Attack on Titan: Kuklo Unbound, by Ryo Suzukaze
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Attack on Titan: Kuklo Unbound, by Ryo Suzukaze
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A prequel to the blockbuster Attack on Titan series, Before the Fall is a three volume young adult fiction fantasy novel series set years before the events that transpire with Eren and Mikasa. Together, the second and third volumes of Before the Fall are yet another prequel story and they are for the most part separate from the story of Angel and Wall Maria. In this collection we are introduced to a new character Kuklo was found as a baby crying in a mass of Titan vomit, amidst the dead titan corpses. He is called "a child of titan" and is essentially hated by the people inside the walls. Kyklo despite his horrible beginnings and a single-functioning eye also seems to grow unnaturally fast. He parts himself from his past and gambles on the fate of humanity by enlisting in the Survey Corps. This group functions primarily outside of the safety of the walls. And here with his strength and determination Kyklo survives and thrives. But to accomplish this he gets his hands on the Vertical Maneuvering Equipment. Although the gear is still imperfect and causes a troublesome incident for Kyklo, he fights the titans. Whether it is because it is his fate to fight them, or it is because of his past, he fights against them.
Attack on Titan: Kuklo Unbound, by Ryo Suzukaze- Amazon Sales Rank: #717818 in Books
- Brand: Suzukaze, Ryo/ Shibamoto, Thores (ILT)
- Published on: 2015-05-26
- Released on: 2015-05-26
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 7.49" h x .76" w x 5.50" l, .81 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 298 pages
From School Library Journal Gr 10 Up—The survivor of the attack that killed his mother, Kuklo is believed to be the child of a Titan (born from the vomit of the Titan that consumed her). His is a life relegated to that of a sideshow freak, marred by neglect, abuse, and the ever-looming possibility of sudden death. Kuklo's bleak existence is exacerbated when he is purchased by the Inocencios, a family of aristocrats who plan to use Kuklo for political gain. A series of events lead to the teen's escape and quest to find out if he truly is the child of a Titan—with unlikely alliances along the way. This stand-alone prequel to the popular manga series "Attack of the Titan" (Kodansha) is a combination of suspense, action, and mystery and features short chapters interspersed with manga-style illustrations. However, the occasional action illustrations lead to uneven pacing and are likely to frustrate committed readers of the manga. VERDICT A slow prequel meant to explain previously unexplored elements of the manga series that may only work as an entry point to new readers.—Tamela Chambers, Chicago Pub. Schs.
About the Author Ryo Suzukaze is a professional novelist, comicker and screenwriter. Upon graduating high school Suzukaze entered a technical school only to quickly transition to work in Japan's rapidly exploding YA fiction scene. His first work was on the novelization of the mega-hit video game series: Shin Megami Tensei - DEVIL SUMMONER. He would then go to write novels for the following series: .hack//CELL, the IdolM@ster, and Attack on Titan. Suzukaze would also write the script for the IdolM@ster sci-fi spin-off comic and animated TV series XenoGlossia.Thores Shibamoto is well known amongst Japan's YA fiction scene. Shibamoto's art can be seen on and inside the covers of a number of major works over the last 10 years including Trinity Blood and Bionic Solder.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. A Terrific Loose Sequel (Mostly Next-Generation PoV) to Attack on Titan: Before the Fall By MereChristian Attack On Titan: Kuklo Unbound is the second and third of the prequel novels to the AoT manga series. They take place many decades before the regular series begins with the breach and loss of Wall Maria. The English version combines the two novels into one.The story begins briefly in the midst of the preceding volume, and then jumps about ten to fifteen years (my best estimate) to the time of the "current novels". As the story starts, an infant is found alive in the Titan vomit, having somehow survived the death of his mother. Dubbed "the Titan's son", the boy is sold from master to master and put on display. Beatings, malnourishment, and a hellish existence follow. Until one fateful day, that is...One day, a wealthy man purchases the boy for his son, Xavi, to beat up to bolster Xavi's confidence so he can prepare to enter the military. Every day is an agonizing beating for the savage Titan's son, named "Kuklo". But one day he meets the kind-hearted sister of Xavi, Sharle.Sharle takes it upon herself to teach the boy about the outside world and so on. They develop a close bond bordering on childhood love when a series of events force them to flee land eventually force Kuklo to join the re-constituted Survey Corps.Of course, Kuklo is fine with this, to an extent, as he wants to forever sever the psychological connection that his life has given him to the Titans. With the aid of Cardina and Rosa (who is the daughter of Maria and the late Solm from the previous book) he goes about doing this.This is like the previous book, and unlike the comics, in that the focus on characterization is much more deep. Don't get me wrong, the manga is big on characterization and not just action, but there is only so much a comic medium can do when it comes to exposing the inner workings of characters. Just as manga is more vivid in the descriptiveness of the world and characters, so prose shows their inner thoughts far better.I have to say that I loved Cardina. He was snarky and a bit sour at times, but all in good fun. He sort of played the role of Kuklo's lancer and became the closest thing, other than Sharle, that Kuklo has to family or loved ones. The development of their friendship was awesome.Rosa was cool as as well. Her relationship with Kuklo was kind of like Annie's to Eren's decades later. Well, if Annie were a good guy that is (though we still don't know what the goals of the Titan Shifters' village is, and these are child soldiers in the main manga story, so what their alignment is, we don't know).Finally, Sharle's friendship, goodness, and developing (I assume) romance with Kuklo was sweet and fun to read. On the subject of romance (or the potential thereof), Angel and Maria from the previous book are living together and Rosa calls him "uncle". Now whether they are just friends or are married or live together or what is happening, I don't know. I like to think they are married. It would be a sweet resolution to their arcs of the first book.The book was a little more relaxed and laid-back. Not as intense as the manga series in Eren, Mikasa, and Armin's time, so that lent itself to a narrative that was different, but not a whit less fun. In some ways, it was more fun. The adrenaline rush of terror was absent, but the slow terror and dark feel of the setting was heightened.There is one cool (POTENTIAL) spoiler. Such as references to an outside community that is a myth known only to the nobility.I have to say that this is possibly my favorite AoT story to date. Well this and the previous one. But they are different enough from the main story that takes place years later in-universe that it's hard to judge such things.About the only thing I disliked was the inclusion of some of the cheesier (but brief) shonen tropes that not even the original manga had. Other than that, this was a masterpiece of a light novel and one I greatly, greatly enjoyed.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Recommended read! By Heather Lucas This one was great! I love side stories because they give more depth and information on the main story. It was cool that this took place before the start of the series and was interesting to see how the side/background characters felt about the "Titan child". Kuklo, the main character, developed nicely considering his circumstances and overall the story was great!
3 of 28 people found the following review helpful. Not interested enough in AoT story to read light novels. By Loves RPGs I returned the book unread. I am not interested enough in the AoT genre to suffer through bad translations of "light" novels. Mangas compensate with the pictures, so one can eventually figure out what's going on. You don't have anywhere near that many illustrations in LNs, so you're stuck trying to figure out what the translator meant when they torture and mangle English. There's also the fact that far too many of the translators have low skills in creative writing, so the English they use suffers from too much literalism.I have no clue how good or bad the original author is, because short of reading the work in Japanese, there's no way to tell.
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