The Lychee Light Club
By (Author) Usamaru Furuya
Vertical Inc.
Vertical Inc.
7th December 2018
26th May 2011
United States
General
Fiction
741.5
Paperback
320
Width 140mm, Height 191mm
409g
It is a well earned cliche that teenagers are compelled to rebel against society's norms. But the nine young members of The Lychee Light Club have ambitions far beyond the normal teenage angst. They plan to change the world by building a god-like machine that will realise their wildest fantasies. The android Lychee was initially developed for one purpose: to seize women from their secret empire. Through its interactions with the many members within this most curious of clubs, the machine eventually becomes self-aware and capable of measuring truth and justice.
Lychee Light Club is unflinchingly graphic, and as such it requires a certain taste of its audience. Those who can stomach its depravity will be amply rewarded. Furuyas grimly elegant style [] is a perverse kind of beauty, as visually bold and exploratory as its subject matter. One things for sure, youll never look at lychee the same way again. Otaku USA
Furuya at his most derangeda masterpiece of gore and debauchery that will have your brain screaming in horror even as you read on in rapture. The plotline is simple enoughthe Light Clubs descent into madness shows how absolute power corrupts absolutelybut the complex themes and details make it unforgettable Its shocking, disturbing, revoltingand an instant pick for one of the years best. Grade: A- Anime News Network
Its a gripping readquite literallyas when it arrived I began absent-mindedly reading the first few pages and ended up sitting down in my kitchen and reading the whole book in one sitting If youre looking for something violent, sexual, revolting and thought-provoking, then Lychee Light Club is a solid pick. Its definitely one of the better manga Ive read so far this year. Score: 9/10 Japanator
The manga is in a way a tragic love story and a horror novel at the same time that will leave the reader a bit shocked and enthralled The translations all read well and their placement is great, avoiding getting in the way of the images A great read. Grade: 4.5/5 Examiner.com
Gore so lovingly depicted that it almost transcends and becomes art Make no mistake about it, this is a book filled with sadism, horrific violence and sexual situations, and depraved behavior. But it has a human heart in its Frankenstein-esque robot, and what Ill take from it is not the scenes of people being cut open and smashed into bits More manga as thought-provoking as this, please. A Case Suitable for Treatment
"[Furuya's art] is refined and delicate with a dark edge...It's a creative, cerebral, and occasionally wry take on a genre that usually favors action over irony."--About.com
"[Design] is undoubtedly Furuyas chief asset as an artist and he deploys this in spurts throughout the work at hand. Furuyas approach is akin to a type of popular surrealism which owes much to Dali and Magritte."--Hooded Ultilitarian
Usamaru Furuya was born in Tokyo, Japan on January 25th, 1968. A graduate of the Tama Arts University, with a focus on oil painting, Furuya is currently considered one of the most talented artists in the industry today. A former student in the Osamu Tezuka Manga Correspondance Program, Furuya's drawings as a teen were often published in the pages of the seminal boys comics magazine Shounen King. Upon entering high school, Furuya began to embrace his darkside experimenting with subculture and the undergroud art scene. An early participant in the Tokyo version of the Le The tre du Grand-Guignol, he started off with them creatingpuppets and set designs for their elaborate performances. After graduating from university, Usamaru turned his attention to the world of comics. His early projects combined the surreal with extremely modern political commentary winning him critical acclaim worldwide for his juxtapositions of Tokyo youth and their suit wearing salaryman counterparts. Since his debut in 1994, Furuya has gone to draw 16 titles for Japan's leading comics publishers Shogakukan and Shueisha (publishers of Shonen Jump).