

In fact my only complaint (which is small) is with these pages looking like they might belong in some sort of comic Louvre gallery I would have like to see some kind of mark on the pages like a tab with the original comic on the page instead of throwing the corresponding page and issue on pages way in the back of the book. Of course you can learn more about Stan from his profile (and a picture) which can be found at the end of the book after the index but before the obligatory advertising for other Usagi Yojimbo books. At the beginning of the book we get a Forward from part time colorist of Usagi Yojimbo Tom Luth about his time on the books and we get an Introduction from the man himself Stan Sakai who is responsible for 35 years on probably one of the longest running anthropomorphic comics ever. However, This book is not going to give you a great deal of information about Miyamoto Usagi or the world he inhabits but is instead just a collection of the cover artwork spanning a generation of Usagi Yojimbo stories making this book a super easy read but more so you don't want to rush through this book too quickly or you will miss the fantastic illustrations from the last 35 years (though you can always go back through and look at them more later.) The size of the book is fairly large with a nice hardcover and each of the pages is glossy showing us the art without the clutter of publisher marks on each page vibrantly.
#Usagi yojimbo fan art series
Later on I discovered there was an actual comic series and although I would have very much have liked to read it now I admit the lure of the colorful juggernauts of DC and Marvel stole away my pennies as a youth (as well as those silly Garbage Pail Kid cards) so it was not till later on that I got to read some of the adventures of this rabbit samurai (which by the way the TMNT toys got his name wrong but that is neither here or there) and I am glad I did because it is a fantastic world with that I hope to share with others even as age slowly tries to catch up to me.

I remember the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle toy based on the main character of this series when I was a kid which I also recall thinking had better weapons and was just cooler in general to the rest of the turtles. Later on I discovered there was an actual comic series and although I would have very much have liked to read it now I admit the lure of the colorful juggernauts of DC and Marvel stole away my pennies as a youth (as For the Usagi Yojimbo fan in all of us whether you know of him or not. For the Usagi Yojimbo fan in all of us whether you know of him or not.
