Subject: Thoth read Vinland Saga (Volume 1)
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Posted on: 2019-12-06 19:19:35 UTC

Vinland Saga is an ongoing manga that's been running for a bit over a decade now and has recently been getting attention, having just received a TV adaptation from Studio Wit. I opted to read the manga this time around instead of jumping into the show. I can't say definitively if that's a better or worse choice, so don't take that as a recommendation either way: this isn't a Berserk scenario where there's a right answer to that question (for those of you who are unaware: Beserk is a very well-known manga that's suffered through multiple really terrible anime adaptations). Although speaking of Berserk... well, I'll get to that later.

As the name might imply to you, Vinland Saga is about Vikings. It's about a Viking boy who swears revenge on a Viking after that Viking kills his Viking dad, and so he ends up working for the evil Viking so that he can continue to challenge him to duels to the death until the finally kills him because the evil Viking just won't kill the kid for some reason. It's also about a lot of people who aren't Vikings because, of course, Vikings were specifically the people going out on ships and pillaging. Viking has now ceased to sound or look like a word to me after writing it so much. Viking Viking Viking Viking Viking.

Right. So from that plot synopsis this really sounds like a fairly standard dark historical fantasy affair, which is... kind of is? and kind of isn't? If I had to say two things about Vinland Saga (at least so far) I'd say that it 1) does not put its best foot forward, and 2) has, so far, been far better in execution than in concept.

What I mean about it not putting its best foot forward is that Vinland saga opens on an epic battle scene full of people fighting each other and then the vikings come in and they're all awesome and stuff. As I read further through the story and into the prolonged flashback that takes up most of this first volume it became increasingly clear that that's not what this story is going to be about. if you're looking for hype action and killer fights, I don't think this will be your thing. The story and writing really shines when it slows down a lot and focuses in on character interactions. Most of the best, most memorable moments so far have just been people talking. Or even silence.

And this is where the thing about being better in execution comes in. A lot of these characters and scenarios are fairly archetypical, but it doesn't really matter because it's done so well. We've seen the kid out for revenge, the warrior turned pacifist, and so many of these other characters before, at least in outline. Thorfinn isn't all that different from... I dunno, 50 other anime protagonists with dead dads, on the surface. But he's rendered so well. He's visibly angry and bitter and driven by that need for revenge, and he's certainly a good fighter, but there's also something just... deeply pathetic about him. Beneath all that, he's still just a sad, scared, wounded kid. This isn't a story about the glory of revenge. If anything, it's a condemnation of that.

Likewise, we have our villain-slash-surrogate-father-figure (I know that makes no sense but it's sort of true), Askeladd. And as much as I love Thorfinn's characterization, I might just like Askeladd's even more. He's as charming as he is dangerous, and he's dangerous because he's so charming. He's a manipulative villain who really feels like one, charismatic to a fault, and always endlessly probing for whatever weak point or sore spot he can poke at to get exactly the reaction he wants. Whether or not he cares about the boy whose father he killed is an open question, but I don't doubt that he's got some ulterior motive in keeping Thorfinn alive.

The series has also, by all visible signs, been fairly well researched. It certainly has its basis in history, with several recognizable figures and traditions that are, near as I can tell, period accurate. But I'm not a historian by any stretch, so I'm not really the best to judge. I'm not shocked by this level of research: the author's previous work was a piece of hard sci-fi (near-future, fairly scientifically accurate) about space janitors, and he's certainly no stranger to research.

Art-wise, the manga is fairly solid. Most of it has a very tactile feel to it, with significantly more detail than a lot of manga I've read. That's a mixed blessing (more detail leads to busier scenes, more complexity, and so on), but it's used to full effect in those more introspective scenes. Sometimes the art jumps to more deformed style in moments of levity (or when Askeladd is trying to convince someone he's an idiot), which can be a bit jarring, given how detailed the art usually is, but it's standard practice in manga and anime, so you're either used to it or will be. The character designs are all clear and distinctive, something I really took for granted until I tried to read Attack on Titan, where everyone looks absolutely the same and I honestly didn't even last a full volume in. If I had to complain about the art at all, I'd say that fights often seem a little a muddied: It's hard to tell what's going on, and even someone's head getting cut off didn't really feel like it had much weight behind it. It's missing that something. Fullmetal Alchemist's fights feel better, and that manga is a lot sketchier, less detailed, and less bloody. It feels like, style, the fights are trying to emulate Berserk, but as ugly as its fights can sometimes get, Vinland Saga doesn't have the dark atmosphere or visceral sense of unpleasantness that really makes Berserk's fights. Everything's a little to clean, even when there's blood everywhere.

So yeah, that's Vinland Saga. Contrary to popular belief I wouldn't say it's that much like Berserk, even if it's probably cribbing from it a bit. It's not quite so gritty, but it's gritty enough to feel real and offers a lot of solid character moments interspersed with fight scenes that aren't really great but are solid enough.

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