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Japanese manga
The Strange Tale of Panorama Island
(
パノラマ島綺譚
,
Panorama-t? Kitan
)
is a Japanese
manga
written and illustrated by
Suehiro Maruo
and based on a 1926 novella of the same name [
ja
] by
Edogawa Ranpo
.
[1]
The manga adaptation was published in English by
Last Gasp
on July 1, 2013.
[2]
Plot
[
edit
]
Hitomi Hirosuke, a struggling novelist, writes a story titled "The Tale of RA" about a protagonist who suddenly gains wealth and constructs a paradise. His editor informs him that his wealthy boarding school friend, Genzaburo Komoda, has died. Hitomi forms a plan to impersonate the dead Genzaburo, who looks exactly like him, to gain his fortune. He fakes his suicide and
exhumes
Genzaburo's corpse, hiding it and pulling out his own tooth to match Genzaburo's false one. When Hitomi is discovered in Genzaburo's hometown, a doctor attributes his resurrection to
catalepsy
and Hitomi successfully passes for Genzaburo. Hitomi convinces his family advisor, Tsunoda, of his plan to build an amusement park on the island of Nakanoshima, relocating the fishermen living there. He finances the construction by selling the Komoda family treasures, and appeases his business associate by giving him their kiln. Genzaburo's widow, Chiyoko, learns about his deception after he has sex with her.
Near the completion of the amusement park, Hitomi takes Chiyoko to the island on a tour. He shows her extravagant manmade landscapes dotted with statues and frolicking attractive people, an
aquarium tunnel
, and portions of the island made to look larger optically like a
panorama
. Chiyoko is overwhelmed, fainting, and Hitomi chokes her to death. Later, Hitomi is visited by a detective named Kogoro Kitami who had read "The Tale of RA" and discovered Hitomi's act. Hitomi commits suicide by launching himself into a firework.
History
[
edit
]
Japanese mystery and suspense author
Edogawa Ranpo
originally serialized his novella
The Strange Tale of Panorama Island
in the October 1926 issue of
Shinseinen
.
[3]
Reception
[
edit
]
The manga won the New Artist Prize at the 13th
Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize
in 2009
[4]
and was nominated in 2014 for an
Eisner Award for Best Adaptation from Another Medium
.
[5]
References
[
edit
]
External links
[
edit
]
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Related
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Grand Prize
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Special
Award
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Award for
Excellence
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Creative
Award
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New Artist
Prize
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Short Story
Award
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