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424 pages
First published August 11, 1983
This series only gets better. It has slowly turned from a wacky adventure story with Buddhist overtones into a strange and multifaceted spiritual epic. It is particularly beautiful the way in which Tezuka picks up threads from the opening volumes. It seems so long ago that characters like Devadatta, Tatta and Naradatta were introduced to us, and they return to the narrative on waves of nostalgia.
Tezuka is the master of the panel. He shapes and arranges them so creatively on the page. They slant, slide, break open, alternate between stunning cinematic landscapes and surreal cartoonish iconography, they sometimes draw attention to themselves, and are sometime invisible containers for immersive art.
Looking forward to the final volume.