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collectible aunt jemima handbook and value guide a schiffer book for collectorsRetrieved 2009-06-20. Retrieved 2015-11-17. January 9, 2014. Retrieved January 9, 2020. Retrieved 18 August 2014. Retrieved 2020-12-24. Retrieved 2009-06-20. Retrieved 2009-06-20. Third revised edition (2015). By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. The books division has two main areas of publishing: film and television tie-ins and cinema reference books; and graphic novels and comics references and art titles. The company is a division of Titan Entertainment Group, which also owns Titan Magazines. As of 2016, Titan Books' editorial director is Laura Price.The company has a backlist of over 1,000 graphic novels. Its titles include such licensed characters and properties as Batman, Doctor Who, Family Guy, Heroes, Nemi, Superman, Judge Dredd and other 2000 AD characters, the Vertigo comic-book title Sandman, The Simpsons, Star Wars, Tank Girl, The Real Ghostbusters, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Transformers, The Walking Dead, Life Is Strange, Roy of the Rovers, Dan Dare, WWE Heroes and World of Warcraft.By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Please try again.Please try again.Please try again. Please try your request again later. Then you can start reading Kindle books on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required. Amazon is not legally responsible for the accuracy of the tags represented. If you are an author or publisher and would like to remove a tag associated with your title, please contact your vendor manager or publisher support team. Most cover titles, studios, and creators, but there are also 28 entries for themes such as Fantasy and fairy tales and Puppetry and stop-motion. A rating system warns parents of films they may not wish their children to see. The fact that there are only around 150 black-and-white illustrations may disappoint some fans.http://mnogonomerov.ru/uploads/es3000-pwr-manual.xml
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All rights reserved He has been awarded the Japan Festival Award for outstanding contributions to the understanding of Japanese culture. Helen McCarthy is the former editor of Anime UK and Manga Mania magazines, and the author of The Anime Movie Guide and Hayao Miyazaki: Master of Japanese Animation. She has been awarded the Japan Festival Award for outstanding contributions to the understanding of Japanese culture. Full content visible, double tap to read brief content. Videos Help others learn more about this product by uploading a video. Upload video To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzes reviews to verify trustworthiness. Please try again later. T. Smith 5.0 out of 5 stars Fortunately for us all, Clements and McCarthy were not so easily daunted. It is an astounding achievement by two of the world's most knowledgeable anime experts, and, if you have even the slightest interest in anime, belongs right on the shelf next to your DVDs, laserdisks, and videotapes. If I have any criticism to give, it's that movies that were not of personal interest to the authors are sometimes given short shrift. Example--Crusher Joe and Dagger of Kamui, both of which were groundbreaking films at the time (and still have the capacity to delight--CJ for its amazing action sequences and DoK for the stunning color and design work), are given rather flat entries. But this is personal opinion--the bottom line is that the book is very nearly all-inclusive, and if it contains any errors of significance, I have so far been unable to spot them. Bravo!Ya can't go wrong with this book, man!I bought it to have a reference guide, and for this it has proven useful. It is a great tool for finding various animes by a specific directors, or, on the flip side, finding out who produced which shows.http://sun-tes.ru/files/es300h-repair-manual.xml However, this is almost the extent of its usefulness. If one is searching for a comprehensive guide to themes in anime (say the theme of reaching maturity or of encountering alien life or of the woes of war), one will be completely disappointed. The only way to search for anime is by title or producer. If one seeks factual information about anime, like which Mangas or comic strips the animes are based on, one will be disappointed. Even basic terms, plot tools, cliches, genres, and so on are completely overlooked. Japanese culture and language are apparently never consulted by the authors. All that matters to the writers is what the title of the anime was, usually the basic plot, and who made it (and in some instances influences). As if that wasn't enough, one must also sustain insult while the author shows disdain and disregard for certain animes which may happen to be some of the most popular and loved (Evangelion