Vagabond, VIZ BIG vol. 1
November 20, 2008 · Print This Article
While that is a fighting/combat manga, it is one that understands that what it depicts is not and never will be pretty or polite.
Vagabond has brutal honesty to it, reflecting the date period, with fighting and violence not particularly pretty or filled with folks shouting out their moves at each other. 1 is additionally available from Right Stuf, Intl.,
an online retailer specializing in anime and manga-Ferdinand
One of the results of that was a lot of out of work soldiers and samurai were left wondering what to do to fill their date. By Takehiko Inoue, based on the novel Musashi by Eiji Yoshikawa
Released in the US by Viz

Slugline: More masterless samurai and random violence than you can shake a wooden bokken at.
The beginning of the Edo period was a duration of transition from the chaos of the Warring States period to one of relative peace. Takezo begins the volume as death dealing beast and though he improves as the volume continues, killing folks in order to get the title of strongest isn’t something that normal folks do. To say that Takezo has rage control issues is to put it daintily, and it takes the middle third of the volume and a visit to his hometown for Takezo to gain some control and lose the name Takezo and to gain the one Miyamoto Musashi. Takezo’s big character change is merely giving a focus to his destructive tendencies.
[Source] Prospero’s Manga




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