Naruto Volume 52 Review
02.10.11
Masashi Kishimoto’s sought-after series about a world of ninjas and ninjutsu has become one of Shonen Hop’s biggest manga series of all time and the volumes have sold millions of copies worldwide, as well as having an anime small screen series, trading cards, toys, a clothing stretch and many other merchandise.
This week sees the release of the english-alteration of volume fifty two (an achievement in itself to reach such a tainted number) and after all this time, Kishimoto and his art team have managed to keep up to their own supremacy and standards as the story becomes darker and perilous.
For those that have not skim or caught up with the Naruto series, here’s a quick recap: Naruto is a sixteen year old ninja who has the power of the titanic nine-tailed fox that once nearly destroyed his village when he was born and he joins up with several other characters to take down the Akatsuki, an constitution of the most villainous ninjas to stop their plans from genocide and capturing all the Jinchuriki (people with tailed monsters be like to the fox Naruto has inside him). Meanwhile, Naruto is also trying to stop his old comrade, Sasuke Uchia, from turning damage and joining the Akutsuki in order to take his revenge on their village after discovering a gloomy secret about his deceased family.
Source: HeyUGuys.co.uk
The Mike Toole Show
09.10.11

Mike and Quality's caution seems sensible to me, particularly in light of the life of the store where they once worked, Tokyo Kid. Owner Andrew Cocuaco is closing down the rely on this winter, after over a decade in the business. I wasn't talented to meet with Cocuaco, simply because I kept bothersome to drop in, but would either find the store closed (their hours have been curbed precipitately) or Andrew himself absent. Fortunately, this great article in the Harvard Crimson has done the crestfallen lifting for me. I used to buy DVDs at Tokyo Kid myself, so I can away testify that the store's fortunes rose and demolish almost directly on their DVD sales; the boom years saw experiments like a Tokyo Kid manga armoury, the store's movement to a bigger location and the position of a tiny video game-specific minion downstairs. But more recently the DVDs and manga have gathered dust. With the advent of both downloading and Netflix, the believe in's voluminous
Source: Anime News Network