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Chargement... Shugo Chara! 1 (édition 2007)par Peach-Pit
Information sur l'oeuvreShugo Chara ! - Tome 1 par Peach-Pit
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Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. I read book #1 based on a patron's enthusiasm for the series as a whole. Ugh, maybe I'm not of the manga mindset or I'm too old but I found the fantasy elements and illustrations confusing. The characters all look the same except for the cat boy plus when the characters have an emotional freakout they are drawn completely diferently so I thought these were new characters! Amu was also too girly insecure for me. An interesting series with an appealing character and art. At first I have to admit that I wasn't sure how I'd like this series. After all, it deals with eggs as a source of power. However, the art is drawn well enough for me to not really have any qualms about this idiosyncrasy and I really like the humor. Also, it deals with the issues alot people had when growing up trying to determine your own identity, the 'what makes you YOU'. I'm sure alot of us wished we were more like the jock, the cheerleader, the SBA President, instead of being born the way we were. The grass always seems to be greener on the other side. I guess my only real issue with this series is with the extreme youth of all the characters. The main character is nine and yet her personality and attitude is that of a high schooler. It kind of makes me wonder if publishers are planning on robbing the cradle soon for their pursuit of 'cute'. :D aucune critique | ajouter une critique
Appartient à la sérieShugo Chara! (1) Prix et récompenses
Everybody at Seiyo Elementary thinks that stylish and super cool Amu has it all: But nobody knows the real Amu, a shy girl who wishes she had the courage to truly be herself. Changing Amu's life is going to take more than wishes and dreams-it's going to take a little magic! One morning, Amu finds a surprise in her bed: three strange little eggs. Each egg contains a Guardian Character, an angel-like being who can give her the power to be someone new. With the help of her Guardian Characters, Amu is about to discover that her true self is even more amazing than she ever dreamed. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)741.5952The arts Graphic arts and decorative arts Drawing & drawings Cartoons, Caricatures, Comics Collections Asian JapaneseClassification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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Her new eggs capture the interest of several people: the Guardians of Seiyo Elementary and a mysterious boy named Ikuto. The Guardians and Ikuto are all looking for something called the "Embryo," which is capable of granting a person's wish. Tadase Hotori, the "King's chair" for the Guardians, has a wish he'd like to see granted, and Amu decides she wants to help him because she has a crush on him (although it's unrequited - he says he's in love with someone else). However, Ikuto also has a wish he wants to see granted.
Once upon a time, I tried to get into the anime adaptation of this and just couldn't. The story and characters were aimed a bit too young for my tastes, and the whole thing was overly cute in a way that didn't work for me. There wasn't enough to hold my interest for more than a few episodes.
The manga isn't working any better for me so far. Again, it's aimed too young for my tastes, and the premise is a lot. Magical eggs, the Embryo, magical transformations, the cute boy Amu knows she has a crush on vs. the cute boy who intrigues her, plus the whole "X eggs" thing introduced at the end of the volume. So much stuff crammed into this series.
Honestly, the whole "character egg" concept kind of put me off. The idea, I guess, is that kids' "characters" aren't yet clear and well-defined, so the eggs give them the potential to be completely other people who are either the person they want to be or an aspect of the person they really are inside. It reminded me a little of Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials books and their daemons, except that the character eggs seemed much more limited. Most people only have one egg (if they ever get to see their egg at all), and from the look of things, it could only contain one type of other personality, one that wasn't very well integrated with that person's regular personality at all.
So far, the series has revealed all of Amu's "guardian characters" and shown what Nadeshiko and Tadase's do. Ikuto's "guardian character" has also done a little, but it's tough to say what it does for him beyond give him cat ears (WTF, did Ikuto secretly wish he were more like a cat?).
For all that Amu has a huge crush on Tadase (apparently just because he's good-looking - she doesn't actually know him well enough to have any other reasons), his "character change" didn't make him seem all that appealing. I sort of liked Ikuto more - his attempt to apologize using snacks was cute - but I wasn't really a fan of his blatant flirting (licking one of her character eggs, ew).
Although I'm vaguely interested in finding out what Ikuto and Tadase's wishes are, I doubt I'll be continuing this.
Extras:
Author freetalks (which were pretty interesting - Peach-Pit is composed of two people, one of whom writes the stories and both of whom draw, focusing on their assigned characters); character profiles for Amu, Tadase, Nadeshiko, Kukai, Yaya, and Ikuto; and 3 pages of translation notes. One part of Peach-Pit's Q&As was odd and had me wondering if perhaps one of them was nonbinary:
(Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.) ( )