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20 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Highly enjoyable manga
This wonderful series, "One Piece" is a comedy-drama, and one of my favorite manga. I think the reason I like it so much is that, although it is technically a shonen series, it has a little something for everyone: comedy, drama, tears, laughter, magic, strong male and female characters, and the obligatory "cute" character (Tonytony Chopper, who is introduced much later...
Published on July 17, 2003 by Jennifer Wilson

versus
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars zoro vs zolo
i had a hard time rating this because as a rule, i love one piece and want to support the magnaka. however, i HATE viz medias translation and misspronunciation of characters names (zoro-zolo, ace-trace). i know that in japanese zoro and zolo are almost the same, but eiichiro oda wrote his name in english several times and it was always zoro. the story itself is...
Published 16 months ago by Heather M. Greenlee


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20 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Highly enjoyable manga, July 17, 2003
By 
This review is from: One Piece, Vol. 1 (Paperback)
This wonderful series, "One Piece" is a comedy-drama, and one of my favorite manga. I think the reason I like it so much is that, although it is technically a shonen series, it has a little something for everyone: comedy, drama, tears, laughter, magic, strong male and female characters, and the obligatory "cute" character (Tonytony Chopper, who is introduced much later and is so much more than just a cute sidekick). And, of course, pirates. :D

Even with the over-the-top character designs, superpowers, and elements of magic, Luffy and his friends are all enjoyable and sympathetic, with well-balanced flaws and strengths. Luffy seems too stupid to captain a ship, but occasionally has moments of brilliance that make you wonder if he's secretly a genius. Zoro, the gruff woman-hating swordsman, softens when faced with a little girl who did something special just for him. Nami begins to care about Luffy and company, despite her insistance that she will never be a pirate. Usopp is a coward, but comes through when those he cares about are in danger. Despite his suave exterior, Sanji goes gaga when a pretty woman pays him the slightest attention. Chopper begins to see that there are humans out there worthy of his trust. The dynamics between the whole group, once they are assembled, is incredibly fun and full of chemistry.

On the most basic level, you could call it a pirate comedy, but it is so much more than that. Sure, it is full of funny jokes and silly sight gags, but there is something very serious behind all that.

"One Piece" is about chasing your dreams, and doing so with a group of loyal nakama ("companions") at your side. Luffy's crew are more than friends; they are family, bound together by affection and hardship. They trust their lives to one another, and learn each other's limits. Along the way, they confront their pasts and look to the future, and set out to make their individual dreams into reality.

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22 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Yo Ho, Yo Ho, A Pirates Life for Me!, November 7, 2003
This review is from: One Piece, Vol. 1 (Paperback)
"One-Piece" is currently the most popular manga series in Japan, and it well-deserves the fame and praise. It is a well-done, funny adventure and a rollicking good time. Full of strange, non sequitur characters and bizarre physical humor, One-Piece is a genre unto itself.

"Romance Dawn" is the first volume of the English-translated series, and has the stretchable would-be Pirate Captain Monkey D. Lufty in search of the fabled treasure, the One-Piece. He who finds the One-Piece will have the right to call himself the Pirate King, which is Monkey's dream.

"Romance" does not mean girls in this title, but the dawn of the romance of high adventure and the roaring seas. Of course, no adventure is great without the gathering of the crew, and that is what you find here.

It is hard to see anyone not liking One-Piece. Definitely the best comic coming from Japan today! Yo Ho!

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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The first book will hook you and won't let you go, October 24, 2003
By 
E. Cheng "manga enthusiast" (Syosset, NY United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: One Piece, Vol. 1 (Paperback)
This series is wonderfully original and phenomenally funny! Just reading the first chapter made me a fan for life. The art style is very different but quickly endears itself to the reader because of its flow, pacing, and simplicity. The author, Oda has a gift for storytelling which is evident in this book and only improves as the series progresses. I strongly recommend that everyone pick up this book immediately and see why the series is loved all around the world.

The book is set in a world where pirates roam the seas, and mysterious powers can be gained by eating "devil-fruit". The characters in this series are immensely likeable, with stories that will make you laugh and cry. The sense of adventure that the main character Luffy exudes is insanely infectious, and will quickly instill a desire in the reader to grab a bandana and join the crew.

This book is the epitome of how stories should be told. There are 29 volumes published in Japan (as of October 2003) and the series is still going strong. Currently it's being serialized in Viz's Shonen Jump monthly anthology (also highly recommended) and collected into Graphic Novels when enough chapters have been published. Shonen Jump tends to print 1-3 chapters of One Piece in each issue, and each volume contains 9-10 chapters each, so readers can expect 2 or 3 collected volumes each year.

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Finally, we're on the cruise!, August 1, 2003
By 
Simon (Brampton, ON) - See all my reviews
This review is from: One Piece, Vol. 1 (Paperback)
I'm surprised at how long its taken for One Piece to finally make a debut in the United States, especially considering its got over 140 anime episodes, 27 volumes of manga, video games, plushies, and just about every sort of tie-in the Japanese can come up with. Plus, the concept is a lot more original than the "catch em all" anime trash that has flooded North America over the past few years. If the reason for this delay is because One Piece can occasionally get violent to the point where characters bleed (sometimes ridiculously so, but only for effect), then one only has to realize that in Japan this series is aimed at the Pokemon demographic to see how far behind we in America are with censorship. Get over it already, and bring on the anime!

