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Death Note Box Set (Vol. 1-13)
 
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Death Note Box Set (Vol. 1-13) [Paperback]

Tsugumi Ohba (Author), Takeshi Obata (Illustrator)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (44 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 7, 2008
The entire Death Note manga story arc is now available in a box set for the first time! This custom box set includes all 12 books from the Death Note series, the information How To Read "Death Note 13" and exclusive Death Note premium gifts! The high gloss printed box set also comes with a recessed handle and velcro closure. The box set is 10% off the total retail price of 13 volumes of Death Note! This is a perfect gift for either yourself or anyone not yet exposed to the amazing intrigue of this Obha / Obata masterpiece.   Light Yagami is an ace student with great prospects - and he's bored out of his mind. But all that changes when he finds the Death Note, a notebook dropped by a rogue Shinigami death god. Any human whose name is written in the notebook dies, and now Light has vowed to use the power of the Death Note to rid the world of evil. But when criminals begin dropping dead, the authorities send the legendary detective L to track down the killer. With L hot on his heels, will Light lose sight of his noble goal...or his life? Light tests the boundaries of the Death Note powers as L and the police begin to close in. Luckily Light's father is the head of the Japanese National Police Agency and leaves vital information about the case lying around the house. With access to his father's files, Light can keep one step ahead of the authorities. But who is the strange man following him, and how can Light guard against enemies whose names he doesn't know?

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Author: Tsugumi Ohba
Born in Tokyo, Tsugumi Ohba is the author of the hit series Death Note. His current series Bakuman is serialized in Weekly Shonen Jump.



Artist: Takeshi Obata
Takeshi Obata was born in 1969 in Niigata, Japan, and is the artist of the wildly popular SHONEN JUMP title Hikaru no Go, which won the 2003 Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize: Shinsei New Hope award and the 2000 Shogakukan Manga award. Obata is also the artist of Arabian Majin Bokentan Lamp Lamp, Ayatsuri Sakon, Cyborg Jichan G., and the smash hit manga Death Note. His current series Bakuman is serialized in Weekly Shonen Jump.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 208 pages
  • Publisher: VIZ Media LLC; Original edition (October 7, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 142152581X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1421525815
  • Product Dimensions: 9.9 x 9.2 x 6.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (44 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #28,543 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Born in Tokyo, Tsugumi Ohba is the author of the hit series Death Note. His current series Bakuman is serialized in Weekly Shonen Jump.

 

Customer Reviews

44 Reviews
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81 of 88 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Kira's World, October 10, 2008
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This review is from: Death Note Box Set (Vol. 1-13) (Paperback)
There are a limited number of manga series that can be considered worldwide hits. Rather surprisingly, considering the amount of dialogue and seriousness of a story that the author had doubted would be accepted as a Shounen (young boy) Jump title even in Japan, Death Note became one of those titles. When a story about someone in our world finding a killing tool Death Gods use (and killing anyone they view as evil with to create a better world) becomes so successful it's a little special - it isn't every day that a story where words and not fists are used as weapons becomes this popular. Death Note has become so popular that there have even been stories on the American news about kids at school getting suspended after notebooks were found on them with details of deaths written inside!

My first encounter with Death Note was with the anime. I saw discussions about it on a forum I used to visit frequently just after the anime started airing in Japan and what I read interested me, a lover of dark and depressing stories, enough to download the first episode. I was blown away by the quality of the story, the mix of real world and fiction blending superbly. Every episode thrilled me more than the last during the first section of the story, never allowing me to remove myself from the edge of my seat. I watched all 37 episodes weekly and was very rarely disappointed.

Fast forwarding to the recent past, I discovered a Death Note manga box set was coming out by chance. I put in a pre-order with Amazon as soon as I found out about it, later cancelling to order from a cheaper store (I paid £39). I was a little worried about receiving a damaged set after my Naruto manga box set had arrived with some damage, but I put those fears aside since I wouldn't have ended up ordering it if I kept predicting a pessimistic future involving damaged goods. Thankfully, lightning didn't end up striking twice and this time around I was lucky - my set was undamaged on arrival.

