Junji Ito's Cat Diary: Yon & Mu Collector's Edition

by Junji Ito

Hardcover

Status

Available

Call number

PN6790.J33 I85913

Publication

KODANSHA COMICS, Edition: Collectors, 127 pages

Description

"Hell-o-kitty! Master of Japanese horror manga Junji Ito presents a series of hissterical tales chronicling his real-life trials and tribulations of becoming a cat owner. Junji Ito, as J-kun, has recently built a new house and has invited his finance, A-ko, to live with him. Little did he know ... his blushing bride-to-be has some unexpected company in tow--Yon, a ghastly-looking family cat, and Mu, an adorable Norwegian forest cat. Despite being a dog person, J-kun finds himself purrsuaded by their odd cuteness and thus begins his comedic struggle to gain the affection of his new feline friends" --

User reviews

LibraryThing member aratiel
Super cute drawings and depictions of cats doing cat things. The rest of the art was weird, and the artist's wife not having pupils was incredibly creepy. Which makes sense, because apparently the artist also draws horror manga.
LibraryThing member villemezbrown
A Japanese master of horror brings the proper level of creepiness to sharing a house with a cat. (Dogs rule!)
LibraryThing member PhoenixTerran
Junji Ito's Cat Diary: Yon & Mu was one of the manga releases I was most looking forward to in 2015. Junji Ito is primarily known for horror manga–his Uzumaki is one of my personal favorites in the genre–but in 2008 he had the opportunity to serialize an autobiographically-inspired manga based
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on his experiences living in a house with two cats. The result was Junji Ito's Cat Diary, ultimately collected in a single, slim volume and published in Japan in 2009. The English-language edition of the manga released by Kodansha Comics in 2015 also includes the contributions made by Ito and his wife (Ayako Ishiguro) to the 2011 Tohoku Earthquake relief anthology Teach Me, Michael! A Textbook in Support of Feline Disaster Victims. I thoroughly enjoy Ito's brand of unusual horror and I, too, happen to have the privilege of feline companionship, so I was very interested in Junji Ito's Cat Diary. I expected it to be a manga that I would enjoy and I wasn't disappointed; I absolutely loved it.

J-kun is the proud owner of a new house in pristine condition from floor to ceiling and he's looking forward to living there with his soon-to-be wife A-ko. What he didn't initially realize was that by inviting her to live with him he would also become host to two more guests: Yon and Mu. J-kun is convinced that Yon, one of A-ko's family's cats, is cursed. He's a strange-looking feline with skull-like markings that would seem to confirm J-kun's suspicions. Mu, on the other hand, is an adorable kitten with a pedigree and cute enough to melt even J-kun's dog-loving heart. And so begins J-kun's trials and tribulations as a keeper of cats, slowly falling under their spell as he grieves the loss of his perfectly-kept house. He warms up to both Yon and Mu, but they don't quite exhibit the same amount of warmth in return, more often than not preferring A-ko's company. But J-kun is determined–one day he, too, will enjoy Yon and Mu's love and affection.

Junji Ito's Cat Diary is immensely entertaining. Ito has kept his signature style used when drawing horror manga and has applied it to a collection of stories that are closer to being gag manga. The illustrations can be intentionally grotesque and creepy, with an emphasis on J-kun's exaggerated expressions as he reacts (and overreacts) to the events occurring in his household and the horrors of pet ownership. A-ko, too, is drawn in such a way that her disconcerting appearance adds to the atmosphere of horror in the manga. For the most part, the cats are simply cats (at least when J-kun isn't hallucinating from lack of sleep); it's the humans who come across as maniacal. Junji Ito's Cat Diary looks like it should be a horror manga and has all of the genre's visual stylings, but it really isn't. The humor is even funnier because of this deliberate disconnect between the actual stories being told and how they are being portrayed.

As someone who tends to enjoy Ito's work and as someone who tends to like cat comics, I was already in a position to particularly appreciate Junji Ito's Cat Diary. It may certainly not work for everyone, though–the manga is a weird mix of horror and comedy, the grotesque and the adorable–but I loved it. In general, the stories in Junji Ito's Cat Diary are less about Yon and Mu's antics and more about J-kun's reactions to their behavior and his changing relationships with the two cats. Yon and Mu are actually very normal as cats go; the humans in the manga are the ones who come across as eccentric and a bit odd. Junji Ito's Cat Diary is hilarious but at the same time the manga maintains and oddly disconcerting and even ominous atmosphere. Ito simply excels at taking the mundane and transforming it into something truly devious and bizarre. I'm not sure, but perhaps I should be concerned by how much I can identify with the stories found in Junji Ito's Cat Diary.

Experiments in Manga
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LibraryThing member alanteder
Human antics around Cats
Review of the Kodansha Comics paperback English translation edition (2015) of the Japanese language original 猫日記よん&む (2009)

Although marketed as a Cat Diary, this is more about how the author and his fiancé/wife act around their cats and the quirky rivalries and
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plays for power that occur in the competition for the attention and love of their cats Yon and Mu. There are plenty of incidents that pet lovers will sympathize with and understand. Junji Ito does bring his horror manga style into play at some points in the occasional over-dramatized face drawings, but this is overall still a loving and comedic view of life with pets.
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LibraryThing member Jonez
Omg. I dont care, 5 stars simply because relatable.
LibraryThing member Koralis
Definitely creepy. Not a fan of cats.
LibraryThing member caedocyon
The over the top = automatically funny thing isn't really my style, and I kept being surprised when the stories were over because they hadn't really gone anywhere. Many of the cat drawings are great though, especially Mu going from sweet to bitey.

Are the straights OK? No, they definitely aren't. At
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least they have cats.
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Awards

Great Graphic Novels for Teens (Nonfiction — 2016)

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

127 p.; 10 inches

ISBN

1646512510 / 9781646512515
Page: 0.1826 seconds