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Hardcover The Twelve Kingdoms, Volume 1: Sea of Shadow Book

ISBN: 1598169467

ISBN13: 9781598169461

The Twelve Kingdoms, Volume 1: Sea of Shadow

(Book #1 in the The Twelve Kingdoms (7 books edition) Series)

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Acceptable*

*Best Available: (missing dust jacket)

$173.49
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Book Overview

Yoko Nakajima's life has been fairly ordinary - until Keiki, a young man with golden hair, tells her that she is his master and must return to their kingdom. With the help of a magic sword and a magic... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Worth the Wait

I really enjoyed the anime and really regreted that I would never get to read the story the TV series was based on. Well, Tokyopop answered the prayers of fans. The story is written for teenagers, but still enjoyable for adults. If you're tired of the same old fantasy based on European tales, then you'll like this world set in a world of twelve kingdoms based on China. But also very different-for instance all creatures are born from certain trees, rather than from the bodies of their parents. Since, I saw the extras on the DVD, I knew that the book did not have certain characters, and frankly, I like not having them around. In the anime they served a certain purpose, but that purpose is served in the narration of the book. This allows the pace to be quicker, as the young queen learns about her new world. For those who worry about yet another book in which an ordinary teenager becomes an extraordinary gifted one in another world-you need not worry. Her world is pretty tough and she gets into a lot of trouble and danger,there is lots of edge-of-seat action. I really enjoyed this book for the action, likable characters and a whole new fantasy world.

A rare gem - not just for teens

12 Kingdoms: Shadow of the Moon, a Sea of Shadows (full japanese title) is a book about Yoko Nakajima and her transition from ordinary japanese schoolgirl to a ruler in a distant fantasy world. Other reviewers had described Yoko's story in more detail so I won't go into it. This book has been released in Japan about 10 years ago and then was animated in 2002. While chronologically it is not the first book in the series, but it starts the story of Yoko Nakajima and it is also the starting point for the anime series. Fans of the later should be familiar with ongoing events, but there are some noted differences in the book. Overall 12 Kingdoms reminds me very much of a Japanese version of Lord of the Rings. And it is a damn good one. Not just because of it's epic proportions and fantasy theme but for it's outstanding quality and attention to details. There is a lot of going on inside the characters and Yoko's internal journey is far more interesting than her surrounding fantasy landscape. The moral problems she faces are relevant for all ages and nationalities: like accepting your dark side, choosing to answer with love to violence and deception, what does it take to be a leader. It is a rare gem indeed - highly recommended for all readers and not just for teens. I am even tempted to re-read it in original Japanese, though it is not an easy task to do yet after 1,5 years of study as my third foreign language ;).

Sea of Shadow - a must read.

The Twelve Kingdoms: Sea of Shadow is the first of hopefully many English translations of stories in the Twelve Kingdoms. This particular story deals with Yoko and the journey she takes from an insignificant school girl to a person worthy and capable of her destiny. The author's ability to bring her characters to life is top-notch. The presentation of the novel is wonderful. The illustrations from the Kodansha White Heart edition are included and appropriately placed. The novel, happily, does not have the jagged page edges that have been appearing with more frequency. The overall presentaton is pleasing to the eye and touch. The translation seems to be loyal to the original, and the translator made (in my opinion) usually appropriate decisions as to when to leave the original Japanese word/Twelve Kingdom local jargon and when to translate the word to a literal English meaning. I do take some issue with specific word translations (Emperor->King, sage->wizard), but over all, the prose is engaging and well constructed. <br /> <br />As far as readability and age level go, I will compare it with the later Harry Potter stories (books 4+). The book is written in the 3rd person point of view. The vocabulary is definitely later high school/college vocabulary, and the sentence structures are relatively simple. The amount of description contained in the story requires some careful attention to reading. Though the sentences are usually not overly complex in syntax and form, the complexity of the prose will probably deter some of the younger or weaker readers (age 15 and below). From the beginning there is a generous amount of blood and gore, and those sensitive to such imagry should probably not read this book. <br /> <br />The idea of destiny and fate is paramount in the Twelve Kindgoms, where the will of the Heavens is believed to (and certainly seems to) hold sway. In order to properly appreciate the path that destiny takes, the story should be read at least twice. In the beginning Yoko is a baby - dependent on the protection of her environment. Her parents, who make sure she doesn't stand out, and the safe, clean, well-fed environment of modern Japanese society. Throughout the novel we can take part in the amazing growth that Yoko takes as she attempts to be self-sufficient, forming (bad and good) social connections, making mistakes, and learning how to be independent and true to herself in the end.