But anyways, for those who've never heard of One Piece, the best comparison I can make is to the LucasArts Monkey Island computer game series. Both take liberties with the pirate age, mixing it with modern trappings and sensabilities for great comedy and adventure. Long ago, a great pirate named Gold Roger was executed, but not before leaving behind a cryptic message for people to find his treasure. Whoever finds his "one piece" will become the next king of pirates. Enter Monkey D. Luffy, a young boy who has eaten the gum-gum fruit, and has gained the ability to stretch his limbs and become the ultimate rubber man. Because of a promise made to his childhood hero, the Red-Haired pirate Shanks, Luffy sets out to become the king of pirates. In this volume, he runs into a bounty hunter named Roronoa Zoro, a pirate thief named Nami, rescues a town from a corrupt Marine Captain with an axe-hand, and prepares for a fight with a clown pirate (to be continued in volume 2).

Having seen the chinese version of the manga and some fansubbed episodes, the story always follows a strict formula, like every long-running series. Luffy and company come upon a town that needs help, fight the local tyrant/pirate until they eventually win, and move on. However, something new is added each time, and the series, if a little dragged out, never becomes boring. The art is simple but effective, and the character designs get wackier and wackier as the series progresses. Plus there's a lot of great character development, with some genuinely touching backgrounds for Luffy and his crew. If you've got the money and are in the mood to read a long-running manga title, you can't go wrong with One Piece.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I want some of whatever Eiichiro Oda is on!, May 14, 2004
This review is from: One Piece, Vol. 1 (Paperback)
What happens when you take Brad Pitt (Sanji) and team him up with the likes of Pinochio (Usope), the Legendary Zorro (Zoro), A mysterious Cowgirl (Mrs. Robin), A princess in disguise (Bibi), an expert cat theif (Nami), and one of Santa's Reindeer (Chopper)? Then you finalize the group by puting them under the command of Reed Richards love child gone wrong; a Hero with what appears to be down syndrome (Monkey D. Luffy)...in the setting of mythical pirate times; enter the imaginative oddity called: "ONE PIECE. "

Maybe some of you have heard of it. It is probably the most famous ANIME and MANGA among teens in Japan now adays. "One Piece" done by Eiichiro Oda takes the action and adventure of Dragon Ball Z and combines it with the story telling quality like Alice in Wonderland and weaves in the intricate character development and relationships not so unlike the X-Men, and takes you to far off lands once upon a time, somewhere over the rain-bow, and it's anything but Kansas anymore.

What I mean to say is, it is so strangly original in the artistic sense, that you can't help but keep turning page after page. Sure enough, the story contains recognizable elements of the same old duke it out in Street Fighter/Goku with a bad hair day/Ultimate kung-fu style, but it is told in a quirky and often offbeat way. Sometimes you have to keep puting the book down to dry your eyes from all the tears of laughter. The narrative has a wonderful flow and ocassionally the humor is dark, and other times it's just too bizarre. I will say this is one of the most entertaining and consecutively enjoyable Manga series I have ever read. I bought the entire 36 collected issues, and will continue to buy the ongoing series straight from Japan.

Oda's art is anything but traditional. His characters don't look anime but have a loose lines mix between Tim Burton sketches and Alice and Wonderland drawings. The art is constantly wonderful energetic and dazzles you with Oda's excellent aesthetic design sense. It may take time adjusting to the visual stylings of "One Piece" but falling in love with it is easy to do.

Originally I avoided One Piece at all costs, and just like a Pokemon plague I was refusing to get sucked into the consumer market hype just because it is some popular trend. But I caved in, and now I am peniless and in love.

Extremely dynamic and action packed, constantly laugh out loud funny, with odd situations, strange occurances, and even stranger characters that would give Lewis Carol a run for his originallity... enter the bizarre world of One Piece.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One Piece, July 22, 2003
This review is from: One Piece, Vol. 1 (Paperback)
The first volume of One Piece is when Luffy first sets out to become a pirate in an era when the Navy has gone corrupt. When we think of pirates most of us think of mean people who have no loyalties, but Luffy is not like that at all. He's fiercly loyal to all his friends and comrades and sticks up for what he thinks is right.

Although he is unable to swim, a consqeuence of eating the Gum Gum fruit, Luffy faces his goal of being the best pirate in the world with steadfast determination. Armed with his rubbery body, which he uses to fight off other pirates and a hat, a mento of a pirate captain (and friend) who saved Luffy from a shark at the cost of his hand, Luffy sets out on his journey to become the worlds best pirate.

This first novel shows how Luffy gains his First Mate Zoro a world reknown pirate hunter and swordsmen and his Navigator - a pirate thief.

I recommened this novel to anyone who likes Anime/Magna and anyone who is not yet a fan. This is a fun story full of friendship, loyalty, and of course pirates.

