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Subject:      File: "SHUNABY PARAGRAF"
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SHUNABY PARAGRAF

Subject:  SHUNA translation (PARAGRAPH-EMPHASIS VERSION) (8/91)

SPECIAL NOTE:  THIS VERSION IS RECOMMENDED FOR THOSE PERSONS WHO DON'T
HAVE THE MANGA; IT IS MUCH EASIER TO UNDERSTAND ON ITS OWN.  IF YOU HAVE
THE MANGA, GET shuna bypanel FOR A STRICT, UNADORNED TRANSLATION.

---------------------------- cut here -----------------------------------

Subject:  SHUNA translation (PARAGRAPH-EMPHASIS VERSION) (8/91)


SHUNA'S JOURNEY translation with page and panel breaks indicated, vers. 1


This file contains two things:
* SHUNA'S JOURNEY manga review by Lorraine Savage (from THE ROSE #23)
* SHUNA'S JOURNEY translation with page and panel breaks indicated

The manga review comes first.



    SHUNA'S JOURNEY manga review by Lorraine Savage, founder of Anime
   Hasshin and editor of THE ROSE fanzine (from THE ROSE Vol. 4, #23):


MANGA REVIEW
SHUNA'S JOURNEY
by Lorraine Savage

     Hayao Miyazaki's comic prose (no word balloons) book of 1983 is the
story of a young prince in search of a special grain so he can feed his
starving people.  The book is another epic masterpiece by the creator of
Nausicaa's polluted world, the majestic castle in the sky, and the
enchanting Totoros (among other great stories).  SHUNA'S JOURNEY is a
little, full color manga book by AM Juju, 380 yen, that appeared with
Animage magazine.
     Miyazaki's graceful water colors embrace this story.  Shuna's
village is deep within a valley surrounded by high cliffs, and peopled
with old, bushy-mustached patriarchs (true to Miyazaki's style).  The
painted landscapes, nightscapes and sunsets are portrayed in a beautiful
range of colors.  Those who enjoy the water color stills from the Famous
Detective Holmes episodes will adore this book.
     The story, as translated by Kevin Leahy, can be read and understood
just as it is, without the pictures in the book.  Since there is little
dialogue in the book, translation consists mostly of exposition.
     The beginning of the story has the flavor of an old Japanese folk
tale or a Brothers Grimm tale.  However, the sudden introduction of an
outside entity in the middle of the story didn't quite seem appropriate.
Except for that mysterious force, the story could well take place in
Nausicaa's era, in some land far from her valley.  In many ways this is a
dark story, with slavery, poverty, assassins in the night; but it also
has courage, hope and determination.
     My only complaint: Miyazaki still needs to broaden his scope of
character designing.  With his helmet off, Shuna looks *exactly* like
Nausicaa sans earrings!


    SHUNA'S JOURNEY translation with page and panel breaks indicated:


              Anime Hasshin presents a translation of . . .
               SHUNA'S JOURNEY, a/k/a THE JOURNEY OF SHUNA

 *written, drawn, and watercolored by Hayao Miyazaki in 1983
 *published by ANIMAGE magazine's AM JUJU books in June 1983
 *translated by Kevin Leahy (first mentioned in THE ROSE #23, Sept. 1990)
 *slotted into page and panel designations by Steven Feldman in July 1991
 *corrections to #P136,BL# and #P145# by Tsao Sheng-Te, August 1991

     A short note about manga and this copy of Mr. Leahy's translation:
First, manga are read from right to left--not only from page to page, but
from panel to panel.  Second, this translation shortens "page and panel"
to "#P__,__#" to allow for variations of panel placement.  For example,
"#P48,TR#" means "page 48, top right panel," and "#P96,MM#" means "page
96, middle row, middle panel."  Third, only the first page of each of the
manga's six chapters has an actual, typed page number (the others have no
number).  Finally, the bracketed stuff indicates Kevin's comments,
whereas the parenthetical remarks are mine.


(CHAPTER ONE:)  #P4#  DEPARTURE

     What time is this?  At the present it isn't clear.  Is it in far
gone antiquity?  Could it possibly be in the distant future?  In the
bottom of an ancient valley scooped out of glaciers is the little kingdom
that time abandoned.