The Twelve Kingdoms

Seeing how The Twelve Kingdoms is my favorite anime series ever, you can imagine how excited I was to hear that America would finally be getting the novels which spawned the show. This book covers the first 14 episodes, aka the first 3 DVDs of the series. You'll notice a few major changes, most noticable being the characters of Sugimoto and Asano, which played a much larger role in the anime. But with them being absent, this makes Yuko's journey much more hopeless and depressing in my opinion... A difference that I enjoyed very much. Sadly, the TV show was never finished, and i'm told even the novel series does not have a proper ending. However, it has neither been confirmed nor denied (to my knowledge at least) that will be an 8th installment to the novels, and therefore could inspire a continuation to the anime if done. Needless to say this is the best read i've had in quite a while, and will sit proudly on my shelf. I'm hoping we get to see at least one more novel before the year ends, which should cover the next 7 episodes of the anime.

Never thought I'd see it

Some time ago I saw the anime version of 12 Kingdoms, which I'd found to be one of the most brilliant and enjoyable anime series I'd ever seen. So it doesn't take much imagination to understand how dreadfully disappointed I was to see that it was never completed. The anime covered only four of the seven story arcs and unless the original novels were ever translated, there was little hope that I would ever see the ending of this wonderful series. That has changed now that Tokyopop is translating the novels too, so I'm more determined than ever to find out what happens at the conclusion. At the beginning the main character, Yoko Nakajima, is the person everyone imagines when they hear the phrase "good girl". She is polite, well mannered, obedient to her parents, has a lot of friends, does well in school and is even the class president. Everything that one could ask for in a high school teenager's life, right? Wrong. In the night time recently Yoko has been tormented by frightful nightmares, which has made her tired and very unhappy. Then one day after a particularly embarrassing day at school, a strange man shows up at Yoko's school. He kneels on the floor in front of Yoko and swears his allegiance to her. Completely perplexed Yoko does nothing, however the man (called Keiki) is more than persistant and demands that she accept, warning her of great danger that quickly approaches. Scared and not knowing what to do Yoko accepts Keiki's oath as a great battle ensues between demons, Yoko, and Keiki's mythical beast servants. Fast and furious are the events and before Yoko knows what is happening, she is carried off through a "shoku" - a storm that forms a bridge between Yoko's world and the world that Keiki comes from. The battle concludes, but Yoko wakes up the next day alone and stranded on a strange seashore. Keiki and his servants are nowhere to be found, and neither are Yoko's demonic enemies. Yoko is left to fend for herself in a completely alien world with only a sword and a Hinman (spirtual being) called Joyu that Keiki had infused into Yoko to enable her to defend herself. Being a visitor from the sea - a "Kaikyaku" - makes Yoko a hunted criminal in the new land she finds herself in, so every day is a trial just to survive for Yoko as she faces enemies everywhere - beasts, demons and the most cunning of all enemies: humans. Utterly miserable, Yoko cries every night wanting to go home to her unhappy but "safe" life. Indeed she is a pathetic victim, however her life on the run changes her slowly. With visions shown by the sword Keiki gave her, and strange monkey-like being, Yoko discovers her true self including her own dark side. Much of this first volume of the series "Sea of Shadow" deals with Yoko's transformation from a meek child of a girl into a fierce demon slayer. It is a rather insightful and inward journey as much as it is an outward journey through a strange land for the reader. Fuyumi Ono creates a richly detailed and real-to-lif
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