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Yoshihiro Tatsumi (1935–2015)

Autor von The Push Man and Other Stories

32+ Werke 1,938 Mitglieder 73 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 8 Lesern

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Bildnachweis: © deb aoki/ manga.about.com

Reihen

Werke von Yoshihiro Tatsumi

The Push Man and Other Stories (1969) 485 Exemplare
Abandon the Old in Tokyo (1970) 387 Exemplare
Good-Bye (2005) 265 Exemplare
Fallen Words (2012) 115 Exemplare
Black Blizzard (1956) 103 Exemplare
A Drifting Life, Vol. 1 (2008) 25 Exemplare
L'enfer (2003) 12 Exemplare
Good-Bye and Other Stories (1988) 11 Exemplare
A Drifting Life, Vol. 2 (2008) 11 Exemplare
Una vita tra i margini (2012) 9 Exemplare
Cette ville te tuera, Tome 1 : (2015) 7 Exemplare
Tatsumi (2020) 7 Exemplare
Coups d'éclat (2004) 6 Exemplare
Les larmes de la bête (2004) 5 Exemplare
Pescadores de medianoche (2018) 5 Exemplare
Kobiety (2006) 4 Exemplare
Una vida errante 2 (2009) 3 Exemplare
Saca las joyas (2004) 3 Exemplare
Crocevia (2016) 2 Exemplare
Inferno (2017) 2 Exemplare
YOSHIHIRO TATSUMI - LE LACRIME (2017) 2 Exemplare
Hiroshima (Contagion) (1983) 1 Exemplar
Kikkeren : tegnede noveller (2012) 1 Exemplar

Zugehörige Werke

Rashomon and Seventeen Other Stories (2006) — Umschlagillustration, einige Ausgaben1,110 Exemplare
AX, Volume 1 (2010) — Mitwirkender — 118 Exemplare
Von Thangka bis Manga : Bild-Erzählungen aus Asien (2012) — Artist — 1 Exemplar

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Wissenswertes

Gebräuchlichste Namensform
Tatsumi, Yoshihiro
Rechtmäßiger Name
辰巳ヨシヒロ
Geburtstag
1935-06-10
Todestag
2015-03-07
Geschlecht
male
Nationalität
Japan
Geburtsort
Osaka, Japan
Berufe
manga artist
Kurzbiographie
Decades before graphic novels and short stories for adult audiences gained popularity in the United States, Yoshihiro Tatsumi founded the genre in his native Japan. Beginning in the 1950s, he created "gekiga," meaning "dramatic pictures." Writing and illustrating these tales when the defeat in World War II was still fresh in most Japanese people's minds, Tatsumi began telling stories of ordinary people suffering quietly in urban settings such as Tokyo. Usually unable to express their psychological fears and needs verbally, these characters find release in unusual, bizarre, and even dangerous ways. Accompanying his stories with illustrations that range from the highly detailed and realistic to the expressionistic, Tatsumi has found a niche outside the mainstream while still gaining a large and respectful fan base. It was not until 2005, however, that his translated collection The Push Man, and Other Stories won him attention in North America. A young boy during World War II, Tatsumi was the son of parents who ran a laundry business. The family was so poor that the young Tatsumi attended school irregularly because education had to be paid for at the time. He found comfort in comic books, which could be read in rental book stores in which customers could pay a small hourly fee and read as many comics in that time as they wished. Becoming a fan of comic book artist Tezuka Osamu, Tatsumi learned that the artist lived close by. He visited Tezuka, who took the teenager under his wing and gave him encouragement. Eventually, Tatsumi found work with rental shop company Hinomaru Publishing in his home of Osaka, but as the economy improved in Japan and comic books and paperbacks became more affordable, the rental industry collapsed. Tatsumi left Osaka for Tokyo in 1957, where he and some of his friends started creating comics in the gekiga style. American graphic novelist Adrian Tomine is responsible for editing and designing the collections of Tatsumi's works that have reached America. The Push Man, and Other Stories contains tales originally published in Japan in 1969, and Abandon the Old in Tokyo 's stories are from the following year. Yet, critics have repeatedly noted that they read in many ways like modern compositions.

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Rezensionen

3.5. I really liked watching the development of the forms Tatsumi would eventually become famous for, especially the various arguments about the nature, future, and mechanics of manga the author has, mostly with his brother. That relationship, in fact, was the most compelling part of this memoir for me.
 
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localgayangel | 17 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 5, 2024 |
This is a collection of early Tatsumi short stories, and I found them a little disappointing. Too often there's a lot of set-up building to a one-line pay-off, which too often are not worth the wait. The stories themselves aren't bad (and some are good), it's just most of them fizzle out so abruptly, and read in collection it becomes a bit too much. I'd suggest this is mostly of interest to Tatsumi completists (which I'm not, yet). 2 stars is a bit harsh, but 3 suggests an indifference which I don't feel.… (mehr)
 
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thisisstephenbetts | 1 weitere Rezension | Nov 25, 2023 |
 
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castordm | 19 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 19, 2023 |
Indubbiamente, un'opera monumentale e magistrale, anche se alla lunga la sua struttura ripetitiva dà alla noia. È una summa della storia del fumetto giapponese, che si intreccia con le vicende personali del protagonista (a dire il vero piuttosto ripetitive, appunto) e con la storia del Giappone (davvero tratteggiata alla lontana, peccato). Di nuovo: al di là della noia va riscontrata la maestria dell'autore, che si vede in tanti dettagli fra cui per esempio la riproduzione maniacale delle copertina dei manga citati o il progressivo invecchiamento dei tratti fisici dei protagonisti.… (mehr)
 
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d.v. | May 16, 2023 |

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Werke
32
Auch von
3
Mitglieder
1,938
Beliebtheit
#13,276
Bewertung
3.8
Rezensionen
73
ISBNs
52
Sprachen
7
Favoriten
8

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