     #P6,R#  Why would anyone want to live in this land?  #P6,L#  Time
and again the winds blow thin air down from the mountains.  Nor are the
days of the sun so kind as to warm the valley.

     #P8#  Scratching at the dry soil, planting Hiwabie seedling, but the
barren earth begrudges them so much as the smallest harvest.

     #P9#  The Yakkul are always hungry for the scant Grass and don't
produce very many offspring at all...

     #P10,T#  But the people give thanks for their little harvests...
#P10,B#  In the end they're just living to work, to die...

     #P11,T#  Why is the life of man so pathetically poor?  #P11,M#  Why
is nature so beautiful but cruel?

     #P11,B#  The young man's name is Shuna.  Before long he'll have
inherited this kingdom from his father.

     [One day, Shuna happens across a suffering stranger.]  #P12#  The
man was from a foreign land, in garments like he's never seen, and dying
of hunger and fatigue.

     #P13#  Visitors to this valley were few.  And so it was the custom
of the valley to treat these rare guests with courtesy.  #P14,R#  But the
spells and medicinal herbs of the valley's foremost old woman couldn't
tie the life to the traveler.  #P14,L#  "As the moon sets this very night
he shall be released from his lengthy torment," she said.

     #P15,T#  The traveler beckoned Shuna to his death bed. "I am the
prince of a small country far off in the eastern part of this world.
It's a poor country.  My subjects were always worried about starving.
#P15,BR#  One day, when I was young, like you, I ran across a lone
traveler."

     #P15,BL#  The man took the little bag he wore around his neck and
showed it to Shuna.  #P16,T#  Seeds like Shuna had never seen came
flowing from the bag.

     "This is what that traveler gave me.  If only I had this grain,
there's no way the people could starve.  They could live in abundance,
in peace..."

     That seed was of great importance.

     #P17#  Shuna said, "Our Hiwabie seeds are small and meager.  Could
we not have this species?"

     "Giving you this is fine but sowing it in the soil is useless...
The husk on this seed is peeling.  It's dying already.  While living,
this species is wrapped in a gold-colored husk. Sparkling as beautifully
as anything you've ever heard of.  I wanted to keep the people from pain.
Until today, I was searching for the golden species.  The journey
continued on and on.  Quickly, I grew old...and my strength, too, was
spent..."  #P16,B#  "Over yonder, to the west, where the ground has been
used, the golden grain makes fertile waves roll across the land..." [he
said.]

     #P18,T#  When the traveler died, he left within Shuna's heart a
burning idea.  Since then, Shuna frequently would look firmly in the
direction of the west.

     #P18,B#  Troubled at heart, his father and the elders addressed
Shuna.  "If we are poor it is only because it is our destiny.  It is the
duty of a person to be buried here, to be embraced by this land."

     #P19,T#  But as the time to depart approached, it looked like no one
could convince him...and the elders were gravely disappointed.

     #P19,B#  The women were always gathering, and seeing the excessive
number of bullets he had, they knew of the rigid nature of his
determination.

     #P20#  Violating the law while everyone slept on the night of the
new moon, Shuna saddled his yakkul and left.


(CHAPTER TWO:)  #P22#  TO THE WEST

     In an area where the earth was rotting into pits and rust floated
on the surface of the water, he continued on to the bitter end.  The
wind came and it carried a stench.

     So many days, day after day, Shuna and his yakkul walked to the west
without seeing a single living thing.  #P25#  There were only the things
that people had left behind.  Some time ago, they must have moved far
away from there...

     #P26,T#  In the first month after emerging from the valley, standing
far off on the horizon, Shuna saw smoke rising from human habitations.

     #P26,B#  It was a ship constructed of wood and stone.

     #P27#  It was exceedingly large.  Possibly, it was damaged some time
after its departure.  Now, it seems to have reached a port.

     #P29#  "I'm one suffering the hardships of a journey.  Would you be
so kind as to permit me one night's lodging?" Shuna asked.

     #P30,T#  The place where a woman pointed looked like the entrance to
a cave.

     #P30,B#  At his feet there was a dry crunching sound.  The muscles
of his back turned cold as ice.

     #P31,T#  Shuna vaulted onto his yakkul and left there at full speed.
Behind him, the shouts of the woman could be heard.

