Samurai Executioner Volume 4
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Product Description
A frenetic mix of samurai honor, base violence, and the blood of beheading, Samurai Executioner is not for the faint of heart. For those who love blood and guts crime drama, historical fiction, and brutal action, this is right up your alley. The men who brought you Lone Wolf & Cub also created Kubikiri Asa, a young ronin samurai who helps keep the peace by putting the fear of beheading into Edo's criminals. But it doesn't always work, and so he has to. Full of squirting blood, fast paced samurai swordwork, and the drama that comes from human corruption, Samurai Executioner is like no other classic manga.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #534558 in Books
- Published on: 2005-05-31
- Original language: English
- Dimensions: 1.00" h x 4.20" w x 5.90" l, .44 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 304 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Booklist
The four stories in the fourth book in Dark Horse's project to publish in English the 1990s Japanese series Samurai Executioner veer farther from the beaten paths of the crime story than anything in its predecessors. The usually solemn-to-grim-faced Asaemon even smiles, first in the long "An Offering of Cut Mochi," in which he dines with some kobushingumi (samurai without official appointments who receive small salaries) after watching them in an attack exercise, and again in the brief "The Season of New Straw," when he buys some of a pretty young street-vendor's wares (women entwine some new straw in their hair to promote good circulation). Both stories turn gory yet in conclusion illustrate the executioner's sympathy for even those he encounters professionally. Both also elucidate Edo-period historical details, as do the psychologically acute "Portrait of Death," about Asaemon's near marriage to an artist who, like him, is the child of an executioner and sword tester, and "The Set-up," about a prison riot. The late Kojima's art remains utterly breathtaking throughout. Ray Olson
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