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2001 Nights

2001 Nights

List Price: $16.95
Your Price: $11.53
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An SF novel that is so realistic it actualy is believable!
Review: 2001 Nights is a fantastic journey in the far reaches of space you will never forget! Spanning 3 graphic novels beautifully drawn by author Yokinobu Hoshino, it is a dazzling collection of 19 short stories, from the not- too-distant future to the year 2400. 2001 Nights is about humanity's attempt to discover new forms of life and colonize planets, yet with these hopes of peace comes the dark side of the human soul. With each story comes a group of characters with their own agendas and past tragedies, who may even reappear in future stories. Each episode is so detailed and amazing, the reader thinks he/she is reading a novel, with it's own climax and denouement. In the final episode, or "night," all the events come together, and the sad demise of the Space Age takes place. With amazing art and an intricately woven plot, 2001 Nights is a masterpiece that can be read over and over again! Enjoyable for readers of all ages, including me; Drew Colbert, age 13.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: It is the most intruiging and tanginble sci-fi epic ever!
Review: 2001 Nights is a fantastic journey in the far reaches of space you will never forget! Spanning 3 graphic novels beautifully drawn by author Yokinobu Hoshino, it is a dazzling collection of 19 short stories, from the not- too-distant future to the year 2400. 2001 Nights is about humanity's attempt to discover new forms of life and colonize planets, yet with these hopes of peace comes the dark side of the human soul. With each story comes a group of characters with their own agendas and past tragedies, who may even reappear in future stories. Each episode is so detailed and amazing, the reader thinks he/she is reading a novel, with it's own climax and denouement. In the final episode, or "night," all the events come together, and the sad demise of the Space Age takes place. With amazing art and an intricately woven plot, 2001 Nights is a masterpiece that can be read over and over again! Enjoyable for readers of all ages, including me; Drew Colbert, age 13.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Manga Odyssey
Review: 2001: A Space Odyssey is one of my favorite movies for its detailed and believable vision of a future that is still largely unrealized. I was pleasantly surprised to see Yukinobu Hoshino pay homage to Kubrick's visual style throughout much of 2001 Nights, in scenes that were recognizably inspired by the film. The skillfully-rendered black-and-white panels throughout the book are evocative of the silence and vastness of space, yet the human characters are drawn with grace and style, without the occasional cartoonish facial expressions that mar other manga I've read. This stylistic discipline helps to keep the work focused and believable.

Aside from the fantastic artwork, the author lays out a sweeping story of humankind's quest to find its destiny beyond Earth, told in a series of time-separated vignettes. He touches upon issues of cooperation, isolation, exploration, greed and even religion -- and manages to pull this off without becoming trite.

It's pretty tough to describe in words something that is so visually distinctive and compelling. I originally ordered this book on a whim, but it has just blown me away.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Manga Odyssey
Review: 2001: A Space Odyssey is one of my favorite movies for its detailed and believable vision of a future that is still largely unrealized. I was pleasantly surprised to see Yukinobu Hoshino pay homage to Kubrick's visual style throughout much of 2001 Nights, in scenes that were recognizably inspired by the film. The skillfully-rendered black-and-white panels throughout the book are evocative of the silence and vastness of space, yet the human characters are drawn with grace and style, without the occasional cartoonish facial expressions that mar other manga I've read. This stylistic discipline helps to keep the work focused and believable.

Aside from the fantastic artwork, the author lays out a sweeping story of humankind's quest to find its destiny beyond Earth, told in a series of time-separated vignettes. He touches upon issues of cooperation, isolation, exploration, greed and even religion -- and manages to pull this off without becoming trite.

It's pretty tough to describe in words something that is so visually distinctive and compelling. I originally ordered this book on a whim, but it has just blown me away.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: 2001 Nights and other great worlds
Review: I bought this book in the spring while I was in college studying comics. When you read so many comics, even the good ones seem to go pale. This graphic novel made the hairs on the back of my neck stand up. With mature visuals and sensitive writing Yukinobu Hoshino sows accurately the vastness of the universe and the importance of human destiny within it and beyond it. The occasional over-explaining takes away very little in this epic. A great read by anyone's standards; comics fan or not.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: 2001 Nights and other great worlds
Review: I bought this book in the spring while I was in college studying comics. When you read so many comics, even the good ones seem to go pale. This graphic novel made the hairs on the back of my neck stand up. With mature visuals and sensitive writing Yukinobu Hoshino sows accurately the vastness of the universe and the importance of human destiny within it and beyond it. The occasional over-explaining takes away very little in this epic. A great read by anyone's standards; comics fan or not.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An SF novel that is so realistic it actualy is believable!
Review: I've always been an avid SF&F fan and have probably seen more SF&F movies and books than probably is good for me. Because of this it's almost impossible to find a story that is orriginal and compelling. All the short stories in the 2001 series are not just orriginal but also extreemly compeling and fascinating! In my opinion the entire series is a masterpiece in it's own right. A masterpiece that both SF fans and non-SF fans alike will adore. Both the extreemly atractive illustrations and the stories will be able to fascinate most readers more than once. I have read all the books, in this series, many times and still find them ultimatly fascinating.

