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    <title>yukimuramakoto &amp;mdash; Strange Vistas</title>
    <link>https://strangevistas.com/tag:yukimuramakoto</link>
    <description>Writing about movies, anime, books, and media</description>
    <pubDate>Wed, 13 May 2026 22:16:34 +0000</pubDate>
    <item>
      <title>Heavy, Weightless</title>
      <link>https://strangevistas.com/heavy-weightless?pk_campaign=rss-feed</link>
      <description>&lt;![CDATA[Planetes book cover&#xA;&#xA;It&#39;s easy to imagine space having a meditative quality.  You, inside a metal tube, floating in the void, weightless, with no extraneous sounds for a few dozen thousand kilometers. The tin can keeping you alive doubles as an isolation chamber. With nothing to see, anywhere else, you look inward.&#xA;&#xA;Nothing helps you focus like having nothing all around you.&#xA;&#xA;Planetes is a manga set in a future where space travel - at least between the Earth and the Moon - has become commonplace. So commonplace there are blue-collar jobs. The main characters are a crew of garbage collectors, working in space picking up the debris that could threaten other ships.&#xA;&#xA;There&#39;s Yuri, the stoic, inwards Russian dealing his wife&#39;s death. Fee, a brash American pilot chainsmoker who takes no crap from anyone (almost). And Hachimaki, a Japanese full of dreams who says he&#39;ll get his own ship one day, as soon as he jettisons the dead-end gig he&#39;s using to pick up some cash.&#xA;&#xA;There are shenanigans involved, as author Yukimura Makoto feels his way through the format. Mostly, it&#39;s a book of low-key emotions.  The crew deals with vast emptiness and cramped quarters, their world reduced to the 2 or 3 people they share a ship with.&#xA;&#xA;It creates a tension in the narrative dynamic. The story can have fun but doesn&#39;t goof around too much. There is adventure and some action interludes, but they never become the point. It&#39;s alternatively about people doing their job, world-affecting conspiracies, and quiet introspection.&#xA;&#xA;As a story, it keeps you wondering what&#39;s going to come next.&#xA;&#xA;For the characters, though, it&#39;s about loss, and acceptance, and change. With all that empty space, the nothingness threatening to suck you away, you&#39;re going to have to find your own footholds. Lacking external stand-ins for meaning anywhere around you, you have to provide them yourself.&#xA;&#xA;Boy, is that hard, and Yukimura can make it all feel painfully human.&#xA;&#xA;He concocts the conspiracies the crew get dragged into with the same ease as he presents the strife of a kid trying to live up to his elders. He can put a multi-page chase sequence or make you feel loss in three panels.&#xA;&#xA;You can get what you want as long as you are a crazy, selfish prick of a dreamer, but it might consume you. Reaching for the stars, you may need to leave your loved ones behind.&#xA;&#xA;Expressions. Body language. Walking away. Sorrow. It all comes through.&#xA;&#xA;And then it sort of ... just ends. The story wraps without being able to top itself. But by then it’s done enough. &#xA;&#xA;Having achieved what you aimed for, you realize that there’s peace in just getting on with the job.&#xA;&#xA;small&#xA;#manga #planetes #yukimuramakoto #sliceoflife&#xA;/small]]&gt;</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="https://media.strangevistas.com/planetes-vol1-cover-small.jpg" alt="Planetes book cover"/></p>

<p>It&#39;s easy to imagine space having a meditative quality.  You, inside a metal tube, floating in the void, weightless, with no extraneous sounds for a few dozen thousand kilometers. The tin can keeping you alive doubles as an isolation chamber. With nothing to see, anywhere else, you look inward.</p>

<p>Nothing helps you focus like having <em>nothing</em> all around you.</p>

<p><em>Planetes</em> is a manga set in a future where space travel – at least between the Earth and the Moon – has become commonplace. So commonplace there are blue-collar jobs. The main characters are a crew of garbage collectors, working in space picking up the debris that could threaten other ships.</p>

<p>There&#39;s Yuri, the stoic, inwards Russian dealing his wife&#39;s death. Fee, a brash American pilot chainsmoker who takes no crap from anyone (almost). And Hachimaki, a Japanese full of dreams who says he&#39;ll get his own ship one day, as soon as he jettisons the dead-end gig he&#39;s using to pick up some cash.</p>

<p>There are shenanigans involved, as author Yukimura Makoto feels his way through the format. Mostly, it&#39;s a book of low-key emotions.  The crew deals with vast emptiness and cramped quarters, their world reduced to the 2 or 3 people they share a ship with.</p>

<p>It creates a tension in the narrative dynamic. The story can have fun but doesn&#39;t goof around too much. There is adventure and some action interludes, but they never become the point. It&#39;s alternatively about people doing their job, world-affecting conspiracies, and quiet introspection.</p>

<p>As a story, it keeps you wondering what&#39;s going to come next.</p>

<p>For the characters, though, it&#39;s about loss, and acceptance, and change. With all that empty space, the nothingness threatening to suck you away, you&#39;re going to have to find your own footholds. Lacking external stand-ins for meaning anywhere around you, you have to provide them yourself.</p>

<p>Boy, is that hard, and Yukimura can make it all feel painfully human.</p>

<p>He concocts the conspiracies the crew get dragged into with the same ease as he presents the strife of a kid trying to live up to his elders. He can put a multi-page chase sequence or make you feel loss in three panels.</p>

<p>You can get what you want as long as you are a crazy, selfish prick of a dreamer, but it might consume you. Reaching for the stars, you may need to leave your loved ones behind.</p>

<p>Expressions. Body language. Walking away. Sorrow. It all comes through.</p>

<p>And then it sort of ... just ends. The story wraps without being able to top itself. But by then it’s done enough.</p>

<p>Having achieved what you aimed for, you realize that there’s peace in just getting on with the job.</p>

<p><small>
<a href="https://strangevistas.com/tag:manga" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">manga</span></a> <a href="https://strangevistas.com/tag:planetes" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">planetes</span></a> <a href="https://strangevistas.com/tag:yukimuramakoto" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">yukimuramakoto</span></a> <a href="https://strangevistas.com/tag:sliceoflife" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">sliceoflife</span></a>
</small></p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <guid>https://strangevistas.com/heavy-weightless</guid>
      <pubDate>Sat, 18 Aug 2018 18:00:51 +0000</pubDate>
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