REVIEW

Manga Review: Naruto: Volume 28 by Masashi Kishimoto

Written by Bill Sherman
Published April 12, 2008

It speaks to the series' immense popularity that Masashi Kishimoto's Naruto is currently the one manga series available in the children's book section of my local Wal-Mart Superstore. Though the chain megalo-mart has experimented with manga paperbacks in the past (as with a much publicized deal a few years back with Tokyopop), the nine-tailed fox boy is the only one you see these days on most Wal-Mart book racks. The teen-rated books move, too. Watching the shelves at Wally World over the past three months, Viz's recent "Naruto Blitz" has seen some decent buyer action.

Picked up the first volume in the series' new arc recently, Volume 28, "Homecoming," which is set two years after the first series concluded. Our hero Uzumaki Naruto is returning to the village of Konahagakure after extensive training under Lord Jiraiya. Though grown significantly taller, he still retains his foxlike face and boisterous manner, not to mention his love for ramen noodles. Jiraiya has brought our boy back to work with his old Master Kakashi, since the former is going undercover to check up on the latest threat to the Village, a mysterious group called the Akatsuki.

Much of the new volume is devoted to playing catch-up with series' regulars. We learn, for instance, that the once weak-link girlie teammate Sakura has become a formidable ninja healer under the tutelage of the newest Hokage, the impressively breasted Lady Tsunade. Former Naruto rival, Gaara of the Desert, has become a village protector and is the first to fend off an attack by the Akatsuki. Of all the young characters, he is the one to which Naruto feels the closest kinship. Where our hero has a nine-tailed fox demon residing within him, Gaara's body is home to a one-tailed monstrosity. "We're carrying monsters inside our bodies," Naruto notes. "And that's what they want! Our monsters!"

Significantly absent from the new volume, though, is Naruto & Sakura's former teammate Sasuke, who remains in the clutches of the wicked ninja Orochimaru. Sasuke doesn't make an appearance in "Homecoming" - though we get a hand-wringing moment where Naruto & Sakura worry about him - but he still remains a major story presence.

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Bill Sherman is a mostly harmless pop culture nerd who can either be found at the Pop Culture Gadabout blog, or sorting out boxes of CDs, DVDs, comics & manga paperbacks that are still unopened from a big move across country.
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Naruto, Volume 27 Naruto, Volume 27
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Naruto, Volume 29 Naruto, Volume 29
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Naruto, Volume 28 Naruto, Volume 28
Masashi Kishimoto
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Manga Review: Naruto: Volume 28 by Masashi Kishimoto
Published: April 12, 2008
Type: Review
Section: Books
Filed Under: Books: Action and Adventure, Books: Comics and Graphic Novels, Books: Fantasy
Writer: Bill Sherman
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Comments

#1 — April 12, 2008 @ 20:17PM — Chuck

Just a correction: Lord Jiraiya is the pervy sage, Kakashi is just addicted to the "adult" books Jiraiya writes (Makeout Paradise, etc.).

#2 — April 13, 2008 @ 02:59AM — Bill Sherman [URL]

Oops, you're right. I was mixing up my adult pervs!

#3 — April 15, 2008 @ 10:26AM — cc

naruto all grown up finally he is on his to becoming a true hokage

#4 — April 15, 2008 @ 10:27AM — cc

naruto is a little bitch

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