Author:Jin Kobayashi
Cute Tsukamoto Tenma is desperately trying to help juvenile delinquent classmate Harima Kenji win the girl of his dreams: Tenma's friend Mikoto. But when Tenma hears Kenji say 'I love you' to someone else, she begins to have serious doubts about kenji's loyalties. Now, in an abandoned school in the middle of the woods on a rainy night, Tenma is ready to confront him one-on-one about his infidelities. Little does she know that she has totally misread the situation, and that the love-crazed punk has actually developed a hopeless crush on her!
Manga comics... have ignited graphic novel sales around the world
—— TimeA real treat for fans... an excellent translation as well as one of the most complete sets of reader notes I've ever seen on a manga
—— AnimericaSales of manga graphic novels are driving sales of all graphic novels in the bookstore market
—— Publishers WeeklyThe reigning king of the graphic travel memoir... Delisle's curiosity and amusement at the country's bizarre relationship with foreign visitors is equally funny and fascinating
—— Guardian, *Top 10 Funny Comic Books*A meditation on "impermanence" . . . emotionally compelling yet unsettling
—— AtlanticA gorgeous symphony
—— KirkusBeautiful, mesmerizing, a dazzling experiment in form . . . both bleak and vivid and more a work of art than a comic book
—— StarburstThe concept is stunningly simple, and in laying bare the universality of existence - its beauty, ugliness, and mundanity - it is utterly moving
—— BooklistMcGuire adds lavish color and some plot, but he preserves the captivating, uncanny sense of love, anger and tragedy flying across the centuries while staying in one place.
—— Mark AthikisOne of the most engaging graphic novel experiments in book form I've ever seen
—— Los Angeles TimesHere heightens our awareness of how much has gone before and is still to come
—— Independent (Best graphic novels of 2014)Rarely does a conceptual work seize the emotions like Here. Every moment seems insignificant compared with the massive sweep of time, and yet the most trivial actions take on an aching poignancy
—— NPRAlmost overwhelmingly poignant. His masterful sense of time and the power of the mundane makes this feel like the graphic novel equivalent of Terrence Malick's The Tree of Life
—— Publishers Weekly (starred review)Completely wonderful
—— MetroYou begin to appreciate McGuire's extraordinary command of history and pacing . . . the non-chronological arrangement seems faithful to how consciousness really works
—— FInancial Times WeekendA page-turning graphic novel… sharp, witty, deliciously observant and so exquisitely drawn it took my breath away. The perfect book for Christmas.
—— Jonathan Pugh , Daily MailThe visual and moral chiaroscuro of the novel, and its unflinching depiction of pathos and loneliness in the most and least privileged of social milieus, make it a strong contender, if not for the meretricious glitter of literary awards, then for the more lasting prize of inclusion in the canon of comic-strip masterpieces.
—— Jane Shilling , ProspectPosy Simmonds’s…line and way of telling a story are equally deft.
—— Evening Standard, *Summer Reads of 2019*