Saturday, February 19, 2011

Dark Brown Hairstyles

The Forest of Miyori Hideji ODA

"The problem is that there is no match, all alone. We always need help from humans. Although we would prefer to do without them."

I'm not a fan of manga but my students love it, I bought some in gleaning advice from right to left and I was curious to me my opinion on these securities. I chose start The Forest Miyori of Hideji Oda , whose cover is really beautiful.

Miyori is a young 11 year old girl that everyone sees as a rebel when she was first a little girl who suffers from separation from parents it is d being cut off from its habits (she left Tokyo for the campaign) to be entrusted to his grandparents.
Upon arrival, Miyori share in the forest that adjoins the home of his grandparents. Soon, the little girl meets strange creatures and it turns out she shares with her grandmother's ability to see and communicate with spirits, beings that inhabit this forest. They tell him that the place is threatened by a dam construction project that will flood and then remove the entire region. Miyori then mobilizes the children of his new school to try to save the forest ...

This manga reads 8 short episodes in one go because the player is fast forward to hearing After the quest Miyori. Mixing between the wonderful world of the forest and the dark reality of greed in detriment of nature and men is rather well done.
I liked the message that this manga vehicle, first we should not fear the Other, but take the time to know, d Secondly we must fight for what you believe right. In many ways, The Forest of Miyori is like a fairytale.
The line draws the face of Miyori is sweet and charming. However, I'm still not attracted by the graphics in general because I find that pages are saturated or even a bit stuffy and I am quickly annoyed by the "ah", "eh?" "...", So ubiquitous and, at my humble opinion, some spoil this lovely story. I am simultaneously fascinated by this manga then without being convinced by the manner in general but I think it's a great read for our teenagers!

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