![]() In Sensor‘s first chapter, Kyoko Byakuya finds herself at the foot of Mount Sengoku, amidst the gentle falling of golden volcanic hair. Junji Ito’s Sensor is more Lovecraft than Lovecraft. Lovecraft (minus the racism).īeginning with an unnatural natural phenomenon (golden volcanic hair falling like real hair onto a village), Sensor quickly spirals into a world of religious cults, telepaths, time travel, and unknowable cosmic beings. Junji Ito has always leaned into the Lovecraftian method of world-building and storytelling, but never with so much gusto as in the brilliant Sensor. In the next selection, we’ll cover his third form: Ito’s best manga short stories, and where you can read them. In this selection of Junji Ito books, we’ll cover the first two forms of Junji Ito manga. In recent years, Ito has chosen to (or possible been asked to) adapt a handful of classic novels by Japanese and Western writers from prose into manga. These are longer stories that tell extended, interconnected horror stories. The first is his longform graphic novels. Junji Ito manga comes in three distinct forms. Read More: Essential Horror Manga Junji Ito Manga Books Through Junji Ito’s manga, he forces us to confront the demons of his imagination, and it seems like he enjoys it. While his stories of terror share much in common with Lovecraft, Umezu, and even writers like Kobo Abe and Stephen King, it’s Ito’s distinct ability to bring what he imagines to life in staggering, chilling detail. The fact that Ito is a mangaka is the at the core of his uniqueness and his ability to stand out. Lovecraft is that he dares to draw them as well as write them. What takes Junji Ito’s manga one step beyond even the stories of H.P. There’s a sense that these writers dare to describe what should never be described. Lovecraft.Īfter reading such Junji Ito manga stories as The Thing That Drifted Ashore and The Enigma of Emigara Fault, the Lovecraft influence can be seen as clear as day.īoth of these horror legends share an uncanny approach to the impossible, the unknowable, the otherworldly. Speaking of imagination, Junji Ito’s influence stretches from other horror manga legends like Kazuo Umezu, author of the infamous Orochi: Blood, all the way to the previously mentioned originator of eldritch horror literature H.P. It took a little more time before he was able to break free of the 9-5 grind and dedicate his time, efforts, and imagination fully to his manga creation. Here’s a writer that lives and breathes horror and terror.īefore becoming a full-time writer, and during the writing and release of Tomie, Junji Ito worked as a dental assistant. That’s Ito’s style, and it’s what sets him apart from the rest. Unlike other popular Japanese writers like Haruki Murakami, whose debut works are often overlooked today, Ito’s earlier works are still treasured.Įverything that Ito publishes is in the form of manga which he writes and draws himself.Įven the Junji Ito manga that doesn’t fit neatly into the horror genre still has elements of the uncanny and the unsettling in its illustration. This horror manga was published when Ito was only 24 and, despite it being his debut publication, it remains one of his most popular manga. His debut horror book - which we’ll discuss below - was Tomie. ![]() ![]() While Japan has a strong history of crime and mystery writing, as well as horror writing, Junji Ito still stands head-and-shoulders above the rest. ![]() Lovecraft.Inside and outside of his home country, Junji Ito’s manga is celebrated as the best of Japanese horror writing. Ito's influences include classic horror manga artists Kazuo Umezu and Hideshi Hino, as well as authors Yasutaka Tsutsui and H.P. His titles include Tomie and Uzumaki, which have been adapted into live-action films Gyo, which was adapted into an animated film and his short story collections Fragments of Horror, Shiver and Frankenstein, all of which are available from VIZ Media. As the madness spreads, the inhabitants of Kurozu-cho are pulled ever deeper into a whirlpool from which there is no return! About the Author: Junji Ito made his professional manga debut in 1987 and since then has gone on to be recognized as one of the greatest contemporary artists working in the horror genre. It manifests itself in everything from seashells and whirlpools in water to the spiral marks on people's bodies, the insane obsessions of Shuichi's father and the voice from the cochlea in our inner ear. According to Shuichi Saito, the withdrawn boyfriend of teenager Kirie Goshima, their town is haunted not by a person or being but by a pattern: uzumaki, the spiral, the hypnotic secret shape of the world. Kurozu-cho, a small fogbound town on the coast of Japan, is cursed. ![]()
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