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Battle Angel Alita - Angel of Redemption (vol. 5)
 
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Battle Angel Alita - Angel of Redemption (vol. 5) [Paperback]

Yukito Kishiro
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 208 pages
  • Publisher: Viz Media (11 Aug 2004)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1591162769
  • ISBN-13: 978-1591162766
  • Product Dimensions: 19.2 x 13.1 x 1.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 601,720 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Yukito Kishiro
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
After the slight detour from the series that was books 3 and 4, Battle Angel Alita is back and doing what she does best, in Battle Angel Book 5!

Two years on from her successful motorballing stint, Alita is back living in the scrapyard alongside old friends. Her relatively peaceful lifestyle as a singer is however cut short by a sinister face from the past, Zapan. Having being repeatedly shamed by Alita in the past, including losing his hunter-warrior status and having his face distroyed, he's now an insane killer and more hungry for revenge than ever.

Factor in the equally mentally unstable dark genius Professor Desty Nova, and his rather haphazard experiments, and you have an explosive combination... I don't want to give away any plotlines, but once again this instalment of B.A.A. is heavy on death and destruction, including the deaths of some of the older characters. As usual Kishiro doesn't shy away from depicting visceral violence; so maybe not best to read this while eating your dinner. The gore and general adult themes in this book (murder, drugs etc) are possibly the most extreme in the series so far, so be warned. Having said that, there's nothing here that will genuinely offend seasoned Alita readers!

Although Alita seems to have put her search for her past life on the backburner in this book, we still get a few more teasing insights into the interaction betwen Tiphares and the Scrapyard. But the real star here is the quite involving and emotional storyline; Zapan's inner turmoil, Alita's new-found maturity and responibility, the enigmatic Desty Nova, and so on. The final section of the book is particularly highly charged with these conflicting emotions. The ending is a bit of a tear-jerker, too, but the story isn't over for Alita quite yet...

This book really is a must for Alita fans, but newcomers to the series will get the most out of this book by reading the series from the start.

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Amazon.com:  13 reviews
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful
An excellent return to where the story should be! 2 Dec 2001
By "arxane" - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Of the earlier "Battle Angel Alita" series, volumes one and two were excellent in all areas, and volumes three and four were still good but a step down in the quality of story-telling. This volume, number five, "Angel of Redemption", raises the quality of the plot back to where it should be.

The story of "Angel of Redemption" takes place two years after Alita's motorball stint, when she has gotten over her loss of Hugo and has regained her life with Ido and other friends. But as we all know, Alita's past won't let her live in peace for long. With teriffic pacing and use of an exceptional story, Yukito Kishiro creates beautiful scenes where an old enemy of Alita resurfaces and where she ultimately discovers loneliness and abandonment.

Kishiro's art is still as good as ever, filled with spectacular atistry that immediately draws the reader into the story. The high violence and gore factor is also still here, so this is still a series for mature audiences. The pacing and quality of the story returns from the slight slump of volumes three and four, back to the level of volumes one and two.

There is, however, one thing that makes volume five totally unique, and in a few ways better, than volumes one and two. The first two volumes don't have very powerful cliffhangers, so while the stories in these volumes are teriffic, they don't give the reader something to look forward to in the next volume. Volume five does have a powerful cliffhanger (although it's not a major plot twist kind of cliffhanger), and the reader will desperately want to know what will happen in volume six.

If you've read the first four volumes, you won't be disappointed by volume five. If you haven't read the first four volumes but enjoy beautiful art, beautiful story-telling, and can stomach high levels of violence and gore, then "Battle Angel Alia" is for you.

5 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Not for the faint of heart... 19 Aug 2000
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Wonderfully written, and beautiful artwork. Truly Yukito Kishiro is a master at his work. Not for the faint of heart though, for the book is gory and touches the inner reaches of the soul. As the series progesses, Alita must go through many challenges and question the human spirit. Kishiro is very intelligent and explains all the aspects of his work in scientific detail. A must-read for all anime lovers!
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Please Remember Me 31 Jan 2003
By Marc Ruby™ - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
With the conclusion of the battle with Jashugan two years elapse in which Alita builds a different life entirely, as a musician at the Bar New Kansas. Even though she protests to Doc Ido that music and fighting have much in common, it is obvious that this time of peace and growth has been important to Alita. She has friends, things to do, and a sense of belonging that has eluded her before. It is a precious time, but one not destined to last.

Perhaps this manga should have been titled Angel's Karma. A moment in Alita's past, her shaming of Zapan that is coming back to haunt her. The hypersensitive hunter killer is unable to move beyond his hatred of Alita, and in a fit of rage accidentally kills his girlfriend. Now insane, carrying Sara's head around in a jar, Zapan is heading for Alita. She joins forces with Sara's father, and the two confront the killer and take him out. Kind of.

Reality, even manga reality, is too harsh to allow such a simple solution. A berserker body that Doc Ido discovered at the same time he found Alita has fallen into the hands of Desty Nova, a Tipharian like Doc, but a lunatic as well. Nova has decided to restore the shredded functions of Zapan's brain hand install him in the berserker. He has equally ugly plans for Ido and Alita finds herself facing a one-cyborg apocalypse.

This story is a tragedy with a grain of hope life a mustard seed held in its core. The fate of everything Alita cares about is at risk, and the beautiful cyborg is called on repeatedly to may incredible sacrifices. Ending Zapan will be, at best, a Pyrrhic victory, and Alita will gain a flash vision of a height that she may never be able to attain. And yet, almost within reach, is a promise of things to come.

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