     #P31,R#  The scattered pieces of bone were clearly human.  There
were signs that they had been burned and broken right to the marrow.
#P31,L#  [Shuna thought,] "These must be the ghouls, the cannibals
I've heard rumors about..."

     [That night, by the light of his campfire, a dozing Shuna is
attacked by veiled women (who look like Dorok priests).  He frees himself
from their ropes and severely injures one with his gun, dispersing the
group.]  #P36#  Just as they had come, the attackers were gone, without a
sound.

     #P37,T#  No, that wasn't entirely true.  He could hear the
whimpering of the badly maimed one.  #P37,B#  The whimpering voice went
beyond the sand dune, and little by little, grew fainter and fainter...

     #P39,T#  The provisions they took out of the valley had been
consumed.  Shuna and his yakkul were starving.  #P38,M#  In order to eat,
he killed.  #P38,B#  In order to survive, he had to make every effort
possible.

     #P39,B#   Little by little, time lost its meaning.  How many days
had passed since he left the valley?  Shuna no longer knew.

     #P40#  The air grew thick.  Before long, he had seen oh so many
abandoned villages.  #P41,T#  The people who lived here, where on earth
could they have gone?

     #P41,MR#  The fields of crops had returned to a completely wild
state.  The meager seeds had become nothing more than Hiwabie.  #P41,L#
He thought, "The seed I'm searching for isn't here..."

     #P43#  Traveling westward again, Shuna ran across a huge vehicle
drawn by a team of horses.  But when he called up to them from the road,
the men only ridiculed Shuna's old-fashioned gun and gave no information.
#P44,T#  An offensive odor came drifting from the armored vehicle.
Seeing the cargo, Shuna received a shock.

     People had been herded into it.  What on earth for?

     #P44,B#  Some number of identical vehicles also passed.  A town,
sprawling across the devastated plain, came into view.


(CHAPTER THREE:)  #P45,R#  IN THE CASTLE TOWN

     #P45,L#  Forty thousand lived in the castle town.  People and
vehicles were coming and going constantly through the main gate.

     #P46#  Inside the castle, a forest of towers that had begun to
collapse, was the liveliest, noisiest place Shuna had ever seen.  #P47#
How could you describe it... If you do business in this town, your main
stock is people.

     #P48,TR#  The seed he desired couldn't be in this place.  #P48,TL#
If he got some provisions, he could leave here soon.

     #P48,B#  Shuna offered the jewel adorning his sword hilt to the
merchant and his attitude promptly changed.  In the front of his shop all
sorts of beans and grains formed mountains.

     #P49,T#  Shuna's eyes became riveted to one mountain in particular.
There was the seed he desired.  But threshing had made it completely
lifeless.  Shuna inquired of the merchant if there wasn't any living
seed.

     "There really aren't any other dealers of farm-related goods.  When
wheat is needed, it's just brought from someplace else."

     "Well, isn't that wheat grown in this vicinity?"

     "The slave traders are waiting to exchange their people, so why
don't you go ask the slave traders?"

     [Shuna approaches a group of heavily armed men.]  #P49,BR#  "Did you
say slave traders?  We're man hunters," [one of them said.]

     #P49,BL#  "The ones he bought it from, do you know where they
brought that booty from?" (asked Shuna.)

     #P50,T#  The lips of the men became hostilely stiff and they were as
silent as stone statues.

     #P50,B#  Shuna was exhausted...

     [As he sits down to rest and eat the last of his provisions, Shuna
sees a little girl and her sister chained to a building.]  #P51,M#  "Even
this little girl..." he thought.

     [He offers her the last of his food.]  #P51,B#  "Eat." (he says.)

     [A fat merchant appears in the window behind the two slaves.]

     #P52#  "My good traveling man, that pair has caught your eye, and an
eye for quality it is.  #P53,TR#  These sisters are blood descendants of
a certain royal family, you know.  #P53,TL#  Make a fine wife for a noble
man.  Make a fine serving girl.  #P53,MR#  And they come incredibly
cheap.  Well, what will it be?  Your mount in exchange - I can't think of
a deal more to my disadvantage..."

