Cigarette Girl manga review
By Leroy Douresseaux
May 28, 2017 - 20:35
Top Shelf Productions
Writer(s): Masahiko Matsumoto, Spencer Fancutt, Atsuko Saisho
Artist(s): Masahiko Matsumoto
ISBN: 978-1-60309-382-8
$24.99 U.S., 264pp, B&W, paperback
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Cigarette Girl cover image |
In these stories, a shared cigarette offers a momentary connection between a salesgirl and a lonely young man, who buys cigarettes simply as an excuse to see the “Cigarette Girl.” A closet hides the evidence of an embarrassed bachelor's laziness, and his shyness is the thing that keeps this bachelor, Asanuma, a virgin.
Toki sells condoms as a door-to-door salesman, as she tries to be “Happy-Chan.” A single woman, not getting any younger, sifts through letters from would-be husbands. And “Naruko Tsurumaki's Love” is his dog, more so than the woman who wants to marry him.
THE LOWDOWN: Masahiko Matsumoto was apparently the manga equivalent of a alternative-comics creator. His simply drawn cartoons and comics have more in common with the leading lights of the American alternative and small press than they do with the highly-polished creations seen in Japan's Weekly Shonen Jump.
Matsumoto's stories are blunt and unsentimental at the same time that they are gentle and endearing. They depict a balance of life that is sweet and sour/pungent, but regardless of what aroma or flavor characters get, they got to keep on going. It is this matter-of-fact simplicity that makes these stories of modest city-dwellers, determined women, and goofy and selfish men fun to read.
Not all of the stories work; some of are awkward. “Naruko Tsurumaki's Love” is annoying because everyone in the story is annoying. “To Somewhere” misses the mark on being spontaneous and romantic. I am not even sure that it could have ever had the spark that one would expect from a story about a young couple just throwing fate to the wind. Ultimately, I would say that Cigarette Girl is a collection for readers looking for... let's see... if we can use the term “world music,” then, how about a niche called “world alt-comix?”
I READS YOU RECOMMENDS: Fans of off-beat comics, alternative or atypical manga will want to try Cigarette Girl.
This book includes the following text pieces:
An introduction by Sean Michael Wilson
A foreword by the late Yoshihiro Tatsumi
Biographical notes written by Mitsuhiro Asakawa
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