After seeing the size of the box my set had been packed in, I was a little worried about the possibility of the store I purchased from sending me the wrong item - it looked tiny in comparison to the Naruto set. I realized after removing the box set from the packaging that the reason for the size was simply down to the Death Note set being compact, so there wasn't to be any drama. I suppose it was a bit silly of me to expect it to be anywhere as near as big as the 27 volume Naruto set...

The box set is certainly very stylish. On the front is an image of a vast amount of skulls bundled together (very fitting), with the Death Note logo going through the middle and various Death Note rules are written in faint text on black behind the image/logo. The back and both sides of the set have one lovely piece of artwork spread across them, the image showing Light holding a scythe whilst walking in (what I assume to be) the Death God world, with a total of seven Death Gods, including Ryuk and Rem, flying behind him in the background. The top and bottom of the set have the same look as the front, minus the bundle of skulls.

Moving onto the interior, the box opens by pulling at the two velcro circles located on the top of the box that connect the front of the box to the top. Once the front of the box is pulled down, you're greeted with an excellent view - all 12 of the Death Note story volumes lined up together and volume 13 sitting alone in its very own little area to the right of volume 12. The inside of the box is totally black apart from an image of a skull.

There's also a small extra thrown in: a large booklet. The booklet contains all the Death Note rules that were put in-between the chapters in the volumes. It isn't the most amazing extra you'll live to see when everything in the booklet is in the volumes, but having the booklet does make finding the rules a lot easier, and it was a nice surprise for me as I wasn't expecting the booklet to be included.

To be honest, I was a little concerned when I first saw pictures of the set; I thought it looked a little disappointing compared to the recently released Naruto set, but it actually looks very pleasing in the flesh. My only complaint about the artwork is that only Light, Ryuk and Rem managed to get themselves onto the box artwork - where were the images of L, Misa, Mikami and a fair few other characters who should've took the place of the (admittedly stylish) black background with faint Death Note rules?

I do have one technical problem with the box, although the problem is more down to me than the design of the box. There's a thin piece of cardboard that separates volume 1-12 and volume 13, this piece of cardboard being connected to the top and bottom. I rather stupidly put one too many volumes into the volume 1-12 section when trying to straighten the bent covers/pages of the books I'd read, not thinking about what could go wrong, and when I tried to remove a volume I must have pushed the little piece of cardboard too far, resulting in it coming loose from the top and no longer supporting the weight of volumes 1-12 when the box is on its side and volume 13 isn't in to support it. It's only a minor problem (at this stage) but, after I was so happy to receive it in perfect condition, it's still going to haunt an idiotic perfectionist like me to my grave. I hope none of you are silly enough to put too many volumes in and/or move the box around too much without volume 13 in to support the evil piece of cardboard!

As for the actual volumes (what you really pay for!), each of the volumes has a different coloured spine, with an image of different Death God at the top of each of the spines. The volume spines are definitely my favourite manga spines to date. The covers of the volumes all have the same theme: a cross, one or two characters shown and faint Death Note rules in the background, with each each volume cover using a different coloured background. The art inside the books is truly wonderful, the art clearly benefiting from Death Note having had one person work on the story and another on the art. The characters expressions are amazing at times, the artist clearly being very good at showing extreme emotions. The only problem with the art I spotted was with the early drawings of the Kira investigation team members being poor, the reason for this being that the artist didn't know during the early stages if they were important characters or not.

After only recently reading volume 1-27 of Naruto and seeing the author of that series use the pages in-between the chapters to reveal lots about himself, what disappointed me about the volumes wasn't the covers, nor was it the story - it was the lack of extras. The author of Death Note seems to have used a pen name, meaning he or she didn't want to reveal too much, which seems to be the reason behind the author not adding any information about his/her life in-between the chapters. Sure, there are a few Death Note rules in-between the chapters, but most of the rules aren't very interesting...reading about the experiences of the author would've been much better.

