Stuff I Read – Kurosagi Corpse Delivery Service Vol 5
Well it’s back in the saddle with Kurosagi Corpse Delivery Service. It’s been a while, as Borders was out of just this volume and never restocked. Given the state of that company, I’m not exactly surprised. So lacking direct access to it through the book store I ordered it through Borders’ online store, which was cheap and offered free shipping because of my plus membership, so yippy on that. But then the volume took something like three weeks to arrive, in which time I had read two volumes of MPD psycho, two volumes of Pluto, five volumes of Cat Paradise, two volumes of Wolf’s Rain, a few volumes of Chi’s Sweet Home, and various other things. So it has been a while. Luckily this series is such that you don’t really need to know what is going in any larger story sense to understand and enjoy the episodes. The company has seen better days as this volume gets underway, and indeed it does feel like a bit of time has passed since the group managed to turn a profit. Still, the show must go on.
The first delivery revolves around a man who dies while the group is performing for a group of elderly people, and one of them passes away. It turns out that the man is from a ghost town, or at least a town reported to be a ghost town, where someone killed all of the inhabitants. This is actually quite straightforward in the end, and it turns out that a soldier snapped once he had returned home and killed pretty much everyone in the village, only to be killed by the then young man who passed away at the beginning of the story. Not really a whole lot in the way of story, though there were some neat moments, like when it is explained how dead people and turn into soap. It was really more trying to say something about war and that kind of thing and just didn’t move the way some of the other stories did. Luckily the second delivery revolves around mummies, and introduces a new mummy character working for the company’s rivals. In this story the rival company (from the second volume) have gotten into the swank world of mummification, and the delivery guys come across a fake mummy. After a bit of help from the living mummy, they find out that the mummy was made by a professor at the university to be sold off to fund his research into legitimate mummies. This one again fell a little short, but was interesting and had some cool scenes in it.
The third delivery was probably my favorite of this volume, and got into motion as the group starts raising money by becoming professional mourners. They join forces with an old woman who has the power to make people cry, and begin to uncover a very odd set of deaths. Here we see at one time the capitalist methods being used to get the company more money. But at the same time someone else took those same tenants and decided that they could start making more money by killing popular bloggers and then running shuttles to their funerals. It is nice and twisted and shows how those self-impowering but morally bankrupt capitalist ideas can be used for incredibly horrible things. The last delivery revolves around cryonics, or cryogenics, or whatever you want to call it. Freezing people. It is another stronger delivery as the team finds a bunch of heads in a cave and find a case of fraud. This is also the delivery that puts the team in actual risk, as the guys get stuck in a freezer and it is up to the women to bust them out. It also has the most humor with the ending, with the decapitated heads rolling after the man who fooled them and getting stuck in ice, on display in the future as a very odd scene.
Overall, though, this is another rather mediocre volume of the series. Not that it isn’t enjoyable, but the volume really doesn’t do anything new, and it leaves me wishing that more would start happening with what there is of an overarching story. The ghost that haunts the main character is still mysterious and even the glimpses we get of what might be plot development lack clarification. It is still fun to read, and I still enjoy it, but I don’t want it to get stuck in the same old rut. I want the group to evolve, and really they need to do something as their company is pretty much dying. They manage to turn a small profit in two of these mysteries, but really it seems like they would have to do more than that to survive. More, I want some sort of change, some sort of story, to immerge that will prompt these characters to grow a bit. I’m all for episodic storytelling, but there still have to be character developments, and I find that a bit lacking of late. Still, I consider this a good manga, and I still give it a 7.25/10.