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About the Author

Image credit: via myanimelist.net

Series

Works by Shoji Gatoh

Full Metal Panic! [Light Novel] 1: Fighting Boy Meets Girl (1998) — Author — 116 copies, 3 reviews
Full Metal Panic! [Light Novel] Ending Day by Day [TokyoPop] (2011) — Author — 32 copies, 2 reviews
Full Metal Panic! Film Book (2002) — Original Creator — 20 copies
Full Metal Panic! [Light Novel] 8: Burning One-Man Force (2006) — Author — 10 copies, 1 review
Full Metal Panic! Sigma: Volume 1 (2005) — Author — 7 copies
Full Metal Panic! Sigma: Volume 2 (2006) — Author — 6 copies
コップクラフト (ガガガ文庫) (2009) — Author — 6 copies
コップクラフト 4 (ガガガ文庫) (2014) — Author — 5 copies
Full Metal Panic! Sigma: Volume 4 (2006) — Author — 4 copies
コップクラフト2 (ガガガ文庫) (2010) — Author — 4 copies
コップクラフト 3 (ガガガ文庫) (2011) — Author — 4 copies
Amagi Brilliant Park, Volume 1 (2013) — Author — 4 copies
Full Metal Panic! Sigma: Volume 10 (2009) — Author — 3 copies
Full Metal Panic! Sigma: Volume 11 (2009) — Author — 3 copies
Full Metal Panic! Sigma: Volume 9 (2008) — Author — 3 copies
Full Metal Panic! Sigma: Volume 6 (2007) — Author — 3 copies
Full Metal Panic! Sigma: Volume 3 (2006) — Author — 3 copies
Full Metal Panic! Sigma: Volume 7 (2008) — Author — 3 copies
Full Metal Panic! Sigma: Volume 5 (2007) — Author — 3 copies
Full Metal Panic! Sigma: Volume 8 (2008) — Author — 3 copies
Full Metal Panic! Sigma: Volume 12 (2009) — Author — 2 copies
FULL METAL PANIC SIGMA 16 — Author — 1 copy
FULL METAL PANIC SIGMA 18 — Author — 1 copy
FULL METAL PANIC SIGMA 19 — Author — 1 copy
FULL METAL PANIC SIGMA 13 — Author — 1 copy
FULL METAL PANIC SIGMA 15 — Author — 1 copy
FULL METAL PANIC SIGMA 17 — Author — 1 copy
FULL METAL PANIC SIGMA 14 — Author — 1 copy

Associated Works

Full Metal Panic! [Manga] Volume 1 (2000) — Original Creator — 246 copies, 1 review
Full Metal Panic! [Manga] Volume 2 (2001) — Original Creator — 176 copies
Full Metal Panic! [Manga] Volume 3 (2002) — Original Creator — 156 copies
Full Metal Panic! [Manga] Volume 4 (2002) — Original Creator; Original Creator — 132 copies
Full Metal Panic! [Manga] Volume 5 (2002) — Original Creator — 118 copies
Full Metal Panic! [Manga] Volume 6 (2003) — Original Creator — 110 copies
Full Metal Panic! [Manga] Volume 7 (2004) — Original Creator — 102 copies
Full Metal Panic! [Manga] Volume 8 (2004) — Original Creator — 82 copies
Full Metal Panic! Overload! [Manga] Volume 1 (2005) — Original Creator — 69 copies, 1 review
Full Metal Panic! [Manga] Volume 9 (2005) — Original Creator — 64 copies
Full Metal Panic! Overload! [Manga] Volume 2 (2005) — Original Creator — 52 copies
Full Metal Panic! Overload! [Manga] Volume 3 (2005) — Original Creator — 45 copies
Full Metal Panic! Overload! [Manga] Volume 4 (2006) — Original Creator — 34 copies
Full Metal Panic! Overload! [Manga] Volume 5 (2006) — Original Creator — 34 copies
Full Metal Panic! [Anime] Season 1 (2005) — Original Creator — 24 copies
Amagi Brilliant Park [2014 TV series] (2014) — Original light novel — 9 copies
フルメタル・パニック! VOL.0EX [DVD] — Original Creator — 1 copy
フルメタル・パニック! mission.6 [DVD] — Original Creator — 1 copy
フルメタル・パニック! mission.5 [DVD] — Original Creator — 1 copy
フルメタル・パニック! mission.4 [DVD] — Original Creator — 1 copy
フルメタル・パニック! mission.2 [DVD] — Original Creator — 1 copy
フルメタル・パニック! mission.9 [DVD] — Original Creator — 1 copy
フルメタル・パニック! mission.3 [DVD] — Original Creator — 1 copy
フルメタル・パニック! mission.1 [DVD] — Original Creator — 1 copy
Full Metal Panic! Another [Manga] 1 (2012) — Original Creator — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Gatoh, Shoji
Legal name
賀東 招二
Gatō Shōji
Other names
Kinuta, Satoshi
Gatou, Shoji
Gatou, Shouji
Birthdate
1971-07-11
Gender
male
Relationships
よしひさ, 井上 (friend)
Nationality
Japan
Birthplace
Tokyo, Japan
Places of residence
Shiga, Japan
Associated Place (for map)
Japan

Members

Reviews

7 reviews
One of the best combinations of comedy, action, and romance I have ever read, though the romance is admittedly the lesser of the three in this volume. The "fish out of water" comedy of Sousuke Sagara, a boy trained to be an assassin, then raised in a war zone after he failed to assassinate the general he was sent to kill trying to adapt to living as a normal high school student in Tokyo is very funny. The extremes to which he goes to guard Kaname Chidori, the beautiful girl who is being show more targeted by terrorists, without letting her know that she is being targeted or that he is guarding her, make for good humor as well.