Now, with the box out of the way, it's best I cover volume 13 before describing the story and giving my thoughts, the reason being that volume 13 isn't anything to do with the story - it was called volume 13 only to get more people to buy it. So, what is volume 13? The answer is that it's a book filled with extras, ranging from interviews to character profiles. Quite a lot of the extras are a waste of space because they don't give new information or because they simply aren't detailed enough. For example, the early part of the book goes through the main characters, giving a few bits of information and showing a graph to highlight their qualities, yet there wasn't any in-depth character analysis and, going on a comment the author made about the most intelligent character in an interview, even the skill graphs were inaccurate. There is a lot of good content in the book, though, namely an interview with the author, an interview with the artist, an interview with both together and the pilot chapter that was created before Light and L came into existence. In all honesty, it's worth the money for the interviews and pilot chapter alone, so the disappointing sections don't really matter - it's nice to read once you finish the series.

I can now finally get into what matters: the story. Death Note is, as you can doubt work out from the name alone, one that deals with death on a regular basis. It starts with Light Yagami, a genius student who finds life all too easy, finding a notebook that a Death God dropped into the human world out of boredom. Light's initial reaction was to not take the notebook or the rules written inside it seriously, but he soon came to the horrifying realization that the notebook wasn't a joke when, out of curiosity, he wrote down the name of someone who was holding kids hostages in a school - the person died from a heart-attack 40 seconds after the name had been wrote down, just as the Death Note rules stated. Once Light paid attention to the rules, he understood that he could make anyone have a heart attack if, with their face in mind, he wrote down their name, or he could be more creative and specify exactly how they die.

From there, Light quickly overcame his fear and started to think about how he could better the world with this power. He was bored with his life prior to finding the Death Note and was disgusted with a world where criminals escaped punishment time and time again, so the Death Note made him more happy than he'd ever been once he got over the fact that he'd actually killed another human. But, as you'd expect, Light wasn't doing this purely out of the goodness of his cold heart: he wants to become the God of the new world he plans to... Read more ›
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26 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Buy It Right Now, January 17, 2009
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Death Note Box Set (Vol. 1-13) (Paperback)
I'm going to make this short and sweet. I generally don't write reviews. They take too much time and too much thought and I never really get the feeling anyone is reading them. Therefore it takes something pretty god damn exceptional for me to go out of my way to give it a review. The Death Note Series is one of those pretty god damn exceptional products. I'm not a fan of manga in general and I can't think of any anime shows I like so for me to like this manga collection as much as I do is really saying something. The plot is very dark, even with some humor thrown in every now and then, and there are several cool and interesting characters thrown into the mix of things to make it entertaining. The story plays out like a cat and mouse detective story with awesome, and completely unique, twists on the genre. What I enjoyed most about the series was the several philosophical questions I had to ask myself in regards to morality and the nature of good and evil that I encountered during this book. I will not give anything away but if you read it you will know what I'm talking about almost right away. The ending was also one of the most brilliant endings I ever could have asked for, working on several different levels for me and remarkable enough that I feel it deserves a special mention. I hope you buy this and I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.

- Sean Summers
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Ultimate Collection - Great art, great story, great price!, July 23, 2009
This review is from: Death Note Box Set (Vol. 1-13) (Paperback)
A series defintely not for the younger reader, Death Note is anything but typical. Light Yagami finds a notebook that will allow him to kill anyone by writing their name down in it. He is not the average hero you find in Shonen Jump titles, he is the opposite. The great thing about Death Note is that the author weaves a brilliant tale to make you root for the police one minute and Light the next.

With detailed artwork from Obata (Hikaru No Go) and an engrossing storyline, it's no wonder Death Note has become a worldwide sensation.

This collection is a steal. With each volume sold for $7.99 separately, the bargain is there. The box is a nice addition but not the real draw for me. It's all about the deal. Get it while it's hot!

*Note, this series includes extreme violence, murder, adult situations, etc. It is a reading-intensive graphic novel. It is a 'thinking' manga, packed with internal monologues and intense descriptions.
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