Jocelyne Allen, Yoshihiro Tatsumi

cesspool_princess's review against another edition

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3.0

These were fun and many of them punny/ silly. The stories themselves are p repetitive but I like that and think it mirrors the form of these stories passed down from generation to generation. Basically the history of all hitherto existing societies is the history of class struggles... and also mfs have been down bad to prostitutes since the dawn of time. My favorite stories were the one about the bird painting and the grim reaper one. This is funny bc both are rly well constructed little stories all building towards one final pun or joke on the last panel. I dont think them being build up for a pun negates the value of the stories its more just like a fun turn at the end. Overall p good but def didn't blow my mind or anything, felt v sweet/ soulful which was exactly what the doctor ordered after reading Blood Meridian, Notes from the Underground and Heaven (review coming soon) all in a row. 3.5

600bars's review against another edition

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4.0

After my disappointing experience reading the Push Man, I wasn't sure if I wanted to continue reading the other Yoshihoro Tatsumi book I had on hold. But I figured it is in my possession and it is not going to take very long to read so I might as well. This is very very different from Push Man. It’s an attempt to do Rakugo in graphic novel format. Rakugo is an Edo period storytelling method that seems similar to stand up comedy where someone is kneeling in the middle of the room and tells a comedic story. These stories have been passed down orally since the 1600s but I thought they translated very well to this format. The Push Man had been reversed so that it read the same direction as a normal western book, and they had to rearrange all the panels and change so much. For this volume they trusted the audience enough to be able to read it the Japanese way. Most of the stories feature a poor man pretending to be rich or hoping for a lucky windfall or deceiving someone etc. Similar to the Push Man, many of the men are deadbeat alcoholics, and often have nagging wives, and many of the women are sex workers (Oiran). But it doesn’t have the viciousness and hatred of the Push Man. My favorite story was the one about the painting where the birds come to life, but then on the last page I realized the entire thing was a set up for an elaborate pun! Many of the stories end abruptly before it seems like a moral or lesson is about to be imparted, but after I read the bird story I realized that probably all of these are set-ups for a punchline. The joke is just lost either to translation or I do not understand the context from the 1600s. I am sure these killed with Edo audiences. Some I could still get a little bit of the humor, like the irony of the Grim Reaper story that ends with the dude sneezing on the candle that will extend his life.

The story about the annoying child made me sad… what a sad downward spiral where you don’t like your kid because you accidentally raised him to be a brat who always gets what he wants but then you like him less and then he behaves worse because he feels the lack of love and so on and so forth… The shopkeepers had no tact!! At my job we have stuffed animals for sale in the kids section and parents get mad when their kids want the stuffed animals instead of books. To avoid meltdowns, they’ll say things like “These aren’t for sale, this is only for display”. I’ve entertained the thought of what if I had no social intuition and I went up to the poor parent trying to avoid a temper tantrum and said “These are totally for sale!”. These shopkeepers kept doing exactly that and I can’t tell if they had no social understanding or were just being a dick to get the sale.

Though I’m sure I missed a large portion of the jokes and meanings of these stories, there was still enough that is the same today for me to enjoy the tales of luck, fortune, and difficult customers.

nightwater32's review

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funny informative lighthearted reflective medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? N/A
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? N/A
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? N/A

3.75

bwguinig's review against another edition

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4.0

An interesting read. Stories were so unpredictable. A great look into Japanese culture. Love reading manga.

2kimi2furious's review against another edition

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3.0

This was really cute.

acinthedc's review against another edition

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3.0

In a twist on a Japanese oral storytelling tradition, Tatsumi uses images and written word to tell these short stories that are a combination of moral lessons and joke telling (often puns). Not all of the stories work well in this format as some of the jokes fall flat after a long build up.

tmaluck's review against another edition

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4.0

"Rakugo" are an oral tradition in which the characters of a story can change based on the storyteller, but the premise and ending are more or less the same. Tatsumi, who wanted to steer his gekiga legacy toward humor for a change, leads the reader through eight short tales, each of which ends in either slapstick or a massive pun. The effect was groan-worthy the first two times, then I felt a gleeful sort of suspense as each story's progress built up my anticipation for how it would end. What new curveball would land on the last page?

suggoiai's review

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4.0

A collection of manga stories about inns, cities, and the people who live there. The stories themselves are well-told and drawn beautifully. The endings seem to have a sharp irony or lesson. In the afterword, there is explanation about this style of story which the author has adapted to manga. For me, it would have been better to put this explanation up front. However, if you read the afterword first, beware of minor spoilers after the genre explanation.

qwerty88's review

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4.0

lovely illustrations, and several new-to-me stories
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