Selasa, 20 Desember 2011

Shaman Warrior Volume 9, by Park Joong-Ki

Shaman Warrior Volume 9, by Park Joong-Ki

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Shaman Warrior Volume 9, by Park Joong-Ki

Shaman Warrior Volume 9, by Park Joong-Ki



Shaman Warrior Volume 9, by Park Joong-Ki

PDF Ebook Online Shaman Warrior Volume 9, by Park Joong-Ki

The final volume in Park Joong-Ki's lavishly illustrated Shaman Warrior saga brings Yaki face to face with the forces of Kugai, now led by Yuda — the Death Lord who executed her father. Yaki is also reunited with Nejo, a fellow orphan who stole her heart when they were being raised in the brutal Butcher Camps. Fickle fate's placed Nejo in the middle of a violent misunderstanding, however, and his strength and resolve will be further tested after a horrible accident separates him from Yaki once again. Heartbreak, horror, and hope — amazingly enough, this volume has it all! After she inherits her father's shaman powers, the beast inside Yaki is unleashed, and she fights to avenge her father, protect her endangered, mystical shaman bloodline, and find her place in a war-torn country.

Shaman Warrior Volume 9, by Park Joong-Ki

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1071827 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-03-11
  • Released on: 2015-03-11
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Shaman Warrior Volume 9, by Park Joong-Ki


Shaman Warrior Volume 9, by Park Joong-Ki

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Most helpful customer reviews

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful. Isn't A Final Volume Suppose to Show You the End? By James S. Taylor With all nine volumes of this story now available, I would like to review it as a series from the angle of whether it is worth the investment of your money.There are many strengths. The artwork is detailed and very well done, though sometimes body perspective is odd. The main characters all have depth, good back stories, and are interesting to the point that you care what happens to them.The story is essentially one of revenge and the quest for freedom. The Korean kingdom of Kugai has been subjugating the surrounding areas. It has been using shaman warriors to do so. These are people who can manifest an animalistic attack form that increases their ferocity, speed and strength. At the end of its conquest stage, Kugai decides that the shaman warriors are too dangerous, betrays them, and sends out hunter teams to wipe them out. Only a few survive; one is Yaki, the infant daughter of one of the greatest shaman warriors. She gets hidden in a camp that trains assassins, where we expect her to grow up and become the sword of justice against Kugai and what it has done to the shaman warriors. The story that follows takes its time and is paced somewhat like Blade of the Immortal. Battles are lovingly rendered and intense. The characters develop at a leisurely rate over many pages and there are prolonged flashbacks to fill in details and character motivation.However, when you open the final volume, after seeing the length of time Joong-Ki has taken to tell his story so far, you will be worried. Normally, when you are nearly half way through a last book before the climactic fight begins, you would not be concerned, but not with Joong-ki. You know from his rate of story telling that a proper ending is easily going to take another half to three quarters of another volume.Don't worry about me giving away how it ends, because there really isn't an ending. Up to that point, the story is progressing with the timing and detail that you have come to love and expect. The event for which everyone has been waiting for over a thousand pages has finally happened: [this is no spoiler; you would have to have no brains not to know that this was going to happen in the final battle]: Yaki has gone full bore shaman warrior and has a sea of villains to kill, not to mention the major bad guys. Another main character is surrounded and in deadly danger. You turn the page to see what happens next.....The End.Excuse me? Now, understand this correctly. I don't mean that Joong-Ki decided to compress things. Nor do I mean that he got tired of drawing and gave a text epilogue explaining what happened. I mean the story cuts off cold at about what was likely the third-of-the-way point of the climactic arc during the climactic battle, as surely as if Yaki had just used her sword to chop the last half of the book right out of your hands. You will be looking at the binding wondering if the back fell out somewhere on the way home from the bookstore or if Dark Horse had forgotten to include something. Seriously, it's that brutal.After realizing, to your shock, that the claim on the back cover, that this is the final volume, is actually not a mistake, you get a lame six-page "several months later" epilogue that doesn't clearly explain anything [all your questions can equally be answered, "Maybe, maybe not"], five more pages of irrelevant behind-the-studio-scenes stuff, and a few pages of art.It would have been nice if those fifteen pages had been used to at least try and give a decent ending, but more than half of a non-existent volume ten would have been needed to do so, which is what Joong-Ki should have done. His artwork is good enough that he could have easily filled out the rest with portfolio work for the series and no one would have complained. At least we would have been given the ending we deserved, instead of this disappointing, artsy wannabe non-sense.At the bottom of the final page, the author expresses the hope that we will purchase his future projects. I hope he isn't betting the house on that happening after I spent over a hundred dollars on this series only to get a cheap, cop-out ending like this. In fact, after the way other manhwa I have tried reading have turned out or, more often than not, just been canceled or left unfinished, I think I'm going to stick with manga from now on, thank-you.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Shaman Warrior - Best Manwha Ever! By Shelby S. Darnell This review seems to be of the final volume of the Shaman warrior manwha, this is only partially true. I will use this platform to comment on the entire series. Vol9 is the final volume and closes the story of the exemplary Shaman warrior Yaki, a child born to one of the 1st of her kind warrior Yarong. Yaki's entire life is tumultuous and pressures her into being a very bright diamond in the rough, as a warrior and a woman. Her father Yarong was a similar person who did everything he could to ensure her survival once he learned that their kind was being hunted. The 9th volume is beautifully illustrated, but so are all previous volumes. The 9th volume is well thought out, but so are all previous volumes. I am doing my best not to spoil this manwha, because experiencing it for ones' self is the goal of this writing. Shaman warrior is currently my favorite Korean comic of all times. Please start at the beginning and keep reading.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Greatness cut down in the last volume By L. Crawley I have to agree with the other reviewer. I should have heeded his review when I was busy purchasing all the volumes. What was most disappointing was how so many story arcs within the story never got resolved. It was like the artist lost interest of drawing this story and suddenly wrapped it up. The last few panels (yes, I'm going to tell you because it's really NOTHING to tell!)**spoiler alert/ show Yaki crying for her friend Nejio... (which we spent too much time in the next to last volume with instead of working more on Yaki getting back to Nejio, that was so crazy!) And this was happening when the guy with the white hair was fighting the other guy**end spoiler alert/ (sorry, I don't have the book right in front of me so the names escape me)! So what exactly happens to him (the white haired guy)? None of this is explained. We quickly go to an epilogue of sorts, and I feel...robbed. The artist didn't even have the decency to allow Genji to tell Yaki that she as her mother! Overall, I got pulled into this manwha because of the wonderfully drawn scenes, the building character developments and plot. But what I got in the end was a letdown...if you can a scan this story on the net, that's your best alternative. I know that is wrong, because the artists work hard on their stories and they should be compensated, and we should support them. But I wouldn't put a cent into a story that started so brilliantly and then ended so...blah. This isn't the first manwha that just disappeared without a trace (Chunchu: Genocide Fiend...they have ONE copy on Amazon going for [...] because it's the last copy EVER!)...maybe that's a sign that I need to stick to reading mangas.

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Shaman Warrior Volume 9, by Park Joong-Ki

Shaman Warrior Volume 9, by Park Joong-Ki

Shaman Warrior Volume 9, by Park Joong-Ki
Shaman Warrior Volume 9, by Park Joong-Ki

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