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4.0 out of 5 stars An interesting story line, but no action., Jan 24 2004
This review is from: Blade Of The Immortal (Paperback)
There aren't really any action scenes worth talking about in this novel. Rin does a few things, but she doesn't actually "fight". There is a story about this guy and his masks, but that isn't fully developed until the next volume.

This isn't a great place to start for your first volume. It mostly just develops story, but the story is important. Start somewhere else though. Get DREAMSONG if you can't fight a good seller for BLOOD OF A THOUSAND.

Those who already own the previous volumes of BOTI could skip this book and the next possibly. It develops Rin some, but I skipped it for a while and was fine.

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5.0 out of 5 stars 4th in the serie., July 16 2003
This review is from: Blade Of The Immortal (Paperback)
"On Silent Wings, Volume 1" is the 4th book of the serie.

Amazing story and drwing style.

7 stars.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Ignore the volume listing at the top of this page, April 4 2003
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This review is from: Blade Of The Immortal (Paperback)
I bought this book from here at Amazon, thinking that it was first in the series because it says 'volume 1' on it. That is NOT true. This is in actuality volume 4 or 5--it is the first of two PARTS called 'On Silent Wings', but it does not start the series. Now, due to a mistake, I must go back and get the other books before this one so I can have some understanding of what is going on.

This looks to be a good series, and I look forward to reading the rest of it, but it would have saved me some hassle if I had known that this is not actually volume 1.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Review of Volume 1, Oct 11 2002
This review is from: Blade Of The Immortal (Paperback)
This volume and its sequel capture events from issues 19 through 28 of the manga comic books, and represents events in the earlier phases of the adventures of Rin and Manji. It contains two stories, "Rin's Bane," and the first part of "On Silent Wings." Both of these are strong stories that trace Rin's growth from a young girl hell-bent on vengeance for the murder of her parents into a woman who is beginning to understand the real price of retaliations.

In "Rin's Bane," the young swordswoman, smarting from an argument with Manji over her fighting skills heads off into the woods to wash her hair. There she finds herself face to face with Kagehisa Anotsu, the leader of the Itto-Ryu swordsmen. Anotsu brushes aside her skills, and she is forced to face some very unpleasant truths about her beliefs. The lessons of this encounter haunt Rin in the next story, "On Silent Wings." Manji and Rin are at a local fair when the immortal swordsman suddenly finds that a local mask maker is another Itto-Ryu. In a parallel encounter, Rin risks her own life to prevent a haughty samurai from killing a young child. Manji barely avoids a public battle, and Rin is shocked to recognize the artist as the killer who defiled her mother.

As events proceed inexorably towards the second volume's part of the story, we sense the internal tensions in Rin and her swordsman as they confront the possible outcomes of their actions. Hiroaki Samura's tale again touches on complex moral issues rather than simply dishing out a violent samurai melodrama. The grim horror that counterpoints the lighter exchanges between Samura's main encounters provides the basis for much thought and consideration. One of the surprises in this series has been the quality of the translation, which manages to carry through the whole range of the dialog. Yet Japanese is preserved where it is part if the detailed and carefully composed artwork. This extremely high level of artistic integrity grows on the reader. "Blade of the Immortal" is much more a genuine graphic novel than it is a simple manga.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful art with an intellectual twist, July 24 2001
This review is from: Blade Of The Immortal (Paperback)
The first time I looked at the Blade of the Immortal series, I seriously thought "Oh wonderful, another cheesy, gore ridden series with no plot and ... artwork." However, upon reading it I was taken aback by how wrong I truly was. The art is beautiful in its own way, unique and sketchy looking with no possible way it could be turned into an anime and still look as gorgeous. The story is also very nice, there is blood, but there is a good intellectual plot with the occasional twist of witty humor. It is an interesting mix of fact and fantasy, real and surreal all mixed in a historical setting. This series is set apart from others and I don't believe that I have any others quite like it. It never gets old. I highly recommend that, no matter what you're interested in, you should at least give this stunning series a try.
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5.0 out of 5 stars a must-get, Mar 18 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Blade Of The Immortal (Paperback)
this is one of the best comics i've ever read. it's about manji's job as a bodyguard for rin, who confronts Anotsu Kagehisa, who killed rin's father. she attemps to kill him, but does she really even stand a chance?this book was explosive and had a mix of action and explaining of the story for people who did not read any other of the Blade of the immortal series.
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5.0 out of 5 stars How do you say "sweet!", Mar 7 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Blade Of The Immortal (Paperback)
Dude this book is beast!! The best comic company ever (dark horse comics) has once again put out another comic that doesn't just raise the bar it obliterates it. Kudos to Hiroaki Samura for making the best comic book ever.
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5.0 out of 5 stars The Best of the Best!!!, Dec 13 2000
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This review is from: Blade Of The Immortal (Paperback)
Blade of the Immortal is truely a work of art. I have read and re-reading it on a regular basis. It is a manga book that sets itself apart from all the rest, american and japanese. The story is well written and its shows us the emotions of the characters flawlessly. This particular book needs to be read with its sequel to be fully enjoyed,though. So what are you waiting for.....order it!!!!
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5.0 out of 5 stars An exciting, thought provoking series., Aug 15 2000
This review is from: Blade Of The Immortal (Paperback)
I stumbled onto "Blade of the Immortal" translations in comic book format. Attracted by the art, and the unusually deep dialogue between the opponents (as dramatic as Kazou Kioke's "Lone Wolf and Cub", but much more up-to-date in sensibility and subject matter) I immediately began looking for back issues, which was difficult. Many retailers don't seem to order many issues of this book. Fortunately the trade paperbacks started coming out soon after.

