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a cartoon version of the Bible
What do you think about this new version of the Bible that has just been published in the Japanese manga graphic novel form?
Here are some details as reported in the New York Times:
The Bible as Graphic Novel, With a Samurai Stranger Called Christ
By NEELA BANERJEE
“Ajinbayo Akinsiku wants the world to know Jesus Christ, just not the gentle, blue-eyed Christ of old Hollywood movies and illustrated Bibles.
Mr. Akinsiku says his Son of God is “a samurai stranger who’s come to town, in silhouette,” here to shake things up in a new, much-abridged version of the Bible rooted in manga, the Japanese form of graphic novels.
“We present things in a very brazen way,” said Mr. Akinsiku, who hopes to become an Anglican priest and who is the author of “The Manga Bible: From Genesis to Revelation.” “Christ is a hard guy, seeking revolution and revolt, a tough guy.”
Publishers with an eye for evangelism and for markets have long profited by directing Bibles at niche markets: just-married couples, teenage boys, teenage girls, recovering addicts. Often the lure is cosmetic, like a jazzy new cover.
Sales of graphic novels, too, have grown by double digits in recent years. So it makes sense that a convergence is under way, as graphic novels take up stories from the Bible, often in startling ways. In the last year, several major religious and secular publishing houses have announced or released manga religious stories.
The medium shapes the message. Manga often focuses on action and epic. Much of the Bible, as a result, ends up on the cutting room floor, and what remains is darker.
“It is the end of the Word as we know it, and the end of a certain cultural idea of the Scriptures as a book, as the Book,” Timothy Beal, professor of religion at Case Western Reserve University, said of the reworking of the Bible in new forms, including manga. “It opens up new ways of understanding Scripture and ends up breaking the idols a bit.”
While known for characters with big eyes and catwalk poses, manga is also defined by a laconic, cinematic style, with characters often doing more than talking.
In a blurb for the Manga Bible, which is published by Doubleday, the archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Rev. Rowan Williams, is quoted as saying, “It will convey the shock and freshness of the Bible in a unique way.”
No doubt. In the Manga Bible, whose heroes look and sound like skateboarders in Bedouin gear, Noah gets tripped up counting the animals in the Ark: “That’s 11,344 animals? Arggh! I’ve lost count again. I’m going to have to start from scratch!”
Abraham rides a horse out of an explosion to save Lot. Og, king of Bashan, looms like an early Darth Vader. The Sermon on the Mount did not make the book, though, because there was not enough action to it.
The Manga Bible sold 30,000 copies in Great Britain, according to Doubleday. The print run in this country is 15,000, and it sells for $12.95.
Mr. Akinsiku, 42, who uses the pen name Siku, grew up in England and Nigeria in an Anglican family of Nigerian descent. He recently graduated from theology school in London. For years, he has worked as an artist, and a rendering of the Bible was the best way of glorifying God, he said in a telephone interview from London.
While younger adults and teenagers are the most avid consumers of manga, Mr. Akinsiku said he had heard from grandmothers who picked up the book as a gift for their grandchildren. The book is meant to be a first taste of the Bible, which many feel too intimidated to read, Mr. Akinsiku said. Every few pages, a small tab refers to the biblical verses the action covers.”
What do you think? Would you be interested in reading this version of the Bible?
Vick Mickunas
Permalink | Comments (4) | Categories: what do you think?

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Comments
By Marie
February 21, 2008 8:02 PM | Link to this
I was wondering if there is any Japanese book stores located in Dayton, Ohio? I was looking for something that carried japanese craft books and mags. Thanks in advance. MarieBy victor mickunas
February 12, 2008 10:00 AM | Link to this
I’m reading it now and it isn’t bad.By Roger
February 11, 2008 12:35 PM | Link to this
Definitley interested. As a long time anime fan, Bible believer and follower of Christ, I have to say I am ready for this book. :) I don’t find it blasphemous to take artistic license with Biblical text as long as the author is not claiming new revelation about it’s meaning or persuade readers into a new theology, and especially when the author “refers to the biblical verses the action covers.” At face value it simply looks like a retelling of the great stories of the Bible, which are full of drama and action that even athiests can enjoy reading.By ronster
February 11, 2008 10:29 AM | Link to this
hmmmmm… i seem to remember this thing the monks told me about, called an “illuminated manuscript” … i think i saw one in a museum once….