
Alien
Nine Book 1
by Hitoshi Tomizawa
CPM Manga
Translated by Laura Jackson & Yoko Kobayashi
BW,
224 pgs
$23.95 CAN / $15.95 US
Gross alien helmets and more
by Dana Tillusz
Alien
Nine is light-hearted science-fiction graphic novel set in the
future after Earth's initial contact with distant alien life forms.
Since the first UFO landing fourteen years ago, aliens running loose
are a daily annoyance in the human world. The many different alien
types pose no real threat (as of yet) and run around creating havoc
for those humans in charge of capturing them. Those on extraterrestrial-catching
duty belong to a group of individuals called the "Alien Party."
They spend their days scooping up little mutants and wrestling with
the larger, aggressive kind. It might sound fine and dandy, but
to poor Yuri Otani, it's the crummiest job a kid could ever have.
It
is Yuri's last year of Elementary School and her classmates have
voted her in as one of the school's three Alien Fighters. Her new
partners Kasumi and Kumi excel on the job and capture the invading
pests like they had natural talents to do so. Yuri hates the job
and the "gross" aliens she is forced to deal with. She
continually curls up in fear when forced to fight. She just doesn't
have what it takes to do this disgusting dirty work. Her fellow
fighters try to help her when they can, but they know that if they
are forced to fight a large invading force (instead of a few aliens
like they have been dealing with) their whole school may suffer
the consequences. So it's up to them to help Yuri through this fear
and teach her how to handle the difficult job of herding these little
buggers.

Looking like a toad's head, the Borg help the
Alien Fighters round up the little aliens that are running loose |
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Each
Alien Fighter has a symbiotic alien called a "Borg" to
work with, to fight and to help capture the other aliens. The Borg
alien is worn on top of the student's head like a hat. This alien
helmet is intelligent (and aggressive-it tries to kill the other
aliens when not completely controlled) and defends the Alien Fighter
from harm with tentacle like appendages that shoot out from its
body. This Borg creature looks like the head of a giant toad with
large feathery wings and it suctions itself onto their host's head.
In exchange for helping the Alien Fighters out in their duties,
the Borg feeds off the waste of its host; eating their sweat, tears
and lucky for us, the book really doesn't detail much more than
that.
Alien
Nine is created by manga artist Hitoshi Tomizawa and has been
published in its original Japanese format and translated by CPM
Manga. The format might appear strange and backwards to the average
Western reader who may be unfamiliar (reads right to left) with
traditional manga. A common practice by some manga publishers is
working with a jarring mirror image printed in the opposite form
(left side being right). Others will cut and paste every single
panel so Western readers can read it in the format they are familiar
with. But the publisher of Alien Nine felt it should be published
in its original format and was kind enough to include instructions
on how to read it properly.
In
Book One of this three part graphic novel set, we are introduced
to the main characters and what they do (or forced to do like Yuri
is). This story is far from complete and is only setting the stage
for the next two volumes. Our reluctant hero still needs to find
her self-confidence and learn how to handle her elected duty. After
reading this first book, I know something big is going to happen
in the later collections.
I really
enjoyed my read of Alien Nine, but it lacked some important
elements. Firstly, we are never given a lot of information about
all the aliens running around and what their real purpose is, besides
looking cute and being annoying. The history behind the "first
contact" is mentioned but never explained in any significance
or historical context either. It seems that everything in this first
arc is only a chapter in a larger story, suffering in ambiguity
until its future revelation to the reading audience. I can handle
that, but creator Hitoshi Tomizawa could have given us some more
story sustenance to chew on in this introduction to his future Earth
and its invading aliens. I'm definitely in this one for the long
haul, but it'll be a little frustrating waiting the next few months
for more invading critters to beat on.
4 of 5
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