comes to mind). Of course, it is a first edition. And it is already very dated, with much important anime being too recent for any real inclusion (for example, the world-shaking Spirited Away is mentioned as an upcoming Hayao Miyazaki film). Definitively buy it if such a book is what you seek, but do not expect an encyclopedia.Sections on types of subject matter too. This is an adult reference work so some caution about child questions.I appreciated the note to parents and informative preface. Thoughtfully compiled.More content has simply been added, which is fine, I suppose. It's a fun encyclopedia for browsing and perhaps stumbling across an anime you'd never heard of before. However, due to the haphazard and inconsistent amount of detail provided on each entry I wouldn't really recommend this as a serious research tool.For example Some animes as Miss Machiko (edit: Shame on Miss Machiko, page 580) and Hi Atari Ryoko (Mitsuru Adachi work) (edit: It is in 629 page as Sunny Boardinghouse?), are not easy to find. I can imagine it lacks dozens of anime works, Also I notice it is a impossible task if not collaborate Europe and Japan itself to achieve a good encyclopaedia, it would necessary several books not an only one. A good effort, at least.Fascinating, the Halliwell of anime perhaps?Cant beat it:)Page 1 of 1 Start over Page 1 of 1 Previous page Next page. Please try again.Please try again.Please try again. Please try your request again later. Illustrated and fully indexed. Jonathan Clements has translated over 70 anime and manga and was editor of Manga Max from 1998-2000.Then you can start reading Kindle books on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required. In these areas, the book is definitive, and readers can only wish a comparable volume existed for American animation. The authors are less sure about non-Japanese influences ( Cowboy Bebop owes more to noir detective films than to Route 66 ), and they focus more on storylines and the business of anime than on visuals. They don't discuss the influence of American Saturday morning TV on early anime designs ( Speed Racer, the component series of Robotech ) or the art nouveau styling in Revolutionary Girl Utena. The result is a book that anime fans will either love or love to argue with. --Charles Solomon For quite some time, these enthusiasts have needed an all-encompassing, detail-oriented reference work. Fortunately, Clements and McCarthy, who coedited The Erotic Anime Movie Guide and have an outstanding history in anime indexing, translation, and criticism, are just the folks to carry it off. Choosing the best examples from a field that was about twice the final number of entries, the authors review and detail more than 2000 anime films and TV series. Each entry includes a short synopsis, commentary, details about key creative personnel, and evaluation of the work's significance. Over 100 illustrations representing major releases are sprinkled throughout. The end product is a huge, exhaustive, timely, and authoritative compendium of information that will be appreciated by anime experts and neophytes alike. Recommended for all libraries and essential for film and media collections. David M. Lisa, Wayne P.L., NJ Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc. He has been awarded the Japan Festival Award for outstanding contributions to the understanding of Japanese culture.Full content visible, double tap to read brief content. Videos Help others learn more about this product by uploading a video. Upload video To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzes reviews to verify trustworthiness. Please try again later. T. Smith 5.0 out of 5 stars Fortunately for us all, Clements and McCarthy were not so easily daunted. It is an astounding achievement by two of the world's most knowledgeable anime experts, and, if you have even the slightest interest in anime, belongs right on the shelf next to your DVDs, laserdisks, and videotapes. If I have any criticism to give, it's that movies that were not of personal interest to the authors are sometimes given short shrift. Example--Crusher Joe and Dagger of Kamui, both of which were groundbreaking films at the time (and still have the capacity to delight--CJ for its amazing action sequences and DoK for the stunning color and design work), are given rather flat entries. But this is personal opinion--the bottom line is that the book is very nearly all-inclusive, and if it contains any errors of significance, I have so far been unable to spot them. Bravo!Ya can't go wrong with this book, man!I bought it to have a reference guide, and for this it has proven useful. It is a great tool for finding various animes by a specific directors, or, on the flip side, finding out who produced which shows. However, this is almost the extent of its usefulness. If one is searching for a