Last month, underground comic books publisher Last Gasp released an English edition of Yūnagi no Machi, Sakura no Kuni under the title Town of Evening Calm, Country of Cherry Blossoms. While 98% of the English mangasphere seems to neither know nor care about this book (which was to be expected), some people have actually read and, what’s more, bothered to review it. I thought it’d be nice to put together a post that contains links to all the English reviews that are available online (after all, if we don’t do it, who will? ;)). So far, the verdicts have been unanimously positive.
- Mania Manga Review Added 04.27.2007
“Mania Rating Grade: A+ … Town of Evening Calm, Country of Cherry Blossoms handles its controversial subject matter tactfully, but is still packed with emotion.”
- The Comics Journal
“… [It’s] a book that will stay with you for quite some time after you’ve read it, but without feeling like you’ve just eaten the literary equivalent of a plate of spinach. You’ll be haunted by its implications, to be sure, but you won’t feel as though you’ve been hit over the head with Big Messages … Town of Evening Calm, Country of Cherry Blossoms is well worth your attention.”
- Jog - The Blog
“… the powerful intermingling of pain and death, and life, nonetheless, going on through happiness and farce, makes this a wrenching book that you’ll surely return to.”
- Flipped (Comic World News)
“BUY THIS BOOK … Fumiyo Kouno’s Town of Evening Calm, Country of Cherry Blossoms (Last Gasp) is empirically, incontrovertibly good and everyone should read it.”
- Pop Culture Shock
“SHOCK VALUE: A+ … Kouno’s refusal to impose an obvious dramatic structure on either story, her deft manipulation of time, and her emphasis on small, everyday moments, inoculate Town of Evening Calm against sentimentality and mawkishness.”
- Overlooked Manga Festival
“Hiroshima stories have long been a part of manga, … What Kouno brings to the genre is a sense of distance and a quiet, conversational, uninsistent tone. This is not, for the most part, a book about the horror of the atomic bomb. It’s a book about the sad and lovely and aching city that grew up around that horror.”
If you know of more English reviews of this book, don’t hesitate to drop us a line. We will update this post accordingly.
Meanwhile, a quick glance across the Pacific is in order as the homepage for the upcoming live-action adaptation of Fumiyo Kōno’s manga was launched only a few days ago.
Directed by Kiyoshi Sasabe (Sea Without Exit, Curtain Call, etc.), the film is scheduled to open in Japanese theaters on July 28th. There are also plans to show the film at the prestigious Cannes Film Festival held in May. Following is the film’s main cast:
- Nanami Ishikawa (Rena Tanaka)

- Minami Hirano (Kumiko Asō)

- Fujimi Hirano (Shiho Fujimura)

- Asahi Ishikawa (Mitsunori Isaki [young], Masaaki Sakai [old])


- Nagio Ishikawa (Yūta Kanai)

- Yutaka Uchikoshi (Hisashi Yoshizawa)

- Tōko Tone (Noriko Nakagoshi)

Looks like something to look forward to.