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Trèfle, coffret de 4 volumes (tomes 1 à 4)

par CLAMP

Autres auteurs: Voir la section autres auteur(e)s.

Séries: Trèfle (Omnibus 1-4)

MembresCritiquesPopularitéÉvaluation moyenneMentions
4141261,003 (3.52)10
"Kazuhiko is a young, but already deeply wounded black ops agent of a baroque, retro-tech future-- is pulled out of retirement to escort Sue, a mysterious waif, to a destination she alone knows. Sue and Kazuhiko have never met, yet she knows him, having grown up since the age of four with her only human contact being two distant voices: that of her elderly 'grandma'-- Kazuhiko's commander, General Ko, and of Kazuhiko's dead girlfriend, the beautiful singer Ora. Sue has been kept in that cage all these years because of what she is, and what the Clover Leaf Project found her to be: a military top secret, and the most dangerous person in the world!" -- p. [4] of cover.… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 10 mentions

Affichage de 1-5 de 12 (suivant | tout afficher)
Incredibly beautiful manga. Curious story about love with a heap of sci-fi thrown in. The story was told a bit strangely and may not fit everyone's tastes, but good lord is the art glorious. Worth reading just to look at the artwork even if the story is not your cup of sakè. ( )
  spaceman5000 | Jul 23, 2020 |
Kazuhiko, a former government agent, is roped into doing one last job for General Ko, one of the heads of the government. She tells him he must deliver a package, which he soon learns is actually a young girl named Sue. In the first two volumes of Clover, Kazuhiko does his best to take Sue to her destination despite opposition from multiple sources. He gradually learns who Sue is, why people don't want her going free, and how she's connected to him. The third volume of Clover is a flashback to the time when Sue and a beautiful singer named Ora first met, the beginnings of Sue's desire to leave her cage. The fourth volume of Clover is yet another flashback, even further back in time, to the days when Ran escaped his own cage and met Gingetsu, a friend of Kazuhiko's.

Clover's biggest strength was that it was very beautiful. It came across like an art experiment on CLAMP's part - lots of negative space, interesting things done with panel placement and usage, etc. And since this is one of those tragic CLAMP series, there are lots of beautiful people looking sad. A few of them get to be happy for a little bit, but it fades into bittersweetness at best.

Unfortunately, this series is style over clarity. Scenes felt disjointed and didn't always transition in ways I could easily follow. The first couple volumes technically had quite a bit of action in them, but it didn't always feel like action because of the way CLAMP drew things. It was weird, and I struggled to follow everything that was going on. The end of the amusement park portion was especially confusing, and instead of giving me more of that story, volumes 3 and 4 turned out to be flashbacks. The story never returned to its present.

One thing I didn't know until after I started reading was that this series was originally intended to be longer. I don't know why it was halted, but it was, which explains why, after two volumes of flashbacks, the story just...stopped. It was immensely frustrating.

The story had song lyrics repeated frequently throughout, at least two or three different songs. I did my best to pay attention to any lyrics the first time they showed up, but I generally found them difficult to read (in a fancy font, often white text on black backgrounds). Also, song lyrics are just disjointed text to me - I can't even vaguely imagine them put to music unless I've actually heard that music before. After a while, I just skimmed any lyrics that came up, which was probably not what CLAMP was aiming for.

I was left with so many questions. On the one hand, the government acted like Clover power was a simple matter of math (a two-leaf plus a three-leaf would equal five and therefore be too powerful to oppose). On the other hand, it was clear that some Clovers' powers wouldn't be a problem not matter how many of them got together, so it really wasn't just a matter of adding up the total number of leaves. And did people like General Ko technically count as Clovers? The world-building didn't make much sense to me.

All in all, this is one of those series that I'd probably only recommend to CLAMP completists or comics creators. As much as I liked the visuals, the story itself was more difficult to follow than it needed to be and didn't have a proper ending.

Additional Comments:

Supposedly each of the different levels of Clovers got a different tattoo, but the one character who was a one-leaf Clover had a four-leaf tattoo. Was that a mistake on CLAMP's part? It confused me.

Extras:

A few pages of full-color images at the beginning of each volume in the omnibus, as well as a full-color bonus gallery.

Rating Note:

I struggled with rating this. The story is probably more 1.5 stars - it's unfinished, will likely never be finished, and is structured oddly for something that stops at the point it does. The artwork, however, is lovely, more in the 4-star range (the clarity issues make me reluctant to rate it higher).

(Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.) ( )
  Familiar_Diversions | Feb 1, 2020 |
I picked this up at the library because of the cool cover and I liked the fact that all the volumes are in one large omnibus. This ended up being very different from any other manga I have read but I didn’t really like how ambiguous and incomplete it felt.

Some of the illustration in here is truly beautiful and amazing. However, it’s also a bit scattered and hard to follow. At times this felt more like random pieces of art than an actual story.

It was an interesting and different read but I didn’t enjoy it all that much. I liked the retro-tech setting but the characters were all a bit odd and creepy feeling. I also had trouble engaging in the story; it just felt really disjointed.

The ending was really abrupt, less of an ending and more of a “well I guess we’re done now”.

Overall this was okay but not really for me. I liked the setting and some of the beautiful illustrations but thought the story was awkward and disjointed and never really engaged with the characters. When I finished this I was like “eh, okay that was weird...moving on…” ( )
  krau0098 | Oct 13, 2019 |
I wish CLAMP would finish what they start. This is a beautiful manga, but it's clearly not finished. The story is lovely, but much shorter than it should be.

I can't help giving it a higher rating than it should have. The art work is just that gorgeous. ( )
  rabbit-stew | Mar 29, 2019 |
I found the book disjointed and hard to follow. The different stories didn't really explain anything, and at times felt cliched.

However, the illustration were beautiful. ( )
  TheDivineOomba | Jan 27, 2018 |
Affichage de 1-5 de 12 (suivant | tout afficher)
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Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
CLAMPauteur principaltoutes les éditionscalculé
Yoshimoto, RayTraducteurauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé

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Trèfle (Omnibus 1-4)
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"Kazuhiko is a young, but already deeply wounded black ops agent of a baroque, retro-tech future-- is pulled out of retirement to escort Sue, a mysterious waif, to a destination she alone knows. Sue and Kazuhiko have never met, yet she knows him, having grown up since the age of four with her only human contact being two distant voices: that of her elderly 'grandma'-- Kazuhiko's commander, General Ko, and of Kazuhiko's dead girlfriend, the beautiful singer Ora. Sue has been kept in that cage all these years because of what she is, and what the Clover Leaf Project found her to be: a military top secret, and the most dangerous person in the world!" -- p. [4] of cover.

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