comprehensive guide to themes in anime (say the theme of reaching maturity or of encountering alien life or of the woes of war), one will be completely disappointed. The only way to search for anime is by title or producer. If one seeks factual information about anime, like which Mangas or comic strips the animes are based on, one will be disappointed. Even basic terms, plot tools, cliches, genres, and so on are completely overlooked. Japanese culture and language are apparently never consulted by the authors. All that matters to the writers is what the title of the anime was, usually the basic plot, and who made it (and in some instances influences). As if that wasn't enough, one must also sustain insult while the author shows disdain and disregard for certain animes which may happen to be some of the most popular and loved (Evangelion comes to mind). Of course, it is a first edition. And it is already very dated, with much important anime being too recent for any real inclusion (for example, the world-shaking Spirited Away is mentioned as an upcoming Hayao Miyazaki film). Definitively buy it if such a book is what you seek, but do not expect an encyclopedia.Sections on types of subject matter too. This is an adult reference work so some caution about child questions.I appreciated the note to parents and informative preface. Thoughtfully compiled.More content has simply been added, which is fine, I suppose. It's a fun encyclopedia for browsing and perhaps stumbling across an anime you'd never heard of before. However, due to the haphazard and inconsistent amount of detail provided on each entry I wouldn't really recommend this as a serious research tool.For example Some animes as Miss Machiko (edit: Shame on Miss Machiko, page 580) and Hi Atari Ryoko (Mitsuru Adachi work) (edit: It is in 629 page as Sunny Boardinghouse?), are not easy to find. I can imagine it lacks dozens of anime works, Also I notice it is a impossible task if not collaborate Europe and Japan itself to achieve a good encyclopaedia, it would necessary several books not an only one. A good effort, at least.Fascinating, the Halliwell of anime perhaps?Cant beat it:). Groups Discussions Quotes Ask the Author Illustrated and fully indexed.To see what your friends thought of this book,My main experience is with anime films; tv anime is a more recent love, thanks to services like Hulu and Crunchyroll (and of course torrents, but shhh), so I've wanted to arm myself with a good reference tool. I'm glad I didn't choose the actual book and its high price tag because this has been a bit of a disappointment so far. I've read better reviews on websites l My main experience is with anime films; tv anime is a more recent love, thanks to services like Hulu and Crunchyroll (and of course torrents, but shhh), so I've wanted to arm myself with a good reference tool. I'm glad I didn't choose the actual book and its high price tag because this has been a bit of a disappointment so far. I've read better reviews on websites like Anime Review, Them, Anime Network, Anime Now, and Lost in Anime; I've found better recommendations on My Anime List. It probably is just a case of wishing the authors spent more time on shows that I like or am interested in. My understanding of this third edition is that it has excised the rating system and some of the stronger opinions in favor of more neutral language, and that it has corrected a lot of mistakes. I wonder if I would have preferred an edition with those strong opinions intact because the dryness makes the writing rather uninteresting, especially after reading the passionate entries on the websites I've mentioned. Also there are just too many hentai reviews. I'm not against the genre by any means but the guide reads like an encyclopedia on tv series that also includes every adult cable show ever made. It is a bit laughable and eventually wearying. Still, I've appreciated many of the entries, particularly the thematic ones, and I've picked up a handful of recommendations. I'm not sure when or if I will ever finish this one, so I think I will use this review to hold a space for lists of favorites and the like. Television series only, at least for now. I guess I could just use My Anime List, but because I tend to get excited about websites and then completely forget about them a few months later, Goodreads it is. Lil' Slugger will beat your fears away.I plan on prioritizing the josei titles that catch my eye because Kids on the Slope was amazing.This book's listed all the one's I can think of, and plenty more besides. Not all get pages and pages of text, but hey, you can't expect the authors to have watched and deeply analysed EVERYTHING, and there's a lot of interesting and enlightening stuff here. T This book's listed all the one's I can think of, and plenty more besides. Not all get pages and pages of text, but hey, you can't expect the authors to have watched and deeply analysed EVERYTHING, and there's a lot of interesting and enlightening stuff here. There's a slight review in many of the descriptions, usually enough to serve as a warning or reccomendation. Personally I'm really enjoying the commentary, I think it's quite funny in parts.There's also some commentry on themes of anime and other stuff, which is probably really interesting and useful for people properly interested, but I've spent most of my time looking up anime I've watched so far. I did read a bit about ratings of anime (as in people tuned in, or however it's measured these days). That was very illuminating, I'd always assumed anime must be highly rated in Japan, and also I completely bought that GTO (live action) was the highest rated series in Japan. Surprise! But really, this is a very good book, and VERY UP TO DATE considering others I've read. It's up to sometime in 2006: 1917 to 2006 doesn't seem a bad span to me. I can imagine a book like this might confuse a newcomer to anime, given the amount of content. But also, each description will ususally contain a mention of an anime of similar plot or style, giving thozse exploring the genre a bit of a tour, without having to ask the advice of someone else who m,ight have COMPLETELY different tastes. Anyway, like I've said, I've only had this book a day, so maybe I'm speaking to soon. All I know is that having had it this long has given me more motivation to write a review than I think I've had in a long time. It's filled to the brim with misinformation and half-truths, it's pointless, and above all else it's oddly mean-spirited and holier-than-thou for something so blatantly ignorant. Long story short: if you're curious how bad it is and whether my claims of inaccuracies and poor reviews pretending to be encyclopedic entries are correct, simply read the legal online preview. Read the words of actual animation fans with actual animation knowledge and, above all else, true respect for the medium.The average reader will have to be careful to take some of the reviews with a grain of salt, as like I said above- just because one person didn't like it doesn't mean that you won't. (Even if that person is writing an encyclopedia.) That being said, the book is far more efficient than it was in it's first few incarnations. The die-hards probably won't need this, but this should be a nice addition for the new anime fans out there! Buat mereka yang awam anime, buku ini bisa menambah wawasan dan pengetahuan agar tidak menganggap animasi hanya tontonan bagi anak-anak. Industri anime sudah menjadi industri raksasa di Jepang, hingga pangsa pasarnya bukan hanya anak-anak dan remaja, tapi juga dewasa. Buat mereka yang awam anime, buku ini bisa menambah wawasan dan pengetahuan agar tidak menganggap animasi hanya tontonan bagi anak-anak. Industri anime sudah menjadi industri raksasa di Jepang, hingga pangsa pasarnya bukan hanya anak-anak dan remaja, tapi juga dewasa. Bahkan sampai ada anime porno (baca: Hentai) segala, yang baru baca sinopsisnya di ensiklopedi ini saja para feminist bisa murka, saking jalan ceritanya selalu 100 merendahkan kaum wanita. Membaca setiap entry-nya dari A sampai Z, kita juga bisa mengetahui bahwa ternyata budaya animasi Jepang dan AS masih sangat berbeda, di mana seperti di Indonesia, di AS animasi masih dianggap tontonan khusus anak-anak. Mungkin di Indonesia sensornya tidak seketat AS, tapi ada saja yang mengecam tayangan One Piece dan Naruto, yang dianggap membawa pengaruh buruk buat anak-anak (yang masih belum bisa membedakan fiksi dan kenyataan, barangkali). Sementara tayangan anime yang di Jepang ditujukan buat kalangan dewasa macam Crayon Shinchan malah tidak dikritik, padahal bisa saja anak-anak Indonesia meniru kenakalan dan pervert, -nya. XD Anyway, ensiklopedi ini mengingatkanku pada masa aku masih tergila-gila pada anime, rajin mengumpulkan dan menonton fansubnya. Fullmetal Alchemist, Gungrave, Hellsing, Srcyed, Gundam, Trigun, Bleach, Naruto, and many many more. Hanya karena faktor waktu yang terbatas sekarang aku cuma mengumpulkan manga saja (tapi tetap update berita anime dari majalah sih).Indeed, factual information is what I was expecting, and it was the reason I purchased this tome, sight-unseen, from amazon some time ago. What I found instead are biased, snide capsule reviews. I understand how touchy fans get about things l Indeed, factual information is what I was expecting, and it was the reason I purchased this tome, sight-unseen, from amazon some time ago. What I found instead are biased, snide capsule reviews. Another very dissatisfied reviewer on amazon suggested that it is a useful tool for finding new shows based on the production staff listed in the index, if nothing else. I recommend sticking with the online version of what I wanted: aniDB It could've been a great coffee table book if they had had a bigger budget. It could've been a great coffee table book if they had had a bigger budget. I did not finished it, just look at some recent anime I watched, like Paprika (2006 film), Code Geass, Nabari. See evernote. New York, NY: Stone Bridge Press. Citation by: Ashley D. Brown Type of Reference: Encyclopedia Call Number: NC1766.J3 C53 2001 Brief description: An expansive encyclopedia of more than 2000 anime films and TV series. Each entry includes a short synopsis of the anime feature, commentary, details about the creative staff, and comments on the work’s significance to anime history. A biblio. The anime encyclopedia: A guide to japanese animation since 1917. New York, NY: Stone Bridge Press. Citation by: Ashley D. Brown Type of Reference: Encyclopedia Call Number: NC1766.J3 C53 2001 Brief description: An expansive encyclopedia of more than 2000 anime films and TV series. Each entry includes a short synopsis of the anime feature, commentary, details about the creative staff, and comments on the work’s significance to anime history. A bibliography, index, and illustrations are also included to complete the comprehensive information. Each entry includes a short synopsis of the feature, commentary, details about the creative staff, and significance of the work to anime history. A bibliography, index, and illustrations complete the reference work. Relation to other works: The only anime encyclopedia available, it relates to all of the manuals and handbooks on how to draw anime in the library.This book is also useful for knowing how long a series is and how many OVAs a series has. The only problem with this book I have is the author hating on classic series like Cutie Honey, or very important anime achievements such as Shojo Tsubaki. Feature Lengths, series, OVA's, specials, shorts ect.My only qualm is that it's now quite a few years out of date. It's taken a while, but I think another revised edition was released just this year. Feature Lengths, series, OVA's, specials, shorts ect.My only qualm is that it's now quite a few years out of date. It's taken a while, but I think another revised edition was released just this year. If you are a die hard Anime fan, than this is the must own book of your life. Filled with a lifetime's worth of information and stocked chock full of 1000's of fun to read entries on Anime films, directors, studios and important events and happenings in Anime's past and present. Overall, I highly recommend this book. If you are a die hard Anime fan, than this is the must own book of your life. Filled with a lifetime's worth of information and stocked chock full of 1000's of fun to read entries on Anime films, directors, studios and important events and happenings in Anime's past and present. Overall, I highly recommend this book. However, the use I've had from it, in my eyes, counts as read. It's a great read and very informative; however, it's not a cover to cover book. Reference only. However, the use I've had from it, in my eyes, counts as read. It's a great read and very informative; however, it's not a cover to cover book. Reference only. I received this as a gift at one point. His non-fiction works include biographies of Confucius, Marco Polo, Mao Zedong, Koxinga and Qin Shihuangdi. He also writes for NEO magazine and is the co-author of encyclopedias of anime and Japanese television dramas. Some features of WorldCat will not be available.By continuing to use the site, you are agreeing to OCLC’s placement of cookies on your device. Find out more here. However, formatting rules can vary widely between applications and fields of interest or study. The specific requirements or preferences of your reviewing publisher, classroom teacher, institution or organization should be applied. Please enter recipient e-mail address(es). Please re-enter recipient e-mail address(es). Please enter your name. Please enter the subject. Please enter the message. Author: Jonathan Clements; Helen McCarthyPlease select Ok if you would like to proceed with this request anyway. All rights reserved. You can easily create a free account. To protect our access to ETAS, the physical copy is temporarily not requestable. Covering more than 80 years of anime history and over 3,000 titles, the authors show how the anime universe has influenced creative cultures far beyond its native Japanese shores. The earlier volumes were published by the London company Titan; the Encyclopedia is published by Berkeley's Stone Bridge Press, also responsible for Frederik L Schodt 's excellent books on manga and McCarthy's guide to Hayao Miyazaki. The first two books offered increasingly in-depth overviews and analyses of anime, but the Encyclopedia goes several steps further. Far bigger than its predecessors, and exponentially more ambitious, its 500-odd close-typed pages, cover over two thousand anime titles ranging across every format and genre imaginable. In short, it's all here, or at least a sufficiently large chunk of the medium to keep any human busy for years. The major creator credits are given (lead animators, music, directors, writers and designers), as well as company names, running times and -- if applicable -- number of episodes. Perhaps inevitably, the names of lead voice-actors are omitted; given the number of large character ensembles, they would have consumed much of the book. Rather than include extensive details of video availability, the book marks titles with asterisks to indicate a legal English-language release. This does not always mean a U.S. video exists, but in practice it usually does. The main text often contains information on this front, especially when there are multiple remakes of the same title (see below). The same notation uses (m) for movie and (v) for video. As one might imagine, this means entries for sprawling anime such as Gundam or Tenchi Muyo.Sometimes it's hard to judge if they're right; how many buyers looked for Neon Genesis Evangelion before turning to Evangelion. Happily, the forty-page title index includes all variants, presented in a friendly, instantly useable format (unlike the fiddly system in Anime Movie Guide ). The main text is lively and entertaining, with endless interesting asides: learn how Evangelion copied its uniforms from Gerry Anderson's live-action UFO, or how the judo-girl epic Yawara.Many entries are unashamedly opinionated, and may alienate thin-skinned fans whose favourite title is knocked. The alternative, though, would have been a far blander book; arguing with such guides is half the fun.The worst fault is the lack of any kind of general survey or overview of the medium. Would it have been so hard to have ten or twenty pages at the start, sign-posting significant anime titles and industry trends. Some anime fans already know about Hajukaden, Candy Candy, Tomorrow's Joe and Doraemon, but for those who don't and want this book to tell them, it can be infuriating searching thousands of entries. As one reads more of the book, the trends and tendencies emerge; for example, the late '90s fad to remake old anime for TV. But it would have been better if these had been itemised at the outset, or made into capsule entries of their own. There are generic sections on Early Anime, Wartime Anime (together covering the period up to 1945) and the World Masterpiece Theatre, but what about broad entries on shojo and shonen, sports anime or robot shows -- or, for that matter, individual entries on Tezuka, Oshii or Miyazaki. The answer, of course, is that such entries could overrun the book, returning us to the issue of balancing acts. This is a book where Junk Boy gets more type-space than Tezuka's Legend of the Forest, and MD Geist gets more space than Heidi or Arion. To take a more ambiguous value-judgement, this is a book where the pernicious but undeniably important Cream Lemon is discussed in more detail than nationally-beloved Japanese icon Doraemon. This raises several issues, hard to untangle. Many buyers, of course, will be primarily interested in anime they've either seen or can easily see. Also, compact titles are easier to research and evaluate fairly than TV series that (in the cases of Heidi or Doraemon ) would take dozens of hours to view in full, let alone critique. Still, it means many of the longest entries in the book are of positively rotten or worthless titles. Which is a valuable service to anyone thinking of buying MD Geist, but it may disappoint long-in-the-tooth fans who wanted more detail on, say, Door into Summer (one of the few mass-marketed gay anime) or the anime Tom Sawyer. As the writers note at one point, even listing anime by title skews the book, because ten niche exploitation videos will count for more than a hugely popular TV show that ran hundreds of episodes and lasted a decade. Is that bad? Once again, the answer lies with the reader. The jacket boasts more than a hundred illustrations, usefully indexed at the front, but they're tiny and monochrome, randomly scattered through the book with appropriate cross-references. (The most striking is the last image, taken from wartime anime Black Cat Banzai; it shows an evil and decidedly unauthorised Mickey Mouse.) This is a book to be bought for the information it carries. On that basis, for all the above drawbacks, it's a classic taking anime scholarship proudly into the new millennium. Now, where's the expanded CD-ROM? Berkeley, California: Stone Bridge Press, 2001. 545 pages. ISBN: 1-880656-64-7 (softback). Please try again.Please try again.Covering more than 80 years of anime history and over 3,000 titles, the authors show how the anime universe has influenced creative cultures far beyond its native Japanese shores.