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Gto: 14 Days In Shonan Vol. 5
By (Author) Tohru Fujisawa
Vertical Inc.
Vertical Inc.
15th October 2012
United States
General
Fiction
741.5
Paperback
192
Width 127mm, Height 178mm
155g
Trailblazing writer returns and introduces a new challenge for his unique anti hero, Eikichi Onizuka. After cracking down on troubled teens in his own school, Eikichi goes home to the peaceful shores of Shonan to relax and escape the stresses of modern day Tokyo. However even his own hometown has not escaped the declining state of child services. So in typical form he decides to personally provide hard knocks education to his old neighbourhood with hopes of putting a group of troubled teens back on the track to happiness.
I thought I was done with Great Teacher Onizuka. All throughout college, I plowed my way through the series All was well and good, until just the other day, when Vertical dropped the first volume of Great Teacher Onizuka: 14 Days in Shonan in my mailbox Suffice to say, the first chapter grabbed me almost immediately. It was the same Great Teacher Onizuka humor I remember, and most importantly, I reacted the same to it as I had when I was stuck in my college dorm on those long Syracuse winter nights. Japanator
As a character explicitly points out, its painfully evident that parental selfishness has given [these teens] severe reason to distrust adults and that theyre not about to give Onizuka a second chance if he lets them down. As a result, the manga is dealing with the same Onizuka, but watching him walk a much narrower tight rope Its intriguing to consider how the manga might react to the new twist in its careful balance act and how 14 Days might consequently develop in subtly different ways than the original. Aint
it Cool News
I have never read a GTO comic before this, so the prospect of reading what amounts to a spin-off was a bit intimidating. Luckily the premise is pretty simple I liken this book to Columbo. Anyone who has ever watched a Columbo episode knows that Columbo is going to solve the case. The real pleasure comes from seeing how the bumbling detective puts it all together The figures are strong and confident, and the backgrounds are stunning. Stumptown Trade Review
I loved it The most surprising thing about 14 Days in Shonan is its ability to address serious social problems without devolving into an Afterschool Special. The hand-to-hand combat and barrage of condom jokes helps mitigate against didacticism, to be sure, but Fujisawa is skillful enough to make the students personal troubles a meaningfuland sometimes movingpart of the story, inspiring Onizuka to new heights of creativity (and silliness) in his efforts to reach them. Highly recommended. The Manga Critic
Born in 1967, Tohru Fujisawa is a veteran Japanese comic artist and multimillion unit seller. Best known globally for his international sensation Great Teacher Onizuka (GTO), Fujisawa was the 22nd Kodansha Comic Award Winner in 1998 for his work on the hit series. The GTO property would go on to inspire two animated TV series and an internationally distributed live action TV series by the same name. Since GTO Fujisawa has gone on to pen thirteen more comic series, with four of those properties landing on American shores. Fujisawa continues to be one of the most beloved manga artists of this generation.