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Othello, Volume 1 by Satomi Ikezawa
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Othello 1 (Othello (Del Rey)) (original 2003; edition 2004)

by Satomi Ikezawa

Series: Othello (1)

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122389,806 (3.8)2
Member:RyitGrrl
Title:Othello 1 (Othello (Del Rey))
Authors:Satomi Ikezawa
Info:Del Rey (2004), Paperback, 208 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:****
Tags:manga, split personality disorder, cosplay, love, friendship, betrayal, loner, school, shame

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Othello, Volume 1 by Satomi Ikezawa (2003)

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Read my mini-review at Birdbrain(ed) Book Blog! ( )
  herebebooks | Dec 29, 2010 |
A touunge in sheek look at split personalities, used by the main character (yaya)to cope with her horrible "friends". All the while falling for someone that truly respects her. Made me want to read more and to findd out will Nana (the other side of Yaya) be a help or a hinderence.

Traditional Japanese manga read backward and right to left, also contains many Japanese cultural terms but don't worry manga virgins there is handy reading instructions and a glossary of terms to help you sort it all out.

Great illustration. ( )
  RyitGrrl | Mar 19, 2009 |
I had started this one a few years ago, but never got around to finishing it, so I figured I'd grab it from the library again. The plot is fairly standard shojo--young woman in school with a problem--but the solution is not a new friend or lifestyle change. This time, the girl splits completely, forming an aggressive, assertive personality that takes action---sometimes in violent ways--to do what her normal self cannot.

This story is interesting but has one problem that I have a bit of a prob...more I had started this one a few years ago, but never got around to finishing it, so I figured I'd grab it from the library again. The plot is fairly standard shojo--young woman in school with a problem--but the solution is not a new friend or lifestyle change. This time, the girl splits completely, forming an aggressive, assertive personality that takes action---sometimes in violent ways--to do what her normal self cannot.

This story is interesting but has one problem that I have a bit of a problem overcoming, namely that there's not quite enough done to make us see a physical difference when the change occurs. While Nana holds herself differently when she's Yaya, the idea that her friends cannot tell for sure that she's still the same person strikes me as odd. A girl still looks like the same girl, even if she lets her pigtails fall down, you know what I mean?

However, I am willing to overlook that to see how Ikezawa explores the break between the two selves and how it will come to hurt Yaya, who seems to genuinely not know they're occurring. Will Nana take over completely? Will her friends ever figure it out, and if so, will she be more isolated than ever? I for one would like to know, and will keep reading to find out.

Trebby's Take: Recommended ( )
  trebro | Aug 22, 2008 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0345479130, Paperback)

HOW THE OTHER HALF LIVES
Yaya’s high school friends haven’t been very nice. They call her “Yaya the cry-ya! Yaya the misfi-ya!” But no matter how badly they act, Yaya is just too naïve and trusting to believe the worst of her friends. Hard-rocking, butt-kicking Nana is just the girl to grab hold of Yaya’s timid demeanor and turn it upside down. Nana exposes Yaya’s “friends” as slime bags, doles out punishment, and does it all with style. Can there be anything that terminally shy Yaya and hyper-confident Nana have in common? Well, for one thing, they’re the same person. . . .

(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 26 Apr 2011 06:30:46 -0400)

"Yaya's high school friends haven't been very nice. They call her "Yaya the cry-ya! Yaya the misfi-ya!" but no matter how badly they act, Yaya is just too naive and trusting to believe the worst of them. Hard rocking, butt-kicking Nana is just the girl to grab hold of Yaya's timid demeanor and turn it upside down. Nana exposes Yaya's "friends" as slimeballs, doles out punishment, and does it all with style. Can there be anything that terminally shy Yaya and hyperconfident Nana have in common? Well, for one thing, they are the same person ..." Includes special extras after the story -- p. [4] of cover.… (more)

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