Baccano!: 1934 Peter Pan in Chains: Finale

By Ryohgo Narita and Katsumi Enami. Released in Japan by ASCII Mediaworks. Released in North America by Yen On. Translated by Taylor Engel.

At last we reach the finale of this arc. This being a Narita book, all of the plot bombs that were set up in the prior two volumes go off here, and the result is very satisfying. You get the sense of people growing and changing over the course of the series. Christopher points this out himself, as he notes that after spending time with Ricardo, he doesn’t want to kill people anymore. Meanwhile, Rail, driven to the point of madness and despair, discovers that new families and friends are just as good as the old ones. And Firo once again reveals his dark side to us… but it doesn’t last long. Firo is still Firo, the Peter Pan of the title, and his philosophy allows him to stand up against the murderous Leeza, and also save her. There are a few threats and nasty things going on, but for the most part this is a very feel-good sort of book. You leave it with a smile on your face.

There are a few intertwined plot beats that I really liked. On his train to Chicago, Isaac gets into conversation with Sham, talking philosophy as Sham tries to deal with the face that he’s betraying Huey. Isaac’s “do good things, worry about consequences later” attitude is puzzling to Sham, but not to the reader, who’s seen that over the course of the series. And, as we see, it’s not just Isaac. When Rail tries to end it all by jumping off the top of the Nebula building, Jacuzzi rushes in to stop it even if it means his own life, because that’s just the sort of person he is. And then Nice grabs him, and Miria steps in… hell, even Lua, the most passive character in all of Baccano!, is ready to leap in there to save Rail’s life. It’s a great moment. And, of course, it’s resolved by Isaac, arriving in the nick of time to do what he said he would earlier and joyously reunite with Miria.

It’s not all heartwarming, of course. Ladd’s violence can be terrifying, particularly if you’re Leeza, and it’s nice to see him and Firo in such opposition. The method of Huey escaping Alcatraz is somewhat revolting, and the sort of thing only Huey would even think of doing. And Nice runs into the mob, and her thoughts of how they might deal with her and send her back to Jacuzzi make you shudder. This is a fun world to read about, but a highly dangerous one to live in. That said, in the end this is about not destroying things. Rail doesn’t blow everything up with bombs in the end; Ladd decides to become “a model prisoner” so he can get out of jail sooner and return to Graham and Lua; Christopher and Graham each realize that killing each other is not really what they want. And Renee… well, OK, her ending isn’t so sweet, but there’s no denying she deserved everything she got. Narita loves his smiling amoral villains.

So what happens next? Well, it’s going to take a long time to find out, as we leave the world of the 1930s for a few books. Next time Baccano! goes back to Italy in the early 1700s, as we meet a young Huey Laforet and his burgeoning, if irritating, friendship with a certain Elmer C. Albatross.

O Maidens in Your Savage Season, Vol. 1

By Mari Okada and Nao Emoto. Released in Japan as “Araburu Kisetsu no Otomedomo yo” by Kodansha, serialization ongoing in the magazine Bessatsu Shonen Magazine. Released in North America by Kodansha Comics. Translated by Sawa Matsueda Savage.

As the years have gone by, it’s gotten harder and harder to pigeonhole titles into the genre that their magazine is purported to publish. Back in the day there was my “whatever Wings is” joke, but GFantasy, like most Square Enix titles, is for boys in theory only, and Kodansha’s Aria also seemed to slip in and out of genre. And now we have this, which would seem to be a shoujo title judging by the premise and cast, but runs in Bessatsu Shonen Magazine, which also hosted the artist’s former work, Forget Me Not (also licensed here by Kodansha). But the writer this time around is Mari Okada, who is famous for her screenplays (notably Anohana) and is now dipping her toe into manga, though I believe this series is also getting an anime later this year. And with all that said, perhaps it was put in Betsushonen because of its subject matter, as despite – or because of – the melodramatic title, this series is about sex entering the lives of its main cast.

