Aion
Time-Traveller
I've now read the first 4 volumes of Death Note. As I expected when I already knew the anime was very faithful to the first half of the manga, time is passing quickly as I go through the best sections of the story. It's just too bad the Yotsuba section, which almost made me drop the anime at one stage, will get going in the next volume, most likely including a lot more dull chatter than was in the anime. Roll on 'IT'...
There was one change the anime made early on that made the plot far easier to understand: The Raye Penbar train part. With the manga I'm a little confused how L wasn't able to work out that Raye received the FBI file first when he was sent it first and then made the others request for the FBI file. In the anime this confusion was avoided by Penbar simply writing the name of his superior down, which resulted in him unwittingly getting his superior to send the file to all 12 agents.
I'm a little disappointed that neither the author nor artist decided to put any information about themselves between the chapters. What I liked about the Naruto volumes was how the author made sure to talk about as much as possible in between chapters, ranging from informing readers about his other manga attempts and how he was almost killed by a gorilla when he accidentally stood on the foot of a baby, causing the daddy to anger. I'm hoping Vol. 13 makes up for this.
When I'm done with Death Note, I might order Death Note: Another Note - The prequel novel that reveals what happened when L worked with Naomi. I like that it's narrated by Mello; the informal style the first few pages were written in (read them on Amazon) were pretty good simply due to the words coming from Mello.
There was one change the anime made early on that made the plot far easier to understand: The Raye Penbar train part. With the manga I'm a little confused how L wasn't able to work out that Raye received the FBI file first when he was sent it first and then made the others request for the FBI file. In the anime this confusion was avoided by Penbar simply writing the name of his superior down, which resulted in him unwittingly getting his superior to send the file to all 12 agents.
I'm a little disappointed that neither the author nor artist decided to put any information about themselves between the chapters. What I liked about the Naruto volumes was how the author made sure to talk about as much as possible in between chapters, ranging from informing readers about his other manga attempts and how he was almost killed by a gorilla when he accidentally stood on the foot of a baby, causing the daddy to anger. I'm hoping Vol. 13 makes up for this.
When I'm done with Death Note, I might order Death Note: Another Note - The prequel novel that reveals what happened when L worked with Naomi. I like that it's narrated by Mello; the informal style the first few pages were written in (read them on Amazon) were pretty good simply due to the words coming from Mello.