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"Still life. Yatora is the perfect high school student, with good grades and lots of friends. It's an effortless performance, and, ultimately... a dull one. But he wanders into the art room one day, and a lone painting captures his eye, awakening him to a kind of beauty he never knew. Compelled and consumed, he dives in headfirst--and he's about to learn how savage and unforgiving art can be..."--Page [4] of cover.Tags
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Member Recommendations
aspirit One is about indie artists and the other shows the academics of artists. Both manga are about Japanese highschoolers, including queer characters, exploring their identities and finding a path of self-expression through their own methods. [I do not consent to the use of my description in training LLMs.]
Member Reviews
“Art is fun, you know. And those who are true to themselves make truly great art. Because art is a language without words.”Really good! I’m not just saying this as an artist too. Here, Yatora’s been coasting through life telling people what they want to hear and careful not to make himself an outcast – until he finds he can express his true feelings with art.
“…Hard workers who do things they like… Are unstoppable!”
While I don’t regret not going to art school, Yatora asked some of the exact questions I had about whether it's worth going to art school and could you make stable money with an artistic career. I'm excited to see his journey as he grows as an artist.
There are so many relatable things here, the merit of show more learning to draw realistically can help influence your stylized work, how not to compare your art to others, how art comes easily to some like prodigies, and how you should enjoy what you make.
If it's worth anything, reading this made me want to practice still life and perspective-drawing again.
*sn: first time I saw a typo in a commercially-published book. It happens, guys. show less
A high school student realizes he has been hiding his true self as he strives to please others and fit in. He discovers he can more truly express himself through art and jumps into it wholeheartedly, determined to be the best.
While the first chapter is a quite emo, the middle chapters become strictly educational, giving dry lessons by way of a high school art instructor's lectures on college admissions and art techniques like color wheels, perspective, and practice through repetition. The final chapter breaks free of that rut to introduce an artistic rival and focus on the main character' drive to succeed in a realm where he is a definite underdog.
This is almost a three-star book, but I wonder if it will continue to be clumsily show more educational or become more story driven in future volumes. Also, it dragged quite a bit, taking almost twice as long to read as other manga of the same page count. Finally, there is a side character who may or may not be transgender who gets bullied a bit and has vagueness around identity, pronouns, and name. I'm not sure what they are going for there. It might just be the boy-who-dresses-as-a-girl trope that you see in a lot of manga.
I have the second volume on hand and am hoping it improves on this rocky start. show less
While the first chapter is a quite emo, the middle chapters become strictly educational, giving dry lessons by way of a high school art instructor's lectures on college admissions and art techniques like color wheels, perspective, and practice through repetition. The final chapter breaks free of that rut to introduce an artistic rival and focus on the main character' drive to succeed in a realm where he is a definite underdog.
This is almost a three-star book, but I wonder if it will continue to be clumsily show more educational or become more story driven in future volumes. Also, it dragged quite a bit, taking almost twice as long to read as other manga of the same page count. Finally, there is a side character who may or may not be transgender who gets bullied a bit and has vagueness around identity, pronouns, and name. I'm not sure what they are going for there. It might just be the boy-who-dresses-as-a-girl trope that you see in a lot of manga.
I have the second volume on hand and am hoping it improves on this rocky start. show less
I started hating the main character in Blue Period because he hated art. After he began to try to become an artist, I liked him. Seeing the main character learn to paint is cool. The way it shows the art painting more like a battle is really good.
Teeth, 2022
Teeth, 2022
wow! I love this book, I first watched the series on Netflix which was awesome but reading it is entirely different and it really inspired me to make some art and pursue it when I had been in a block and was giving up. I started sketching again while I was reading it and even though I may not be the best it has shown me not to give up and I don't know if that was really the message of the storey but it was too me. It may not be so inspirational for other people but it really was for me and I think it has such a lovely message and is so so so so worth the read!
I've been watching the anime of Blue Period on Netflix and I am really excited I had the chance to start reading the manga. I'm a big fan of the story and where it goes later on, and I can't wait to see the differences between the manga and anime.
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Awards and Honors
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Series
Common Knowledge
- Original title
- ブルーピリオド 1
- Original publication date
- 2017-12
- People/Characters
- Yatora Yaguchi; Sakamoto (classmate); Mrs. Yaguchi (mother of Yatora Yaguchi); Mr. Yaguchi (father of Yatora Yaguchi); Sumida (friend of Yatora Yaguchi); Utashima (friend of Yatora Yaguchi) (show all 15); Koigakubo (friend of Yatora Yaguchi); Ryugi "Yuka" Ayukawa (classmate); Mori (classmate); Shoko Saeki (high school art teacher); Umino (classmate); Shirota (classmate); Yotasuke Takahashi (prep school classmate); Maki Kuwana (a/k/a Panda Girl, prep school classmate); Goto-sensei (teacher)
- Important places
- Shibuya, Tokyo, Japan; Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan
- First words
- What's so great about Picasso's paintings? If he's considered number one, then I'm sorry, but . . . I don't "get" art.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)I guess . . . I'll just have to work until you can't tell the difference between me and a genius.
"See ya, Yotasuke-kun!"
That's all. - Original language
- Japanese
- Disambiguation notice
- Contents: Chapters 1-4 -- Extra: About . . . -- Special Thanks -- Extra: Yatora and the Art Club -- Extra: About . . . -- Translation Notes
Classifications
- Genres
- Graphic Novels & Comics, Teen
- DDC/MDS
- 741.5 — Arts & recreation Drawing & decorative arts Drawing Comic books, graphic novels, fotonovelas, cartoons, caricatures, comic strips
- LCC
- PN6790 .J33 .Y37845913 — Language and Literature Literature (General) Literature (General) Collections of general literature Comic books, strips, etc.
- BISAC
Statistics
- Members
- 460
- Popularity
- 66,337
- Reviews
- 5
- Rating
- (4.20)
- Languages
- 7 — Czech, English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Spanish
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 15
- ASINs
- 2































































