
Yona of the Dawn, Volume 1
Yona of the Dawn
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- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی

December 12, 2016
On Princess Yona’s 16th birthday, she’s trying to plot a course through her marriage proposals—until a coup forces her to flee her castle with a childhood friend, the edgy General Hak. Add in a likable villain she loves and you have a shojo love triangle ready to rumble... but not much rumbling happens. The story’s fictitious setting is reminiscent of the fantastic ancient China in the classic reverse harem manga Fushigi Yuugi, but without the humor or the magic. In fact, aside from the eye candy of the costumes, the book is lacking all around: the plot and characters are simple and stale. By the end of this first volume, Yona hasn’t developed personal agency or become the warrior the cover suggests. However, what story there is has good pacing and layout, and the art is high quality. There’s promise for the future volumes, if Kusanagi (NG Life) can bring the characters to life.

November 1, 2016
Gr 8 Up-In the very first image of Princess Yona, a beautiful illustration depicting her cloaked and standing powerfully against a dawn-lit sky, readers immediately get a sense of who she is. This is a confident, courageous, and capable young woman with the weight of the world on her shoulders. But she wasn't always like this. She used to be carefree, a princess of a peaceful kingdom, doted on by her family. But a betrayal and a coup force Yona to flee, along with her childhood friend, the brash yet kind General Hak. This first volume spends its time well, establishing the characters through differing perspectives, interactions, and flashbacks, as well as the overall feel of the series. In particular, moments of remembered sweetness and even levity temper the tragic tone. The art is strong, with Kusanagi tweaking the shoujo style as needed and delivering on the emotional notes. To help readers equate the setting with the place of inspiration-ancient Korea-she puts a fair amount of care into the period details of buildings and clothing. VERDICT This title shows great promise as an emotional coming-of-age story, perfect for lovers of fantasy and historical romance. Especially recommended for fans of Yuu Watase's "Fushigi Yugi" or Sorata Akizuki's "Snow White with the Red Hair."-Rachel Forbes, formerly at Oakville Public Library, Ont.
Copyright 2016 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

fluffybear - I have this book and want the second book. This story is about a girl named Yona, a princess. She lives with her father, the king, and sir general Hak. Hak is eighteen and is Yona's protector/guard and he is usually a little rude. One day, Yona's closest cousin, Su-Won, comes to visit for her (as we say,) sweet sixteen. This is weird, but Yona (I think) is in love with Su-Won. Her father, on the other hand, wants her to marry Hak. This all changes though, after Su-Won kills her father. "He had been crying tears of joy at the celebration and is now dead, almost the same way my mother died." -Yona When Yona discovers that Su-Won did it, Yona hates Su-Won. She discovers his evil plan and goes to war with him, Hak fighting for her side. (please ignore any misspelling underlines on the Chinese/Japanese names) Su-Won is after Yona so he may slay her and take over the kingdom. (evil, right?) When Hak and Yona take off on their journey to keep Yona safe, Su-Won takes over the kingdom.
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