The protagonists are the members of the school literature club, who are reading famous and notable books – many of which happen to feature sex scenes, which embarrasses some of them, particularly the prudish and repressed Sonezaki. The star of this first volume, though, is Onodera, a cute girl who happens to suffer from a tragic fate common to many cute girls in high school: her male childhood friend is a hottie. As such, she’s dealing with bullying that is leading her to pull away from him in hopes that it recedes. Things are not helped by the literature club’s steamy titles making her think more and more about her own burgeoning sexuality… and about Izumi’s, as she walks in on him masturbating and, unsurprisingly, can’t stop thinking about it. Is she in love? How does she deal with this? And what about Eseecross, the highly amusing euphemism the club comes up with for sex?

There are a lot of amusing moments in this book, particularly at the start, and mostly driven by the repressed to the point of hysteria Sonezaki. But mostly this runs on melodrama, which Okada is very good at creating, and the runaway emotions of teenagers, which she likewise excels in. Onodera’s dilemma may be something that we’ve read in countless stories before, but you never feel bored with the story, and it’s a compulsive page-turner. There’s also the sense it will be an ensemble piece – another girl, Hongo, is working on being a published author, and another, Sugawara, has been so pretty from a young age that she’s had to deal with creepers since childhood, and has to find ways to get them to back off. And Sonezaki has her own not-so-secret admirer, which leaves her in a complete tizzy.

This isn’t a mature title, but it’s definitely for older teens, with frank discussion of sex and sex euphemisms. That said, the story is very readable, and I definitely recommend it to fans of the authors or just folks who like watching young teens grow up and deal with maturity (and immaturity).

I Saved Too Many Girls and Caused the Apocalypse, Vol. 13

By Namekojirushi and Nao Watanuki. Released in Japan as “Ore ga Heroine o Tasukesugite Sekai ga Little Mokushiroku!?” by Hobby Japan. Released in North America digitally by J-Novel Club. Translated by Mana Z.

We’re starting to run out of series, and so it’s no surprise that we get a school festival here. In fact, it’s two school festivals, as Rekka’s school is combining forces with Hibiki’s school. In fact, this volume really seems to revel in having its cliches and lampshading them too: our heroes get trapped in a game, Rekka has to run around trying to find the key to stopping a bomb from going off; Rekka and Hibiki bump heads and (in the classic tradition) end up inside each other’s bodies, and finally Rekka has to deal with the architect of (almost) all of these, a fortune telling girl who is trying to take Makoto Naegi’s role of Ultimate Lucky Student… though the luck isn’t always welcome. Add to that trying to find room to cram in every single heroine, and you have a book that’s pretty packed despite (as always) a small page count.

Given how huge the cast is already, I am grateful that we once again only have two new heroines. Yorun is a standard RPG girl that the others meet when they’re trapped in a game world, and at first seems to be the same as the other NPCs, but there’s more to it than that, especially since they’re investigating this as a “cursed game” to begin with. The interesting thing about her story is also, to be fair, probably the book’s weak point: it’s not really resolved all that well. Yorun is “rescued” by Rekka, but has already lost damn near everything, and by the end of the novel still has no real clue how to go about getting it back. It feels dissatisfying… but at the same time it’s nice to see that Rekka and his team can’t do EVERYTHING.

The meat of the story lies with the second heroine, Touko, a fortune teller who challenges Rekka to various contests as she’s foreseen that he might actually be able to defeat her – something that no one has ever done as she has reality-warping powers that always make things work for her. The trouble with that is that she feels worse every time she uses them, as she knows that she can’t go nuts – she could literally end hunger, but what would that do to the world? Rekka’s solution to her story is not all that dramatic, but it doesn’t have to be: in the end Touko is sort of the Haruhi Suzumiya of this series, and her “being saved” involves showing her that the world is not, ultimately, as predictable or as small as she thought. It’s a rather sweet, low-key ending to this volume.

We’re three away from the end now, so I suspect that we’re going to get (slightly) more serious going forward. Little Apocalypse will never excite anyone, but it does its premise well, now that it’s mostly abandoned subverting the harem genre.