Monday, July 29, 2024

Giga Town: A Guide to Manga Iconography! - A Review

 I received a free ARC of this book from NetGalley in exchange for a fair review.

Title: Giga Town: A Guide to Manga Iconography!

Author: Fumiyo Kouno

Rating: 5/5

It's that time of the month again -- time for some book reviews for NetGalley. Today's book is Giga Town: A Guide to Manga Iconography! by mangaka Fumiyo Kouno. Published by Udon Entertainment and available September 3, 2024, Giga Town is a unique encyclopedia of the symbolism and artistic shorthand of manga. Called manpu, these additions to the base art express movement, emotion, sound, and many other things-- in his introduction to the book, Matt Alt describes them as "a visual code for understanding the ways in which Japanese artists see and portray the world."

This visual code is illustrated in a series of 4-koma (four panel) comic strip, each strip illustrating a particular manpu. Helping us understand the symbolism are a cast of frogs, rabbits, and monkeys as a tribute to the Chōjū-jinbutsu-giga, a series of ancient Japanese scrolls depicting whimsical animals acting like humans, often considered a spiritual predecessor to modern manga. This collection of manuscripts is what gives the book its name, Giga Town. Each comic is accompanied by a short explanation of the symbol, with added cultural context when needed. The illustrations are charming and the skill in which Kouno recreates the Chōjū-giga animals is impressive, she's a great mangaka best known for In This Corner of the World. 

This guide will prove indispensable to manga readers, whether seasoned otaku or new fans. I especially liked the visual component-- too often I read books that only describe visual media and don't include examples. Giga Town understands that manga is a visual medium and any discussion of it needs example images. The cute illustrations are fun and follow in the footsteps of early Japanese art will be appealing to both newcomers and people already interested in the historical art. I really enjoyed my time with this guide and already hope I can swing this as nonfiction manga, rather than a nonfiction work on art, so I can order it for my library collection.