Quantcast
games  anime  toys  movies
Japanator is anime news, community, videos & geeky J-stuff. Updated daily!   Sign up to comment or blog    |    Returning? Login

japanator logo

Japanator review: S.S. Astro Vol. 1
by Brad Rice, 10/22/2008
Japanator review: S.S. Astro Vol. 1 photo

4-koma manga has steadily been growing in the U.S. After the rampant success of Azumanga Daioh, and the numerous titles to follow such as Hidamari Sketch, Lucky Star, and S.S. Astro.

So today, let's delve into S.S. Astro. Astro is short for "Asashio Sogo Teacher's ROom," and gives you an idea of what we're dealing with: four teachers who work at Asashio High School. A mix of Lucky Star and Azumanga Daioh, with a little bit of yuri thrown in for good measure, this title may entertain plenty of you.

So, let's get into it!

S.S. Astro Volume 1
Written and drawn by Negi Banno
Translated by Stephen Paul, Lettering by Alexis Eckerman
Published by Yen Press
Originally release in August 2008

Our four heroines cover most of the different areas of the school. There's Izumi Maki, the gym teacher who has yet to grow up; Yuko Nagumo, the Japanese teacher with a penchant for food; Setsuna Arai, the Nursing Teacher (not nurse) who's a bit of an otaku and a sadist; and Kaname Karasuma, the Foreign Language teacher who's not all that interested in men, but will try and spend her way into Izumi's heart.

The group, as the title implies, forms based on the fact that they're all co-workers. Izumi and Yuko are both friends from high school who start working at Asashio together, while Setsuna and Kaname have been there a while -- and were around when the other two were still students there. The group of teachers all work to support each other as they go about their day, trying to act like responsible adults, even if they have no idea how.

The stories throughout the volume are well-paced between humor, romance, and character exposition, making the book flow very well. The problem is, that means the book is over way too soon. Clocking in at around 117 pages, plus the translation notes and a preview chapter of Suzunari!, the book is over before you know it, leaving you wanting a lot more. I found myself flipping back at random points to re-read stories, or pay close attention to the colored art featured in the book -- mostly promo images done for magazines or events. Unfortunately, Yen Press decided not to print some of the color versions of strips, which, for me, is a little disappointing.

I compare S.S. Astro to Lucky Star and Azumanga Daioh in this regard: The series features otaku humor regularly, but in a far more mainstream and basic sense -- like what you might see on The Colbert Report or such -- but in the end, it's part of the greater patchwork of these characters' school lives. So, if high school drama on a teacher level is what interests you, then S.S. Astro may grab your attention. But the series does come in at $11 a volume (typical for Yen Press), and with the low pagecount and quickness of this series, you'll likely find yourself not satisfied and looking for something more.



Gallery Images:
Photo Photo



About our new comments system

We're evaluating Livefyre, a new comments system that helps us fight spam, allows you to thread comments, get email notifications, and follow site-wide AND twitter/facebook conversations about our stories all from one page. If you love it we will integrate it into the site permanently so that your old comments and profiles sync up. During this test you can register a chat avatar and track your comments here. Let us know what you think! support@japanator.com

Embedding images/pictures: To help us fight spam/pr0n we only support images from Flickr, Twitpic, tinypic, and imgur for images. Just type in the URL and a thumbnail of the picture will show up. Supported video sources are vimeo and youtube.

Legacy comments:

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


 

Anime news got news? tips@japanator.com


Manga news

Community Blogs   + post a blog   view all














TEAM

Editor-in-Chief
Brad Rice

News Editor
Josh Tolentino

Reviews Editor
Hiroko Yamamura

Associate Editors
Dale North
Zac Bentz
Jeff Chuang
Pedro Cortes
Bob Muir
Kristina Pino
Marc Speer
Elliot Gay Chris Walden Salvador G-Rodiles Michelle Rodanes

Made by
ModernMethod






about us and privacy policy