     #P53,ML#  Shuna began to ponder, "If I gave these two their
freedom..."

     Shuna was perplexed.  "But if I part with the yakkul, this journey
can't continue.  I don't have any more jewels," he told himself.

     #P53,B#  "You seem satisfied," the merchant said.  "Congratulations.
Say, that's a really old-fashioned gun, but I'm sure I can give you
something in exchange."

     #P54,T#  "You shouldn't do that!"  Suddenly, the young lady sprung
up.  #P54,MR#  "If you trade away your weapon you'll be hunted down, too.
#P54,ML#  What's more, we aren't from any royal family, but we don't want
to be bought by you."

   #P54,BR#  "Shut up!  #P54,BL#  I'll show you who's the master here."
[The slave merchant knocks the older of the two girls to the ground.]

     #P55,TR#  When it looked as if he would try to stop it, Shuna was
surrounded by patrolmen.  #P55,TL#  "If you don't want to, die, hold your
tongue," [one advised him.]

     #P55,M#  [The merchant bellowed,] "Get out of here, you penniless
bastard, or you'll be serenading me with more screams of that sort."

     #P55,B#  He couldn't help but leave...

     #P56#  Suddenly, the tears began to fall, on and on, and they would
not stop.

     [Later that night, Shuna sits by a fire alone until a squat old man
pops up from behind a rock.]  #P57#  "Oh, that's not a fire, is it?  (the
man asked.)  I'm frozen.  You'll be so kind as to let a miserable old man
warm himself, won't you?  #P58,T#  Well, this old man certainly has the
good luck to run into a kind person.  Isn't that right?  Wouldn't you
say?  Can I have one of those Nan?  Ha ha ha!"

     #P58,BR#  "At the slave market..." he (Shuna) repeated.  [Soon, the
old man has heard of the day's events.]

     "I'm searching for the golden seeds to help the people of the
valley.  That was my intent.  In front of my own eyes, just a little
girl, and I couldn't save her..."

     #P58,BL#  "He he he... And because of this you say you've lost your
confidence?  #59,T#  Why don't you run back to your homeland?  You lived
the pampered, protected life of a prince there, didn't you?"

     [The old man takes another Nan dumpling.]  #P59,MR#  "Ooh, that's
hot... You shouldn't want the golden species and things like that."

     #P59,BR#  "Old man, do you know where the golden seeds are?"

     "I might."

     #P59,BL#  "Please tell me where I should go."

     "Ha ha ha... I'll take another of those Nan first..."

     #P60#  (Continuing, the old man said,)  "Once again, it's best to
proceed westward, until cliffs mark the end of the land.  That's the
point where the dead are born of the moon in the land of the god-like
ones."

     "God-like ones...?"

     "They're the ones who used to have the golden species.  Harvest
from the water, plant in the water, water's what gives it life.  Now,
only the god-like ones have that species.  What they trade to the human
race, that seems to be just dead seed that they get."

     "The god-like ones won't be glad to associate with a person.  I'll
head to that region - I won't bother them."

     #P61,TR#  "You'll go?  You will go, won't you?  Then it's decided."
Having said that, the old man went to sleep.

     #P61,B#  Around daybreak, Shuna awoke, but the form of the old man
was no longer there.  Shuna departed, facing himself first to the east...


(CHAPTER FOUR:)  #P62,TR#  THE ATTACK

     #P62,TL#  Shuna returned to the city of greed, sleeping behind a
firmly barred main gate.  Ascending the castle wall, he went to that
alley from the previous day.  At the wall, the manacles were left undone
and he didn't see any sign of the sisters.

     [Sword drawn, Shuna enters the merchant's bedroom.]  #P62,BR#  "Get
up!  Those sisters, where are they?!"

     #P62,BL#  "You...you little bastard, that I can only guess."

     #P63,TR#  To hear the truth from the mouth of the villainous slave
merchant, Shuna didn't hesitate to exercise his strength.

     #P63,TL#  During the night, the sisters had been sold to a slave
trader going south.

     #P63,BR#  To the south, the yakkul began to give chase like the
wind.  #P63,BL#  Shuna's body felt as if it were overflowing with a
ferocious strength.

