Review: Train + Train, Vol. 1
originally written for and posted on Comicsnob.com [Dec ’06 – May ’08]

Train + Train, Vol. 1
Published by: Go! Comi
Writer: Hideyuki Kurata
Artist: Tomomasa Takuma
200 (186) pages.
Original Language: Japanese
Orientation: Right to left
Vintage: 2000. US edition January 2007.
Translation & Adaptation: Christine Schilling
Production Assistant: Mallory Reaves
Lettering: TeamPokopen
Production Manager: James Dashiell
Editor: Brynne Chandler
Publisher’s Rating: Teen, 13+
Rating: 4 out of 5
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Premise: Combining a high school with a summer abroad and taking it’s students on the galaxy’s longest field trip, the School Trains of planet Deloca are renown across several systems for the quality of their education. In addition to the regular School Trains, however, there is one Special Train, with a unique curriculum.
Synopsis:
Meet Reiichi Sakakusa (call him Rei). He’s your normal rising high-school freshman, though perhaps a bit more timid than most. Or at least that’s what we’re supposed to think.
Rei and Liae Igarashi, a childhood friend, are making the trip from the largely rural planet of Migella to enroll on the School Train. They’re not the most sophisticated of teens however, and soon the two find themselves in big trouble. Rei is about to get his ass kicked by what appears to be 150kg of Cat-thug-hybrid (a non-human a bit testy about being pointed at by some rubes like some sort of sideshow freak) and the only way to save his scrawny ass is to take the offer of a passing girl, who claims she can save him if the pair will cover her next meal.
She’s Arena Pendleton. She kicks ass. She takes names. She has a katana, and knows how to use it.
Arena isn’t out for the regular school course: she’s here for the Special Train. And it’s leaving soon. As in, a couple of hours. She’s grateful for the meal, since she hasn’t eaten in three days, but time’s a wastin’.
As might be expected… the cops, some mercenaries, a pair of high-security time-locked handcuffs, and the resulting comedy of errors has both of our leads in a bind. Seemingly against his will, Rei is being dragged to enroll on the Special Train, and it is only after he makes the (literal) leap that the story really begins.
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Review:
So far, there is only the barest sci-fi gloss (space shuttles, anthropomorphic robots, four-story tall locomotives, cat-like aliens who’ll kick your ass) and a bit of steampunk underpinnings (ref: four-story tall locomotive) to what is otherwise an action- and character-driven book: Fist fights, street rumbles, and running battles punctuated by the occasional revealing conversation about future plans, expectations, and what one should really want out of life.
I’d like more sci-fi elements in future volumes, but I am by no means complaining. I’d still give this title two thumbs up– two thumbs that just finished cocking back the hammers on twin pistols. This one rocks.
Let me back up and deconstruct it a bit, because that’s what’s expected of a critic. The premise is ready-made for episodic adventure, in that the train (both a metaphor and an actual conveyance) can take our characters to a new environment for each book, with new challenges and adventures to be had at every stop. Simultaneously, the train is a huge freakin’ school, so everyone lives and learns together in what is basically a confined environment. I wish I had thought of this first; I’d still be writing sequels. Writer Kurata gets full marks.
The art… supports the story. Neither exceptional or objectionable, it works for this application. It trends close enough to “realistic” that some who object to the super-cute manga style will find no annoying distractions here. And there are the aforementioned aliens, robots, shuttles, and giant machinery to look at. And a one panel cameo from the demon goddess Deathwish, she who will bring destruction and carnage to Deloca in time for its Millennial Celebration. OK, so I’m just teasing you with that one. It’s not that exquisite a panel, I just like repeating “the Great Deathwish, etc.” –a lovely turn of phrase; kudos to both the original writer and to translator Schilling.
Artist Takuma gets 4 marks out of 5. Sometimes, not messing up an otherwise good story is valuable, too. And since comics are a medium of both words and pictures, a lot needs to be said about the importance of panel layout as it affects both pacing and narrative flow. (A lot more than has been said up to this point, anyway.)
I’m looking forward to the trip Kurata and Takuma are about to take us on. (if you’d like more convincing, go check out the trailer on Go! Comi’s web site.) (yes, a manga trailer. CPM has been doing them too)


















