I liked this better than the first volume, because we now see the Buddha growing up, childhood through adolescence, seeing how he separates himself from his (apparent) destiny to become king, and marry in caste, to his rejection of caste, to his destiny to become a monk. His spiritual, ideological transformation, in part through connections to ascetics and other wise men he meets who all seem to know from the start that he is special, Going to be Great, most can see it. I'm also sort of seeing less the cartoony side of manga, though it is there to lighten our biographical tome load, and helps most readers, young readers, maybe, but it still undermines MY appreciation for the book as a whole, even if I get his strategy. And he has plenty of thoughtful and conventional and smart narrative strategies for keeping us engaged, including the pursuit of love, battles... both enlightening and entertaining. Again, sometimes breathtakingly detailed art of Indian/Nepali landscapes in contrast to cartoony manga characters, but real (fictional) characters emerge to blend with the historical Buddha and others, a satisfying blend...