     #P65#  Discovering the slave trader's vehicle, Shuna wheeled around
to the front and suddenly started firing from very close range.  It was a
perfect surprise attack.  Hunting snow leopards was just like this.

     Firing repeatedly with the coolness of a fiend, he did laps around
the vehicle, shooting down the slave traders all the while.

     [It is only a matter of time before Shuna has killed all the
guards.]

     #P66,T#  Shuna searched out the key ring and opened the iron door.
"Even though you may be chased for the rest of your life, anyone who
wants his freedom should be good enough to get out."

     #P66,B#  Only those two sisters stepped down.  Fearing revenge, the
other people would not stand up.

     #P67,T#  "Freedom can't be bought and sold," [Shuna said to the
sisters.]  "Pride is the sword you fought with.  You are free."

     #P67,B#  There was no more time for conversation.  On the horizon,
the shape of pursuers from the town appeared.  "Let's go!"  Shuna hoisted
the two sisters up into the saddle.

     #P69#  Burdened with three people, and heading east, the yakkul
displayed magnificent running ability, immediately pulling out of the
range of vision of the pursuers.  But Shuna's adversaries were skilled.
The pursuers recovered their senses.  By no means would they hurry.
#P70,T#  They were counting on the yakkul growing tired.  While they
made a respectable pace toward the horizon, Shuna was conscious of the
pursuers plodding along behind them.

     #P71,R#  They slept while they ran.  They ate while they fled.

     #P71,L#  After two nights, the ground in front of them suddenly
disappeared.  They had arrived at the limit end of the earth that the old
man had talked about.

     #P72,T#  The yakkul was frothing and needed to lie down.  Since
three people had been put on it, and it had run excessively, it might
die.

     #P72,B#  "The yakkul can be ridden with just you two.  I'll stay
here and hold them off."  The young lady said that they, too, would stay.

     Shuna told them, "If I can kill our pursuers, then I can go to the
land of the god-like ones as I intended."

     #P73,T#  Knowing the purpose of Shuna's journey, the young lady bent
forward.  Presently, she raised her face.  "If you return from the land
of the god-like ones, please be certain to advance north, up to the
north.  We will wait there forever for you to return."  The young lady
said her name was Tea.  Shuna divided the water and provisions in half.
The time for separation had come.  Tea and her younger sister waved once
and were already looking back as they went quickly north and melted away.

     #P73,BR#  Shuna remembered how they set traps hunting goats in the
valley.  He built so many small mounds of little stone surrounding the
edge of the cliff, and set powder cartridges.

     #P73,BL#  Digging into the sand, he buried himself and waited in
silence.

     #P75,T#  When they entered the trap at the end of the path, Shuna
sprang up.

     #P75,B#  Time after time, he shot bullets precisely where he'd
buried the powder cartridges, and with flashes and deafening roars, the
traps were all set off.  The animals panicked, and without a second
thought, rushed toward the cliff.  [The mounts of the manhunters run
blindly off the cliff, taking their riders with them.]

     #P77,T#  That time did it.  Shuna was enveloped in a bluish white
light, like the collected brilliance of a hundred moons.  #P77,B#  There
was a huge gleaming face on it.  At an incredible speed, it shot across
the sky.  It was the moon.  #P78#  It left a broad trail of light behind
it that melted away as it went over there.  In an instant, it was a light
that flitted through the darkness to the opposite shore.

     It was the land of the god-like ones that the old man had talked
about, where the moon returned the dead to life.  It was none other than
the place where the golden species he searched for was.


(CHAPTER FIVE:)  #P80,TR#  TO THE LAND OF THE GOD-LIKE ONES

     #P80,BL#  The end of the night wasn't clear.  Floating dust hid the
opposite shore and thick clouds were expelled from the bottom of the
valley, making it impossible to see.  Shuna fixed his will and began the
descent of the vertical cliff.

     #P81#  He discovered innumerable ancient gods carved in the cliff,
unseen from the top.  But shortly, the gods and their forgotten names
were lost as Shuna's hands lowered him downward.

     #P82#  Entering the thick clouds, the light of the sun was blocked
and visibility was low, making a world of darkness.  The shapes of the
gods disappeared and the skeletons of the dragons of ancient times were
jutting from the stone walls.  Shuna dropped down on the bones, on top
of bones that had lived through the very first night.

