When it comes to art let it be it music books or even anime and manga Ive always found myself loving whats considered niche and underground. Today Im going to review a fairly unknown manga. A total of a stunning 60 people have completed it thus far despite the manga even being from 2016. Here goes nothing...
Description
The manga Im talking about is panpanyas Doubutsutachi or simply Animals if you prefer English titles to Romaji.
Animals while never being clearly explained since the main character is just referred to as Shoujo which just means Girl is what looks like the autobiography of the author herself telling her story as she grows up in the city that she was born in and eventually moves out to somewhere else. The narration is somewhat linear yet episodic and is at times exaggerated and turned into something surreal to keep it interesting and fun.
Speaking of surreal panpanyas artstyle also fits that description perfectly be it her drawing humans other than the main characters as either having normal bodies with giant heads with holes for mouths or as her drawing a platoon of raccoonlike animals you can see both on the cover and inside the manga to really basic and simple drawings of foreground objects and people placed on extremely beautiful and detailed backgrounds. I find this style to be really poetic and I think that each person who sees it will find a different hidden meaning of their own.
The chapters are mixed in length spanning from long ones at 20 pages each to as short as 2 or 3 pages and are also divided by what seem like pages of panpanyas diary narrating her daily life her discoveries of everyday yet interesting things and sometimes even fullpage panels depicting Shoujo throughout the city.
Thoughts
While I was reading it I found Animals to be a very unique and thoughtprovoking experience. The artstyle the storytelling the overall mood everything just clicked making me want to read even more.
The diary pages that divide the various characters are a nice break from the story which is calm relaxed and somewhat strangely nostalgic and while at first I was skipping through them I found myself going back to read them thoroughly as they really add a lot to the manga despite being completely unrelated to the story itself.
This manga and honestly this author in general are something Id definitely recommend getting into as the feeling that panpanyas stories give you and which I can only describe as nostalgic is priceless. This manga is an overall 9 out of 10 for me and a mustread for anyone that finds enjoyment in reading poetic and thoughtprovoking manga.
90
/100