Kekkaishi Volumes 4-6

By Yellow Tanabe. Released in Japan by Shogakukan, serialized in the magazine Shonen Sunday. Released in North America by Viz.

The second omnibus edition of Kekkaishi continues the demon hunting plotline of the first, and adds such popular shonen tropes as the elite older brother who the hero looks up to but is also jealous of, as well as the grumpy new guy who insists he can do everything himself. Both are in the ‘I will not be nice to you as you are TOO WEAK’ school of characters, so Yoshimori is having an especially difficult time.

Of course, Yoshimori is NOT actually too weak, he’s simply too inexperienced and too eager to use his power as a blunt object. Many times throughout the volume, characters are impressed with how long he can keep his kekkai going, and how powerful they are. Of course, Masamori, his elder brother, really is pretty awesome in his own right, and demonstrates several times in this omnibus his coolness under fire. Judging by how he deals with both his little brother and Yomi, the minor villain from an earlier arc, he seems to favor the carrot and stick approach to learning.

One thing that intrigued me greatly throughout these three volumes was Yoshimori’s decision to seal off the Karasumori site. Given it’s what’s attracting all the demons they have to keep fighting, it’s a good idea at its core, but the 87 billion things wrong with it also make themselves known. To his credit, Yoshimori knows this, and spends a lot of the next couple of volumes trying to figure out the secrets of the site and how he can possibly accomplish such a thing. Seeing him deep in thought is also quite amusing, as he tends to squat down with this constipated look on his face – it’s no wonder Tokine figures out he’s hiding something right off the bat.

And then there’s Gen, who would appear to be the new regular character. He has ties with Yoshimori’s brother, and would appear to be there to be the ‘darker’ version of the hero, especially as we see the classic ‘he’s a wastrel who’s absolutely nothing like me – oh wait, except that we’re a lot alike after all’. I liked what his fighting revealed about Yoshimori, and how he’s the sort who thunders ahead without thinking, but as the battle rages gets craftier and more tactical. As for Gen’s own issues, briefly seen here, clearly they’re going to become more important in future arcs.

There’s more to talk about, like all the politics and rivalries going on around the land, and Tokine, who is a presence throughout the book, even if I don’t have as much to say about her this time. But as with Volume 1, Kekkaishi is a good example of solid, well-written shonen manga. It’s not breaking any new ground, but it’s exciting and fun to read. It also features one of the creepiest ‘retired professor’ types I’ve ever seen. He’s probably evil. (Remember, kids, always judge by appearances!)

Kekkaishi Volumes 1-3

By Yellow Tanabe. Released in Japan by Shogakukan, serialized in the magazine Shonen Sunday. Released in North America by Viz.

It is a known fact that one simply cannot read everything. Oh, maybe it was possible back in the 1990s, when most things were still 32-page floppies, but these days there just isn’t the time and the money. And so certain things get put aside. And then, after a while, when you discover that all your friends are talking about them, you go back and discover… hey, when did that get to be 33 volumes? Now, of course, it’s too intimidating to try to read all that.

So Viz has taken to doing omnibuses. Unlike the fancy large-format VIZBIG works, these have no added extras or fancy color pages. In fact, the pages are actually of lesser paper, in order to make them thinner and fit them on the shelves. This is purely a case of ‘we are re-releasing these in bunches of three to try to get more readers who didn’t buy the first time’. They first did it with One Piece, and it seemed to work out well, so we now get four more omnibus re-releases. The super-popular Naruto, Bleach, and Fullmetal Alchemist… and this one, Kekkaishi, a Shonen Sunday title that just ended in Japan earlier this year.

Like most action-oriented Sunday titles of recent years, Kekkaishi never quite caught on sales-wise the way that Naruto and its fellow Jump titles did. It didn’t get an anime premiere in North America until last year, and then it was on Adult Swim rather than Naruto and One Piece’s kiddie slots. (Of course, one may argue that in the case of One Piece, having that slot is what killed it for North America.) Sales aren’t bad exactly – it’s still coming out on a bimonthly basis, which is more than I can say for Hayate the Combat Butler – but certainly an omnibus would be a good idea to show people why this manga deserves more attention.

The plot revolves around Yoshimori Sumimura, a demon hunter from a long line of demon hunters, who uses his powers to capture and eliminate rogue demons. He’s helped in this by his familiar Madarao, a demonic dog spirit, and his childhood friend/crush/rival Tokine Yukimura, the daughter of a rival family of demon hunters, who’s older than him and better at demon hunting – at least at first. Yoshimori has a huge amount of raw power, but tends to simply use it as a hammer most of the time. After a first chapter showing him as a rather reluctant hunter when he was a child, the manga picks up on him in 8th grade, after a rtaumatic incident left him with a much greater resolve to be a good demon hunter.

Except… what he *really* wants to be is a patissier. Yes, his lifelong ambition is to make cakes. The interesting thing about this is that it’s not all that belittled or shown to be a mistake. Yes, he’s a demon hunter *now*, but just because he inherited his family’s ridiculous amount of power, does he have to let that drive his existence? What’s more, for a 14-year-old, the boy’s great at making cakes. Given so much of shonen manga is about dreams, it’s great to see the manga portray his ambitions in a positive light.

I also really liked the heroine, Tokine. Making her two years older than Yoshimori is a great move, in that it allows her to be the one more in control and reserved – as well as allowing any feelings she may have for him to remain in the background. I’ve no idea whether romance will feature in this manga, but for the moment Tokine seems to simply see Yoshimori as an exasperating friend with a ton of power who doesn’t use it all that well – which turns out to be the opposite of her own powers, which aren’t all that colossal but are very precise. There’s a great shot of the two of them separately training in an effort to surpass the other. And yes, inevitably there is a chapter that shows that Tokine is terrified of bugs, the standard “Oh look, she’s human after all” type of thing. But it’s funny.

The stories themselves in the three volumes we get here are very much meat-and-potatoes shonen, combining the monster-of-the-week with longer arcs that reveal more of the backstory behind the two main families. I particularly liked the attention that the villains received, with even the nastiest of them being shown great sympathy. Viz also has a solid translation here as well, though I did note that Yoshimori’s familiar was referred to as female in the first volume – possibly as they hadn’t read Volume 3 yet, where Tanabe-san reveals that he’s male – and gay! Extra bonus points to Tanabe-san for a gay demon dog, something I think is unique to shonen so far.

There weren’t any totally amazing moments in these first three volumes, but everything was very solidly good. For a shonen series that’s just finding its feet, this is a triumph – most shonen series I can think of start off very slowly and awkwardly, not really getting into a groove until several volumes in. The characters are less eccentric than your standard Jump heroes, but I think that makes them more realistic and human. I definitely want to read more Kekkaishi after these three volumes, though, and urge Jump readers who are looking for a nice change of pace from ninjas and pirates to give it a shot as well.