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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars zoro vs zolo, September 20, 2010
This review is from: One Piece, Vol. 1 (Paperback)
i had a hard time rating this because as a rule, i love one piece and want to support the magnaka. however, i HATE viz medias translation and misspronunciation of characters names (zoro-zolo, ace-trace). i know that in japanese zoro and zolo are almost the same, but eiichiro oda wrote his name in english several times and it was always zoro. the story itself is interesting and fun, though it gets much darker later on. i would rate the story a 5 and viz medias translation as a 2 so it evened out at three. i have no intention of buying another viz media translated manga.
maybe i'll start collecting the actual japanese version, though, because the story is fantastic.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars King Of The Pirates!, May 10, 2009
By 
This review is from: One Piece: v. 1 (Paperback)
One Piece is a long-running sho'nen manga written and illustrated by Eiichira' Oda, that has been serialized in Weekly Sh'onen Jump magazine since 1997, making it one of the longest running and most established features in the magazine. It appears in the monthly English version of Shonen Jump magazine as well. One Piece has been tremendously popular in Japan, and it has gained a cult following here in the States.

Volume 1 of the serialized manga is a must have for fans, as it tells the backstory of the main character in One Piece, the rubber-limbed and ever-excitable Monkey D. Luffy. As a young boy, Luffy is befriended by Red-Hair Shanks, a pirate captain of uncommon bravery and ethics. Luffy accidentally eats the legendary fruit of the Gum-Gum Tree, giving him the power to turn his body to rubber at will, but cursing him as well, since those who eat one of so-called Devil Fruits are doomed to never swim in the seas again lest they lose their powers and drown. Shanks saves Luffy's life, giving him his trademark straw hat as a remembrance. Luffy then dedicates his life to adventure, vowing to become the King Of The Pirates by sailing to the Grand Line and recovering the fabled treasure of the famous pirate king Gold Roger. This treasure is known as....One Piece.

Volume 1 also introduces two of the other main characters in the manga, swordsman Roronoa Zolo and thief/navigator Nami.

One Piece is violent and sometimes profane, but the action never wanes as Luffy's story careens from one improbable situation to another. The art is wild and outlandish, the plot is full of good humor and endless adventure, and the tale just seems to propel itself along. It's outstanding fun and I can't recommend it enough to folks who love comic action. Luffy is truly a pirate with a heart of gold, who always goes out of his way to do the right thing.

Romance Dawn indeed. This is a great place to start for anyone who wants to really get into the series.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars They Call Him "Straw Hat Luffy"., February 14, 2009
This review is from: One Piece, Vol. 1 (Paperback)
This amazing series starts out with a little boy named Monkey D. Luffy, who's village becomes a port to pirates. The pirate captain Shanks becomes Luffy's mentor and hero, and when Luffy eats a devil fruit (fruits that gives people extraordinary powers) he finds out that it didn't taste very good! Then in an attempt to defend their honor from bandits he's kidnapped by the leader and thrown from a boat, only to have Shanks save him from a sea monster. From that day on Luffy vowed he would become KING OF THE PIRATES! But don't pirates have crews? So Luffy decides, no matter what, that the legendary pirate hunter Roronoa Zoro was to become his first mate! And the last thing I want to do is give away the entire story, (hopefully I didn't already give away tooo much) so I suggest that you read a bit more about One Piece, if you've watched the "edited" anime (the one shown on 4Kids), you should be warned that there's alot of cursing,
NOT for kids, and buy this GREAT manga!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A great adventure and a wide open sea..., June 18, 2006
A Kid's Review
This review is from: One Piece, Vol. 1 (Paperback)
This is an amazing story about an amazing idiot named Monkey D. Luffy. He has always dreamed of becoming a great pirate. Luffy ate a devil fruit called the 'Gum-gum' fruit and so now he is made of rubber ^.^ His goal is to find the legendary treasure 'One Piece' that was left behind by the previous king of the pirates Gol D. Roger. Luffy first needs to find a crew.

His first choice is Roronoa Zolo, a feared bounty hunter of the East Blue. Zolo first seems frightening but he is amazing. Zolo fights in the 3 sword style holding two swords in his hands and one in his mouth. Zolo's dream is to become the best swordsman in the world. After Zolo realizes that he can choose between becoming a pirate and death, which would mean giving up his dream, Zolo decides to leave his pirate hunting days behind him and become the first member of Luffy's crew. Throughout the whole series Zolo is always improving and beating more characters.

In later books Luffy and Zolo move on to gain the rest of their wacky crew. Nami, an amazing navigator who is a treasure hunting theif. Usopp, a runaway/scardy cat, sharpshooter which a big heart and likes to tell even biggers lies, and Sanji, an awesome cook that has a kick that can split rock in half (sometimes...) Together they meet even more people that becomes their friends and enemies, once and a while they pick up some new crew members too but thats a secret.

In this series you learn to love everyone's crazy personalities. Sometimes its serious but sometimes its laugh out loud. Each character is absolutly amazing. You'll learn to adore pirates.
^.^
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One Piece, Vol. 1
One Piece, Vol. 1 by Eiichiro Oda (Paperback - June 2003)
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