The fact that the humor is as good as it is only makes the fantastic action sequences better. The descriptions of the Arm Slaves, humanoid mecha that are the product of "Black Technology" that changed the world in the late 1980s and early 1990s, and the detailed combat sequences are second to none.

The villain, Gouran, who has a history with Sousuke, is extremely effective, if a little over the top in terms of his level of "evil". However, the story makes it clear that the mercenaries who work for Mithril, the private anti-terrorism organization that Sousuke works for, are not necessarily that much better than the "bad guys", they just work for a better employer. Other than his sneering enjoyment of his work, Sousuke and the other mercenaries are not that different from Gouran when it comes to being willing to kill in order to carry out their mission. In fact, it is heavily hinted that Sousuke has a long history that most likely includes questionable acts that would shock most normal people.

The world building is also exemplary. Gatou-sensei paints a world close to our own, but twisted by the introduction of advanced technology at least a generation or more earlier than it should logically occur, including some that shouldn't logically occur at all. The result is a world with as much, if not more conflict between nations and terrorist organizations bent on achieving their goals by trampling on the lives of innocents as our own, but with tools that lead to far greater devastation, but also allow those that want to end the madness to fight them effectively.

The confusion brought about as young Sousuke deals with unfamiliar feelings as he begins to fall head over heals in love with Kaname is precious. His inexperience with the emotion of love in any form is restricted to the camaraderie he shares with his fellow mercenaries and it is made perfectly clear that the current group of comrades is one of a select few groups he has felt even that level of friendship with. That pit-of-the-stomach feeling when Kaname is angry with him, the longing to see her, and other feelings are completely foreign to him. At one point his fellow mercenary Kurz Weber tells him he is feeling this way because he's in love and "has it bad". His reaction is that it can't be true, because he has heard that love is a wonderful feeling and he feels awful. It makes the commonly used trope of the completely oblivious male protagonist not only funny, but believable, which makes the FMP! series a unique creature in the Japanese manga/anime/light novel world.

A fine and complete story, Full Metal Panic! Fighting Boy Meets Girl
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So far, this is the book I've enjoyed the least. After the events on "Continuing on my Own", Sagara is a "man with a mission". He has a target and he has a plan, or so it seems.

The truth is that I found the book lacking in plot advancement and much slower than the previous ones. So much as to not being able to oversee the evident flaws in this saga, this is mindless fun, nothing more.

Accompaning Sagara there are a couple of new characters. A lively girl quite similar to Kaname Chidori but show more no so engaging and deep -if that can be said from the stereotypical characters we find in these books- and a french journalist that in the end is not that much interesting either. I found myself missing not just Chidori, but also Weber, Mao and even Tessa, more and more. On top of that, Sousuke didn't feel like himself and more than once I thought, "Really? After all that's happened!"

So, I guess this is the book I would skip if I ever read these saga again.
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This volume contains the story arc covered by the second season of the anime and the fourth and fifth volumes of the Japanese edition, which is quite fortunate as after the first volume you are literally left in the middle of the some battles.

This is the first time I have read a light novel and I don't know if other light novels are the same, but it feels like reading a manga or watching an anime. The strange situations or the characters interactions are not what you expect from a novel but show more from a more visual media and specifically, Japanese animation or manga. This is just to say that a series such as this would not probably appeal to someone who is not already into all these.

The story is action packed and very swift. Although I already knew it from the anime, I couldn't keep my eyes from its pages, I read it in one afternoon, not that it is too long, but I usually are too busy to being so deeply oblivious of time passing.

This is a "guilty pleasure" for me, something a bit silly, very fun, mechas, battles and just a bit of odd japanese-style romance between and awkward boy and an outgoing girl. Recommend just for fans.
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This light novel series was the inspiration for the popular anime of the same name. "Fighting Boy Meets Girl" was the basis for the first seven episodes. As the author says in his afterword, it's difficult to put the novel into a specific genre. It's an action-packed story with bursts of comedy; it's a budding teen romance; it's a fish-out-of-water tale with plenty of high school hijinks. Basically, this novel could appeal to anyone and everyone, which is what makes it such a highly show more enjoyable read.

Sousuke Sagara is a teenage soldier working for a mercenary organization known as Mithril. The organization's goal is to prevent world conflicts, and there's currently one brewing when the KGB sets its sights on the Whispered, a special group of individuals who (often unknowingly) possess access to Black Technology that can be used to create unbelievably advanced machines and devices. Sixteen-year-old Kaname Chidori is one of those Whispered and Sousuke is assigned to go undercover as her protective detail. Because Sousuke has had no prior experience leading a civilian life, he makes many errors in judgement, perceiving threats where there are none and making a scene. This prompts Kaname to think he's a creep and provides much of the story's comedic moments.

Despite Kaname's harsh assessment of Sousuke, the two inevitably develop a mutual interest in each other. It is interesting to see their relationship develop throughout the novel -- especially from Kaname's end, where her suspicion of Sousuke slowly evolves into trust. The story overall is engaging and exciting. It's hard to stop reading once you get started.

There is only one fault with this novel, and it's a minor one. The original novel was in Japanese and the English translation could use improvement. Some sentences are awkwardly constructed with words that would have been better left out and frequent instances of adjectives modifying adjectives. However, as previously stated, these are minor inconveniences in what is otherwise a fantastic introduction to a very entertaining light novel series.
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½

Awards

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Statistics

Works
86
Also by
52
Members
629
Popularity
#40,057
Rating
3.8
Reviews
6
ISBNs
117
Languages
4

Charts & Graphs