Picture of author.

Series

Works by Fred Chao

Associated Works

Princess Princess Ever After (2016) — Designer — 692 copies, 57 reviews
The Best American Comics 2010 (2010) — Contributor — 231 copies, 9 reviews
Shattered: The Asian American Comics Anthology (2012) — Contributor — 38 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
male
Education
Emerson College (BA, Film/Cinema/Video Studies)
Occupations
illustrator
graphic designer
Places of residence
Daly City, California, USA
Associated Place (for map)
California, USA

Members

Reviews

11 reviews
Struggling as an underpaid and undervalued sushi chef in New York City, John Hiro is having an existential crisis. He’s not sure that he’s the boyfriend that the lovely girlfriend Mayumi deserves nor does he have any idea where his life is headed. With all these questions floating around in his head, can he learn to relax and just accept things the way they are?

I received a free copy from the publisher in exchange for a review.

When this arrived in the mail from Tor, I honestly had no show more idea what I was looking at (don’t take this statement too literally, I knew it was a book). The cover looked interesting and the tagline of Scott Pilgrim meets Bruce Lee intrigued me (this despite never having read a Scott Pilgrim book) so I was excited to dive in.

What initially leapt out at me was Chao’s style. While it’s certainly not overly flashy – electing to present the story in plain old black and white – it’s fun to take in. He’s got a great talent for putting so much emotion in the story simply through facial expressions and the body language of each character rather than hitting you over the head with narrative.

While Johnny Hiro isn’t anyone exceptional, he’s extremely relatable and that’s the biggest takeaway from this book. He spends so much time in his own head worrying about his station in life, if he’s a good partner for Mayumi or if he’s achieving his true potential. Through Johnny, Chao warns against this, that you need to slow down and appreciate what you have, to live in the now (sorry for the cliches) or you’ll grow to regret it. Despite the fact that there’s a giant monkey running around New York City, that Mayor Bloomberg is a featured character AND that there’s a flashback involving the Yakuza, none of these things seem out of place in Chao’s world. The characters are so well written and fully realized that you’re willing to follow them anywhere the story takes you.
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I liked this slice of life story with a scifi twist. Johnny and Mayumi are adorable and the wacky adventures Johnny gets himself into are funny.
I like the utter randomness that happens here. Trouble seems to follow Johnny Hiro everywhere. His girlfriend Mayumi is pretty cardboard as a character, but she’s supportive and nice. Didn’t care for the cameos, but they add a dream-like quality to the story. The New York setting and the working just to survive gives me such post-college, hipster in a coffee shop vibes.
A slow start, but proceeded with great heart. I remember really loving the first volume when I stumbled on it, and then sat on this one for years after finding it used. The character has grown along with me, and I'm glad I pulled it off the shelf.
½

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Statistics

Works
6
Also by
3
Members
138
Popularity
#148,170
Rating
4.0
Reviews
10
ISBNs
6

Charts & Graphs