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  • Published: 1 January 2013
  • ISBN: 9781935654773
  • Imprint: Vertical Inc
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 368
  • RRP: $29.99

The Book of Human Insects



The Book of Human Insects is recognized as Tezuka's most cinematic title. Reading much like a thriller, this title has more twists and turns than MW and features a timeless leading lady.

Toshiko Tomura is a genius; the darling of the intelligentsia. A modern-day Michelangelo, this twenty year-old is already an established international stage actress, an up-and-coming architect, and the next recipient of the prestigious Akutagawa Prize as Japan's best new writer. Her actions make headlines in the papers, and inspire radio and television programming. And like many great talents, her troubled past is what motivates her to greatness. She has the amazing ability to emulate the talents of others.

Toshiko is also the mastermind behind a series of murders. The ultimate mimic, she has plagiarized, blackmailed, stolen and replicated the works of scores of talents. And now as her star is rising within the world of the elites and powerful she has amassed a long list of enemies frustrated by the fact that she has built critical and financial acclaim for nothing more than copying others' work. Neglected as a child, she is challenging the concepts of gender inequality while unleashing her loneliness upon the world as she climbs the social ladder one body at a time.

One of Osamu Tezuka's most wicked tales, The Book of Human Insects renders the 70's as a brutal and often polarizing bug-eat-bug world, where only those willing to sell their soul to the masses and become something less than human are capable of achieving their wildest dreams

  • Published: 1 January 2013
  • ISBN: 9781935654773
  • Imprint: Vertical Inc
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 368
  • RRP: $29.99

About the author

Osamu Tezuka

Osamu Tezuka (1928-89) is the godfather of Japanese manga comics. He originally intended to become a doctor and earned his degree before turning to what was then a medium for children. His many early masterpieces include the series known in the U.S. as Astro Boy. With his sweeping vision, deftly interwined plots, feel for the workings of power, and indefatigable commitment to human dignity, Tezuka elevated manga to an art form. The later Tezuka, who authored Buddha, often had in mind the mature readership that manga gained in the sixties and that had only grown ever since. The Kurosawa of Japanese pop culture, Osamu Tezuka is a twentieth century classic.

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Praise for The Book of Human Insects

"A sophisticated, nightmarish and thoroughly adult tale despite the cartoonish conventions of Tezuka's art, this handsome volume reaffirms the definitive role the creator of Astro Boy had in elevating manga to serious literary status." --Time Out New York

"Brilliant. Just once, I'd like to read a work by Tezuka that wasn't either at least nearly or totally perfectly crafted... A typical complaint nowadays is that the usual comic costs about $4 and takes about 10 minutes (or less) to read. But with Tezuka's work, you're invited to linger over a page for a minute, just taking everything in. One of Tezuka's (many) skills is his deftness with background details, with an emphasis on lived-in spaces that seem to have texture that you could just grip." --MTV