Inio Asano doesnt really need an introduction to most manga readers if you dont know his name its quite likely you know his magnum opus Goodnight Punpun. Its probably one of the most famous manga without an adaptation of any kind and in fact none of his works have yet to be turned into anime. Yet Asano still remains relevant in the animanga landscape. Hes mostly well known for his melancholic dramas stories about realistic people struggling to find their position in the world. Goodnight Punpun finds our author trying his best to write a pessimistic dark and depressive story about a boy with a chronic depression. Yet even in this he finds time to make sure his characters are grounded in reality that we can understand and relate to most of them. His currently ongoing work Dead Dead Demons Dedededestruction is a scifi about spaceships and alien invasions yet it too focuses more on these characters their emotions and their relationships. While these two are to me the best that Asano has to offer before he made those he achieved some success with a smaller manga a manga that we will be talking about today Solanin. https://wetellatale.files.wordpress.com/2017/04/sol1.jpg?w=620 I first found Solanin when I was in my early twenties and I feel like thats important to note because Solanin is about your early twenties. Its a weird time in your life because when youre in your teens youre growing up youre developing yourself into who you will be from there on out and you kinda get lost with your growth. I felt like an adult when I was seventeen or eighteen I felt like I was mature enough to face the world. But four five years later? I felt the complete opposite I felt lost I felt like I wasnt an adult at all and it took me a while to find myself in a position where I could say I did. It felt like I had failed at growing up I was failing college I was working at a call center getting paid less than the minimum wage I was feeling useless and alone. A great part of what helped me overcome that phase of my life was my friends who were always there for me. A first really. This was the perfect state of mind to read Solanin. Solanin isnt a recreation of my situation it talks about Meiko a office worker who isnt really happy with her job but doesnt really have any other ambition or dream and her boyfriend Taneda who doesnt really have a job at all. Tanedas dream is to have success with the band he formed with his friends. Friends that are also a bit lost on what they want from the future. While Kenichi is still in college due to flunking a year Rip works in his dads drugstore a safe place sure but not really his dream. Whats so good about Solanin from the start is that it shows that a lot of people can feel lost at this age that its normal to feel so it doesnt matter that you have a dream youre trying hard to follow that you have a stable job or that youre still lost in college. This is the time where life really starts and the time where it first feels like you cant go back that maybe you screwed up and fucked your only chance at life. Similar to most of Asanos works Solanin drops its messages with beautifully written monologues and dialogues between these characters. Each of them offers a different point of view or opinion. https://http2.mlstatic.com/DNQNP666188MLB25588443034052017O.jpg Yet contrary to some of his more recent output Solanin doesnt go out without a flicker of hope. Sure the events in the second half of the manga arent necessarily the happiest of times but there is a message here a message that maybe its not too late and maybe its okay to not have your childhood dream come true. Theres more to life than being famous. Theres friends theres moments theres smaller dreams. Theres definitely happiness in that life and you should cherish it. But to say that Solanin is a good manga because of having a message that I needed to hear when I did isnt really enough. Sure its part of the reason why I love it so much but the message wouldve failed if the execution wasnt on par with it. Solanin works because it has a great cast of characters. Its a short manga only two volumes long but its quite enough the first volume alone does a great job setting up the characters their motivations and their relationships with one another. It helps that they feel familiar theyre not super intelligent or extremely quirky characters they are a store clerk... an office lady a guitarist of a dying band. Its natural to associate them with either yourself or people you know. Yet this doesnt mean that the story is boring at all on the contrary while yes the first half is a bit uneventful its in the second half that this manga really shines and without spoiling it it does lead to a pretty satisfying and incredibly emotional finale. A finale that feels emotional not because of the message but because of how real their friendship feels throughout the 29 chapters of Solanin. When you reach the ending you cant help but cheer for these characters and their dreams. https://i0.wp.com/www.garotasgeeks.com/wpcontent/uploads/2015/02/solaningroup.jpg The artwork also does a great job at conveying their emotions. Solanin sees Asano still perfecting his style but the cartoonishly simple characters contrasting with the realistic backgrounds still works. His characters are simple in design but yet they are drawn in a way that you can always know what their current emotions are. It makes you want to smile when smile cry when cry and scream when they scream. https://i0.wp.com/elpalomitron.com/wpcontent/uploads/2019/01/ReseC3B1adeSolanindeInioAsanoInoueElPalomitrC3B3n.jpg?resize=7002C274ssl=1 When compared to the rest of his works I wouldnt say that Solanin is Asanos best. Punpun and Dead Dead Demons are way more ambitious and manage to be incredibly solid works that I would put on my Top 3 manga without hesitating. Solanin is in comparison simpler yet I think theres still some merit in that. To me Solanin was always the easiest to consume and more importantly to relate to. It shouldnt be dismissed to fans of Asano and I think it should be the first manga for people who are trying to get into the authors manga. And for all of those getting lost just know that we all end up finding the way somehow.
95 /100
101 out of 104 users liked this review