“In spite of everything, what does a wandering ronin need to do with the affairs of gods and emperors?”
Stan Sakai is likely one of the finest to ever put pencil to paper.
I really feel like that doesn’t get stated sufficient. That he doesn’t get practically sufficient credit score or accolade for simply how good he’s at his craft. Even having earned a number of Eisners, Ringos, and extra awards. He’s on the vanguard of creator-owned comics, constantly telling top-tier tales with precision, motion, and coronary heart with Usagi Yojimbo since 1984. With that legacy, and longevity, I suppose it would really feel daunting to select up the comics, not understanding the place to begin, however that’s sort of the great thing about the sequence and the way Sakai tells his tales. You can begin wherever.
I used to be there myself after I first began studying the samurai rabbit’s adventures. I had undoubtedly identified about Usagi Yojimbo by way of crossovers with the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and picked up at the least among the Mirage sequence within the early ’90s. Nevertheless it wasn’t till the Darkish Horse sequence within the late ’90s that I actually dove in. I had taken one thing of a hiatus from most comics within the latter a part of the last decade, specializing in college. I used to be mainly solely nonetheless shopping for and studying Hellboy, Starman, and Cerebus. Asking the proprietor of my native comedian store on the time what else I’d like alongside these strains, he handed me a stack of just about a 12 months’s value of Usagi Yojimbo, #13-22. This was the Usagi Yojimbo: Grasscutter arc.
It was good. It drew me in and turned me right into a fan for all times.
Grasscutter is epic. The story drops you in to begin with Japanese mythology and historical past, giving the provenance of the title of the arc, Kusanagi-no-Tsurugi, the grass-cutting sword. It particulars the lack of the sword after which switches to the political intrigue and motion of Usagi’s current day, mixing up our errant rabbit with a conspiracy to revive the emperor, a plot towards one of many Shogun’s staunchest allies, and the evil supernatural forces working in direction of their very own ends. It’s actually spectacular how Sakai weaves collectively the completely different threads. Whereas it does draw on narrative threads even from the primary Usagi Yojimbo tales, the story is advised in a method that the reader will get the entire wanted info.
Sakai’s paintings right here is in prime type. He refined and simplified his model throughout the time the sequence was printed by Mirage. I feel it reached its most acquainted type right here within the early days of Darkish Horse. The characters are slimmer, the faces constructed of solely essentially the most important strains, and what looks like virtually a simple cartooning. I see influences on humour and creatures of Sergio Aragonés‘ Groo alongside the normal samurai manga components from artists like Goseki Kojima. It’s lovely work. And there actually aren’t many comics storytellers on the market that may match Sakai’s capability to tempo a narrative. His layouts and panel transitions virtually learn like a the way to.
If you mix all of that with Sakai’s equally award-winning lettering, you’ve gotten a consummate storyteller.
Stan Sakai’s Usagi Yojimbo: Grasscutter is a spotlight in a legendary run that’s virtually composed of highlights. It blends collectively Japanese historical past and mythology with motion, humour, and pleasure of a humorous animal e-book.
Basic Comedian Compendium: USAGI YOJIMBO – GRASSCUTTER
Usagi Yojimbo: Grasscutter
Author & Artist: Stan Sakai
Writer: Darkish Horse
Launch Date: August 1997 – July 1998
Obtainable collected in Usagi Yojimbo – Quantity 12: Grasscutter and The Usagi Yojimbo Saga – Ebook 2
Learn previous entries within the Basic Comedian Compendium!