Undertown (comics)

Undertown is an American manga-inspired comic written by Jim Pascoe and illustrated by Jake Myler and published by Tokyopop. The manga was released by Tokyopop on August 14, 2007.[1] The magazine, New York, offered an exclusive preview of Undertown on its online-only comics page.[2] The manga gets syndicated in over 50 newspapers, including the Los Angeles Times, Denver Post, Vancouver Sun and Seattle Post-Intelligencer.[3] It was dropped from Los Angeles Times Sunday pages on July 5, 2009.[4]

Undertown
AuthorJim Pascoe
IllustratorJake Myler
PublisherTokyopop
Original run2007
Volumes2

Plot

10-year-old Sama is a shy young boy who is something of a crybaby, as his father apparently constantly reminds him. Sama cries so often that the tears stain his cheeks, but he finds comfort in his teddy bear, Eddie.

Sama's father is hospitalized after a heart attack, and given only a month to live. A stranger at the hospital tells Sama that he can find a cure for his father, the Sugar Stone, a magical healing item, but it is located in the mysterious realm of Undertown. All Sama need do is crawl under his bed, close his eyes, and countdown from ten to one. When his father’s condition turns worse, Sama takes a chance and does as the stranger told him. He wakes up in a strange place where anthropomorphized animals and insects do battle for the one thing that is most valuable in Undertown: sugar. Sama gets an even bigger surprise when his teddy bear, Eddie suddenly comes to life. With the help of a rabbit named B.W., a porcupine name Joey P.P., and a reticent penguin named Broom, Sama takes on The Cloud, the leader of the Insect Insurgents, to find the Sugar Stone. In a place called the Sand Sea, they find lizards who choose to fight alongside them but not join their group. But mystery and secret histories swirl around the boy and his teddy bear, and before Sama can save his father, he’ll have to discover them.

Characters

  • Sama: A young boy at age ten who is lonely and has only one friend. His teddy bear Eddie is from somewhere where teddy bears are made and they can move and talk.
  • Eddie: He is Sama's teddy bear and Sama's only friend. Eddie lost his memory when he was sent up to Sama's world, so now he wants to find the Teddy Bear Bell. In the first volume, he finds it, and it makes Eddie remember everything about his past, including what happened to the other Teddy bears.

Reception

Mania.com's criticizes the manga for not developing the background, saying "characters interact so fleetingly with the cities, the deserts and the forests that Undertown feels like little more than a cardboard backdrop".[5] Coolstreak Cartoons's Leroy Douresseaux commends the illustrator's use of toning in the manga making the art "highly detailed".[6] Publisher's Weekly states, "Undertown ’s real strength lies in how all these concepts are introduced with a breakneck pace and with grand strokes."[7]

gollark: Not *always*.
gollark: "Fortunately", average internet upload speeds here are too slow for lone children to do much.
gollark: Well, multiple devices.
gollark: The "distributed" means that multiple people are doing it, not that multiple people are affected.
gollark: If one idiot runs a thing which saturates the server's network connection, it is not in fact "distributed".

References

  1. "Undertown Volume 1". Tokyopop. Retrieved 2009-02-22.
  2. "New York Magazine Continues Manga Previews". Anime News Network. 2007-08-30. Retrieved 5 December 2009.
  3. "Jim Pascoe's Undertown Gets Syndicated". Anime News Network. Jan 3, 2008. Retrieved 2009-02-22.
  4. "Weather news, Sunday comics changing July 5". Los Angeles Times. July 5, 2009. Retrieved 6 July 2009.
  5. Oxford, Nadia (October 15, 2007). "Undertown, Volume One". Mania.com. Retrieved 2009-02-22.
  6. Douresseaux, Leroy (August 24, 2007). "Undertown, Vol. 1". Coolstreak Cartoons. Retrieved 2009-02-22.
  7. "Fiction Book Review: Undertown by Jim Pascoe, Author, Jake Myler, Illustrator . Tokyopop $9.99 (192p) ISBN 978-1-42780-103-6". PublishersWeekly.com. Retrieved 2017-10-11.
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