Future diary

Sakae Esuno

Book - 2009

Yukiteru is a lonely student whose only hobby is the daily diary he keeps on his cell phone. But Yukiteru has a secret that nobody knows about -- his cell phone can tell the future.

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MANGA/Esuno/Future v. 1
vol. 1: 1 / 1 copies available
vol. 2: 1 / 1 copies available
vol. 3: 1 / 1 copies available
vol. 4: 1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor Comics MANGA/Esuno/Future v. 1 v. 1 Checked In
2nd Floor Comics MANGA/Esuno/Future v. 2 v. 2 Checked In
2nd Floor Comics MANGA/Esuno/Future v. 3 v. 3 Checked In
2nd Floor Comics MANGA/Esuno/Future v. 4 v. 4 Checked In
Subjects
Published
Los Angeles, Calif. : Tokyopop 2009-
Language
English
Main Author
Sakae Esuno (-)
Item Description
Reads from right to left.
First published in Japan in 2006 by Kadokawa Shoten Pub. Co., Tokyo.
"Mystery"--P. [4] of cover, v. 1.
Physical Description
v. : chiefly ill. ; 19 cm
Audience
Tokyopop age rating: OT; older teen, age 16+. May include mild sexuality, aggression, moderate language.
ISBN
9781427815576
9781427815583
9781427815590
9781427815606
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Future Diary, like Battle Royale and Gantz before it, belongs to the forced-fight-to-the-death subgenre of manga, full of capricious puppet masters and bloodthirsty school girls. Yukiteru is a sweet-natured loner who spends most of his time with his cellphone diary and his imaginary friend, the troublemaking deity Deus Ex Machina. The problem is that this trickster god is quite real and out of boredom has created a "game" in which mortals find that their cellphone diaries can predict the future and must use them to fight to the death. Oddly, the only contestant who seems to be bothered by this is Yukiteru. Of the others, his new friend, Yuno, finds it romantic since she's utterly in love and thrilled to protect him; Takao was already a serial killer; and Minene is cheerfully using it as an excuse to blow people up with improbable amounts of explosives. Esuno's art is sprightly, sweet and deceptively innocent. So much so that Minene, a murderous goth lolita gone wrong, is so disturbingly cute that it somehow rebounds and makes her even scarier. Perfect for teen readers who want their fights to the death less gory or who just really like cellphones. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved