Product Details
Black Cat, Vol. 1

Black Cat, Vol. 1
By Kentaro Yabuki

Price: $7.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

81 new or used available from $0.01

Average customer review:

Product Description

Two years ago, Train, a high-level assassin known as Number XIII in Chronos, left the secret society to live by his own rules. Since then, Train has been a sweeper, a bounty hunter, catching criminals and bringing them in alive. But his main mission is to find a former Chronos member who killed his best friend.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #607402 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-03-07
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 208 pages

Features

  • ISBN13: 9781421506050
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Although working within tired conventions, this collection adds up to a surprisingly enjoyable action adventure. Train and Sven are "sweepers," smalltime bounty hunters who survive hand to mouth. Sven is an eye-patched ex-cop; Train is a glamorously mysterious ex-crook. Along the way, the two team up with cute but sneaky Rinslet Walker, who's planning a big heist from a really dangerous master criminal. Readers may be reminded of Cowboy Bebop and a host of similar capers, but the interaction of these characters is brisk and funny, partly because they feel like such old friends. The dash of novelty is Train's not-so-secret identity as the Black Cat, formerly an unkillable assassin for a worldwide criminal conspiracy. He not only does incredible stunts like any action hero but also looks and behaves like a cat, agile and unpredictably feline: aloof and irritating one moment, then ingratiating and playful the next. He's the kind of hard-boiled manhunter who'd take a criminal on a good-bye visit to his family, while excusing the trip as a chance to sample a new town's famous onion buns. The art is familiar but well executed as Yabuki gives old material an enjoyable workout. (Mar.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


Customer Reviews

Like Get Backers meets Rurouni Kenshin4
Black Cat is a fun manga series following Train "Black Cat" Heartnet and his partner, Sven Vollfie. Train and Sven are a pair of sweepers - bounty hunters who go after the most dangerous criminals. But they weren't always sweepers - up until a few years ago, Train worked for a secret organization known as Cronos, where he was trained as a deadly assassin.

In between picking up bounties (and running out on restaurant bills), The Black Cat runs into Creed, his ex-partner from Cronos. Creed has gone rogue and is building up an organization to take down Cronos, and wishes to recruit Train into his ranks. Train also has to deal with his old comrades from Cronos - some of whom want to bring Train back to Cronos, while others wish to eliminate him.

All the while, Train keeps a smile on his face and a bottle of milk on hand - after all, what's a cat without milk? During their adventures, Train and Sven are joined by beautiful master thief Rinslet Walker, and a mysterious young girl named Eve.

Black Cat is a good combination of exciting action and deep emotions (along with a fair amount of humor) that will keep any manga fan entertained.

Not the newest of themes, but glorious nonetheless5
I first heard about Black Cat in the pages of Shonen Jump magazine; simply a one-page "Manga from Japan!" preview sort of thing. Then a couple months later, the same magazine printed the first chapter as a preview with the promise that the graphic novels would be released beginning in March of 2006. Well, it came out early, so I snagged a copy as soon as I heard about it, and I was NOT disappointed!

The story is not that original; it's a bit like Cowboy Bebop meets Trigun. Quite a bit like Cowboy Bebop character-wise, mildly like Trigun setting-wise and in the fact that the main character is an untouchable, carefree gunslinger. That doesn't deter from the fact that it is still a great and interesting story; a very successful re-hash of old ideas.

Train, with the not exactly secret identity of Black Cat, has become a Sweeper (bounty hunter who hunts lesser criminals) in order to leave his past life working for the enigmatic orginization Chronos behind. Of course, what good is a shady past if it doesn't haunt you? Various people from Chronos come after Train, and they either want him to come back or to die.
Train's partner Sven (my favorite character thus far) is an ex-cop who wears an eyepatch over his right eye and smokes more cigarettes than I had thought humanly possible. He's very skilled with a gun, though his true forte is tact. Being a former cop, he is much more wise about the situation every time than Train seems to be.
Rinslett is introduced about halfway through the first volume; a sexy thief who always works in disguise (VERY much like Faye Valentine from Cowboy Bebop...though Faye didn't wear too many disguises if memory serves). She forms an alliance with Train and Sven in order to kill an underworld crime boss who has been funding research and development for bio-engineering humans into weapons of war. His greatest success thus far is Eve; a little girl who can transform at will, though only one arm at a time (she's not fully developed at this point in the story). Exactly why Rinslett wants the crime boss dead is a bit uncertain; she's not exactly open about everything with her partners.

Overall, this manga is great, at least in my opinion. It features one of my favorite art styles, an enjoyable, deep story that's still followable, characters that are easy to like, and action sequences that are comprehendable (unlike Dragon Knights, for instance). I'm definently going to be faithfully buying this series, and I hope that it becomes one of your favorites too!

A stray cat lives free4
They say that a black cat crossing your path can be a sign of bad luck.

But fortunately manga fans won't find the first volume of "Black Cat" to be unlucky. While it doesn't forge new territory, Kentaro Yabuki crafts a funny, snappy, action-packed little opener to this series, and gives it plenty of room to expand later on.

Train Hartnett and his partner Sven are sweepers -- bounty hunters who wander around, catching wanted criminals. But a mafia hit man finds out a shocking secret the hard way -- Train was once the Black Cat, serving the secret Chronos organization. He's a superhuman gunslinger with a belled choker, a giant unbreakable gun, and a reputation for being bad luck personified.

But while chasing a dine-n'-dasher, Train runs into an old friend, who is determined to bring him back to Chronos, or kill him. And when he and Sven rescue a damsel in distress, they find themselves being hired by a notorious thief, Rinslet, who wants the sweepers to work for her. Train can't pass up the opportunity.

Her target is a mobster who is developing some kind of secret weapon -- and when Train infiltrates his mansion, he finds that the man is using nanotechnology to create shapeshifting superhumans. But he doesn't know that one such little girl has left the mansion -- and Sven has taken the deadly child under his wing.

"Black Cat" has an unusually smooth opening volume -- Kentaro Ysbuki doesn't bother introducing the characters to each other, or throwing in a ton of infodumping. Just a lot of hints, elusive memories, superhuman gunplay, and slightly goofy banter between Train, Rinslet and Sven.

It's definitely a fun ride -- Yabuki has a knack for snappy dialogue, solidly detailed artwork, and a quirky sense of humour (Train wears a bell collar and drinks milk). But there are darker moments as well, such as the child whose arm can turn into a giant blade, or the hints of Chronos' nastier side -- assassinations, world control, that sort of thing.

And our quirky hero is a good piece of work -- funny, lighthearted and honorable. But Yabuki hints at a darker past for him when he was a "House Cat." But Sven doesn't get neglected either, since we get to see him bond with the sheltered Eve, which promises to only get more interesting in the next volume. Rinslet could use some expansion, though.

The first volume of "Black Cat" is anything but bad luck -- it's a wry, action-packed little manga that hints at future storylines. Nice opener.