The visuals vary from extreemly realistic to surrealistic, almost poetic at times. Yukinobu Hoshino probably is one of the few artists that is capable of producing art on a paperback sized book without losing detail or feeling of scale.

Also the way he researched his work and plot lines is increadable. I value myself as a very critical punter but can not even find one flaw in the entire series. He actualy makes his work believable as if it were science fact not fiction. People like Einstein, Steven Hawkings and Arthur C. Clark probably could have a great conversation with Mr Hoshino.

I simply can't express how good these books are in the 1000 words that limit this review. Personaly it ranks number 3 in my favorite book list of all times. Just believe me when I tell you it's one of the best books you'll ever buy!

Enjoy!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Only Wish It Is All in Color!
Review: Okay, ditto all the other glowing reviews; I normally don't post my opinions unless it's different from others', but this is one of the few times when a product has got me so enthused that I simply must join in the praise. IT'S GREAT!...I got chills all over just like I first did as a kid when it dawned on me how vast the universe could be, and how alone humankind seems in it...I must say, this is quite an effective "twist" on one's usual expectations of Science Fiction, a twist which actually in effect restores the sense of melancholia which a deep, prolonged contemplation of outer space usually seems to instill sooner or later...EXCELLENT! I mean, what if -- WHAT IF -- we are really, truly, all alone in this great universe?? The statistical probabilities of this seem to make such a case so unlikely it may as well be impossible -- but WHAT IF it is just the case that we are indeed simply alone, that there is really no one out there? After all, would that seem any more improbable than the very fact of the universe's very existence?

Many of us have already given up on notions of an anthropomorphic sky god and its derivatives -- but how many are prepared for the notion that there may well be no other intelligent life forms out there, that *WE* are actually all there is to self-reflective cognition?? Again, this may seem like a cop-out, but it seems easy enough (certainly typical enough) for Science Fiction to speculate on other intelligences, whereas the genre seems to hardly ever suggest the truly more mind-boggling alternative, that we're "just it", and that's all there is to "it"!...the effect achieved is much, much more sublime and breath-takingly, enduringly poetic....

Has Yukinobu Hoshino done any other stuff, I wonder??? Now that I'm "onto him", I'm gonna go look for his other works....

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This makes my top 10 list of essential graphic novels
Review: This is an amazing trilogy (read my other 2 reviews of vols. 2 & 3). The below reviews are so accurate to what I want to say, that I won't repeat them. I love this series. It's some of the best sci-fi comics I've ever read. There's an overwhelming sense of vastness to the universe and a sad feeling for mankind in the stories - no matter how far they get in space, it's still not enough - there's no end to the immenseness!
The stories are wonderfully believable and the Japanese artwork is not the 'big eyed', Hello Kitty stuff one comes to expect of manga.
Whoever decided to translate this series for America should be given an award for recognition of intelligent comic work. It's that good. I've read the 3 books several times and they're wonderful with each read.
Each volume ends with an epic tale. Volume 1 has "Lucifer" which is a great concept of an anti-matter universe which may be responsible for the Big Bang theory. Great stuff. Get these books - they're wonderful. This is the way comics should be done!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This makes my top 10 list of essential graphic novels
Review: This is an amazing trilogy (read my other 2 reviews of vols. 2 & 3). The below reviews are so accurate to what I want to say, that I won't repeat them. I love this series. It's some of the best sci-fi comics I've ever read. There's an overwhelming sense of vastness to the universe and a sad feeling for mankind in the stories - no matter how far they get in space, it's still not enough - there's no end to the immenseness!
The stories are wonderfully believable and the Japanese artwork is not the `big eyed', Hello Kitty stuff one comes to expect of manga.
Whoever decided to translate this series for America should be given an award for recognition of intelligent comic work. It's that good. I've read the 3 books several times and they're wonderful with each read.
Each volume ends with an epic tale. Volume 1 has "Lucifer" which is a great concept of an anti-matter universe which may be responsible for the Big Bang theory. Great stuff. Get these books - they're wonderful. This is the way comics should be done!


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