Review of Servamp #2

Sarah

Staff
AUKN Staff
<b>Review of Servamp #2 by Sarah</b>

"We servamps get power from your blood. Actually the will in your blood. But you have none." Kuro to Mahiru. "Do you protect your friend? Or kill him?"

Mahiru Shirota&rsquo;s kindly, well-meaning nature has brought him a heap of trouble when Kuro, the stray cat he has adopted, turns out to be the eldest of seven servamps (servant vampires). &nbsp;Mahiru&rsquo;s life is turned upside-down. For the sinister Tsubaki, claiming to be the eighth &ndash; rejected &ndash; servamp, is out for revenge against his seven siblings and their Masters, and he&rsquo;s assembling a crack team of second class vampires to support him. Mahiru needs to get up to speed at using his &lsquo;lead&rsquo; (Master&rsquo;s weapon) but even with training from Misono Arisuin, another young servamp Master, he&rsquo;s struggling to master the basics.

But worse is to come as Mahiru&rsquo;s best friend at school, Sakuya, has gone missing. What&rsquo;s strange is that no one seems to remember much about him...almost as if he had never existed. So when Mahiru discovers that Sakuya has become one of Tsubaki&rsquo;s second class vampires, he&rsquo;s distraught. Even more so when&nbsp;Sakuya reveals that he can&rsquo;t trust Mahiru anymore because he lied to him about Kuro&rsquo;s identity &ndash; and reveals that he has a pathological hatred of liars. What is Mahiru to do? He&rsquo;s desperate to prove to the embittered Sakuya that he&rsquo;s still his friend &ndash; and he wants to save him from Tsubaki&rsquo;s malign influence.

<em>Servamp</em> already distinguished itself in Volume 1 as being a vampire tale with a difference. Strike Tanaka has a light but deft touch in telling the story of a boy and his lethargic black cat/vampire who likes to laze around eating potato chips and ramen while playing video games. In this second volume, Sakuya&rsquo;s backstory &ndash; although rather briefly revealed &ndash; brings out the mangaka&rsquo;s strengths. Even though, as in so many shounen manga, the virtues of friendship are emphasized to the extent that they can sound clich&eacute;d, she manages to make Mahiru&rsquo;s determination to save Sakuya both believable and touching, which bodes well for future developments. And the unexpected arrival of Mahiru&rsquo;s uncle is a little gem. Characterization and pacing come together really well in these sections.

However, the story-telling is still&nbsp;a little obscure in other places, in spite of Wesley Bridges&rsquo;s clear and natural-sounding translation for Seven Seas. This is not a manga to skim through at speed (like <em>Seraph of the End</em> or <em>Magi</em>); to get the most out of it, you&rsquo;ll be flicking back and forward to check out where this or that plot point was foreshadowed; it&rsquo;s&nbsp;erring on the complicated rather than complex side of plot development.

There&rsquo;s a bonus one-shot &lsquo;True Tale: A Servamp&rsquo;s Life&rsquo; at the end of this volume, giving a Kuro&rsquo;s view of a day in his life with Mahiru and two more 4-koma inside the end cover.

The big news has been the announcement of an upcoming <em>Servamp </em>anime TV series (details not yet known at the time of writing). The growing amount of character merchandise available in Japan (the mangaka&rsquo;s chibi versions are undeniably cute) and two drama CDs were a good clue.&nbsp;With its distinctive character designs, deepening plot, and deft blend of light and dark, Strike Tanaka&rsquo;s vampire series with a difference seems ideal material for animation. I hope the creative team will do it justice. If nothing else, the lively colour splash pages cry out to be animated! &nbsp;

<strong>In Summary</strong>

It&rsquo;s not quite there yet but it&rsquo;s on its way. <em>Servamp</em>&rsquo;s strengths are shown to greater advantage here as Strike Tanaka brings Mahiru&rsquo;s threatened friendship with Sakuya into sharper focus. I have great hopes for the next volume...

<b>Final score: 8 out of 10</b>
 
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