"Blade of the Immortal" starts off as a fairly typical samurai revenge story, with some unusual horror movie twists. We meet Manji, a guilt-ridden outlaw and expert swordsman, who is cursed with an odd form of immortality. No matter how grievously he is injured, he cannot die. Manji makes a deal with a magical buddhist nun. He will gain the release of death, if he slays 1000 evil men. Soon we meet Rin, a young girl, the daughter of a swordsmanship teacher who witnessed the horrific murder of her parents at the hands of the Itto-Ryu, a renegade sword school. Tortured by nightmares, she seeks revenge, but realizing she has no hope of surviving a direct confrontation with even one Itto-Ryu swordsman, she convinces Manji to serve as her bodyguard and stand in. Taking up Rin's quest seems a perfect confluence of both of their desires: her need to put her parents memory to rest, his to earn his redemption.

The stories take you through dramatic encounters with various members of the sword school. All are dangerous swordsmen with unique styles of combat. Some are quite literally monsters. Each has a unique story, an unique reason for having become a renegade, and this becomes the source of much thought provoking drama before, during and after the battles. All are memorable characters, in particular Shimuzu (Book Two: "Cry of the Worm"), a fellow immortal and Maki, a swordswoman forced into prostitution who fights like the wind (Book 3: "Dreamsong").

Harioki Samura has great timing, the panel layouts make the fight scenes breathtaking and exciting. Also wonderful is the developing relationship between Manji and Rin, a kind of older brother, little sister dynamic that lends the book much humor and necessary warmth (given the bloodiness of the battles).

Beginning with "Rins Bane" (Book 4) Rin's internal debate about the morality and human costs of her quest, takes center stage, and make this one of the deepest and most interesting books to cross the Pacific in years. There's still plenty of action, and the relationship between Rin and Manji continues to deepen, but it's the debates about the sanity of the bushido code, about memory, about filial duty, and hints of political intrigue to come, that make this book an thought provoking and engrossing read.

If you have any taste for the high drama and action, as well as the deeper issues running through comic books like "the Authority", you have to give "Blade" a try. This is the best dramatic manga translation I've read, and it compares favorably with "Lone Wolf & Cub" and "Neon Genesis Evangelion". I really don't think you will be disappointed.

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5.0 out of 5 stars I am impressed, May 16 2000
By 
Gerardo Braham Caballero "origami_man" (Queretaro, Queretaro Mexico) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Blade Of The Immortal (Paperback)
I am really impressed by the capacity of Mr. Samura to change pace on a story. If you have read already the first three books of Sword of the Inmortal then you would be surprised too when you read this one. The first two books centered on conflict, Rin wants revenge and she gets it with the help of Manji, an inmortal samurai who has to kill a thousand evil men in order to rest. This two books are full of blood and flashy fighting scenes i really liked. But in the end you just got your classical story of the good guy versus the evil guys. That's until Dreamsong, the third of the books in the series, here you find a girl who is an "evil" minion of the "evil" master sent to kill Manji, the surprise is that she is not so "evil" as we would like to believe and in the end you cannot stay on Manji's side when they duel. Then it comes "On Silent Wings" and you start wondering if you really need another duel or gross decapitation to buy the following books. At first i only saw the conflict, but after reading OSW i began noticing that Mr. Samura is more concerned for the moral dilema than the physical one. This book tells us a story where Rin is the central character; no more Manji stealing the scene, we get to know her best and really love her, she meets face to face the man she has sworn to kill and discovers that he is not so wrong in doing what he did and does to this day, she is suddenly thrown in a conflict where she cannot find the righteous anger she had so far. Throw in the story a mask maker who wants to leave his past behind, a past that involves the reason of Rin to claim vengeance and you are just left wanting for more. Definitively a must buy, i want to show this book to anyone who thinks that comic books or manga books are not well thought; just a word of caution, buy this together with the second part On Silent Wings 2 or you will be running to the computer to order it after reading the first.
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Blade Of The Immortal
Blade Of The Immortal by Horse Dark (Paperback - Oct 1 1999)
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