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The Book of Heroes

by Miyuki Miyabe

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1688163,148 (3.98)5
When her brother Hiroki disappears after a violent altercation with school bullies, eleven-year-old Yuriko finds a magical book in his room which leads her to another world where she learns that Hiroki has been possessed by a spirit from The Book of Heroes.
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» See also 5 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 8 (next | show all)
A fundamentally Japanese style of young adult fantasy. It's full of exposition in big lumps, but it's also sweet, and thrilling, and pleasant.

The translation is outstanding, as to be expected from A. O. Smith. ( )
  JimDR | Dec 7, 2022 |
Absolutely life-affirming. Not everyone will appreciate the nasty plot twist though! ( )
  georgeybataille | Jun 1, 2021 |
The Book of Heroes by Miyuki Miyabe is a good book. It starts of with a lot of exposition and slower scenes, but it’s well worth sticking with it. The world building, explained through dialogue, was intriguing. The explanations that set up the story in the first few chapters are a little long, but necessary to the story. The story is very original and unexpected. It has a good underlying mystery. The main character has a distinctive voice that matched her age. She matured over the course of the story believably. The other characters were all well written too. ( )
  MHendry | Jan 12, 2019 |
I read this book a few months ago and is finally reviewing. This is a story about Yuriko who needs to find her brother. She discovers that he is was taken over by the Hero, also the villain (Because every story needs a hero and a villain). The story is fun, but didn't really catch my attention. Yuriko was just a pawn in the story - too much following, not enough initiative. Also, as an adult, it was fairly easy to figure out what was happening. ( )
  TheDivineOomba | May 21, 2017 |
The Book of Heroes is the second novel by Miyuki Miyabe that I have read. My introduction to her work was through her novel Brave Story and its various adaptations. The two novels share many similarities with each other: both were initially serialized in newspapers, both are fantasy stories featuring a young protagonist, and both were translated into English by Alexander O. Smith, just to name a few examples. But The Book of Heroes and Brave Story are each very much their own work. After its serialization, The Book of Heroes was released as a completed novel in 2009. Haikasoru, Viz Media's Japanese speculative fiction imprint, first published Smith's English translation of The Book of Heroes in 2010 in a hardcover edition. The novel was subsequently released as a paperback in 2011, which is the edition I picked up. Because I enjoyed Brave Story I was looking forward to reading The Book of Heroes.

Yuriko Morisaki, a fairly average girl in the fifth grade, was dozing off in science class when she receives terrible news: her older brother, who she adores, has gone missing after stabbing two of his classmates. Her family can hardly believe that Hiroki could be capable of such an act. They are desperate to find him and to understand what happened. Soon after Hiroki's disappearance, Yuriko stumbles across a magical book in his room, one that may be able to help her find her brother. Suddenly, Yuriko is no longer an ordinary girl as she is swept into a world of story and magic. It is revealed to Yuriko that her brother and her very reality are in danger. The responsibility of rescuing them has fallen to her. She's not without help and over time she gains some valuable allies, but Yuriko's journey will be a very challenging one.

For me, The Book of Heroes worked better as a sort of philosophical exercise rather than as a novel. I absolutely loved the world building. I found the universes that Miyabe created to be fascinating and intellectually stimulating. I enjoyed thinking about the worlds in The Book of Heroes and loved the importance placed on books and stories--stories that hold tremendous amounts of power and that can quite literally change the world and reality; a reality that in turn can alter and affect those stories; and the grave repercussions that this system creates as a result. The ideas and concepts that Miyabe was exploring in The Book of Heroes were thrilling. But I found actually reading The Book of Heroes to be somewhat of a slog. Yuriko's story felt terribly unfocused for much of the novel.

As often as The Book of Heroes frustrated me as a narrative (which was actually quite often), Miyabe pulls everything together beautifully in the end. In the beginning something just didn't quite feel right about how things were progressing in The Book of Heroes. Yuriko, too, seemed to be frustrated and aware of this. Eventually, all is revealed to both Yuriko and the novel's readers in the final chapter, appropriately titled "The Truth." It was this chapter and the epilogue that follows it that made all of my frustration with The Book of Heroes worth it. The ending is fairly open-ended, but I thought it was very appropriate and very satisfying. The Book of Heroes is more complex and layered than it might first appear; Miyabe mixes reality and fantasy, light and darkness, in a very compelling way.

Experiments in Manga ( )
  PhoenixTerran | Jan 18, 2013 |
Showing 1-5 of 8 (next | show all)
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Miyuki Miyabeprimary authorall editionscalculated
Smith, Alexander O.Translatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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When her brother Hiroki disappears after a violent altercation with school bullies, eleven-year-old Yuriko finds a magical book in his room which leads her to another world where she learns that Hiroki has been possessed by a spirit from The Book of Heroes.

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When her brother Hiroki disappears after a violent altercation with bullies, Yuriko finds a magical book in his room. She learns that Hiroki has been possessed by The Book of Heroes, and that only she can save him. With the help of the monk Sky, the dictionary-mouse Aju, and the mysterious Man of Ash, Yuriko has to solve the mystery of her vanished brother and save the world from the evil King in Yellow.
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