     #P84#  In the afternoon of the next day, the light of the sun
slipped through a rift in the clouds for only a second, and for the first
time, the bottom of the valley was visible.  There was a beach there.
#P85#  What could he say...  #P87,T#  The land of the god-like ones
stretched out on the other side of the stormy sea.

     #P86#  Wouldn't it be nice not to be thirsty anymore!  An exhausted
Shuna staggered into the water and washed his face, hands and feet.  The
water was bitterly cold.

     #P87,B#  Squatting down in that place, the strength left his body,
and like sinking entirely into a thick sea, Shuna slept.

     #P88,T#  Shuna awoke with clear warm water lapping about him.  How
long - the tide was rising.

     #P88,B#  It was like another world, calm and bright.  The waves of
the day before were nowhere to be seen.  The shape of the sandbar was
visible.

     #P89#  A walk along the sandbar brought him to an island.  The tide
had begun to fall.  The sea was teeming with living things.  Species that
had become extinct in distant antiquity were living there.  #P90#  The
island, too, was completely covered by signs of life.  Shuna had finally
set foot in the land of the god-like ones.

     #92#  This island was unspoiled by human footprints.  Pressing on
into the dense forest and entering into the heart, the very heart.

     #P93#  Oh, that place should be so fruitful, such a peaceful world.
#P94#  There wasn't a single thing here to threaten him.  Shuna was
enveloped in tranquil feelings from the very bottom of his heart.

     [Some movement catches Shuna's eye.]  #P95,TR#  "It's someone!" he
thinks.  #P95,TL#  Could it be one of the god-like ones?  The god-like
ones came from the human race, he was glad to say.  The words of the old
man were swept from his mind.

     #P95,B#  It was a green giant.  Silently and staggeringly it walked.
After it, a great number of beasts and bugs followed.  #P96,MR#  When it
came to an open space in the forest, the giant stood still.

     #P96,MM#  Slowly thereafter, it collapsed.

     #P96,ML#  What would come next, Shuna really didn't want to see.  A
horde of small animals covered the giant and began eating it.

     #P96,BR&L#  Before long, the horde moved away, and of the figure
there was not so much as a bone remaining.

     #P97#  Just as he started down the path the giant had come plodding
along, another giant appeared.  Though Shuna was in front of its eyes,
the giant was unaware of his presence.  With a tranquil expression, this
giant passed by, being wounded.  "It went to, die," Shuna muttered,
trembling.

     #P98#  Again the giant proceeded, passing by, following one another
in tranquility, just like people.  The giant swayed back and forth,
disappearing into the forest.

     All of a sudden, it was there before his eyes.  A strange, building-
like thing towered from the center of bare farmland.

     The farmland itself was well-ploughed, and something like waterways
ran through it in every direction.

     #P100,R#  This thing wasn't stone and it wasn't metal, and to the
touch it was mysteriously warm and flexible.

     #P100,L#  He found an entrance, where the waterway continued into a
cave, and began his tour of the building.

     #P101,T#  The interior was profoundly dark and a sweet perfume was
drifting there.  Just as Shuna took another step toward the center of the
cave, he was stricken with panic that stood every hair on his body on
end.  Like a little critter, he ran back out into the forest.

     #P101,B#  That was no kind of building.  It was a living thing.
Certainly, it was breathing...

     #P102#  In the dead of night, the moon returned and halted right
over the top of the building.

     #P103,T#  Something began to be poured out of the mouth area of the
moon.  It was people!!

     #P103,B#  Everything the old man had said was true.  The god-like
ones collected people from the slave traders, and nothing else.

     #P105#  That enormous clot of people was completely swallowed, and
the body began to shake slowly.  How much time could have passed?

     When the light of the moon finally subsided, phosphorescent fluid
came gushing forth from those holes, circulating through the waterways of
the farmland.  Shuna saw it, this time.

     From the water, enormous figures rose, and green giants were "born,"
as it were.

     #P104,B#  The people that were swallowed, were they transformed into
giants, or the liquid that irrigated the farmland?  Shuna did not know.
swayingly, the giants spread out in the field and began sowing the golden
seeds from their mouths.

     Without resting, the giants then scooped water onto the fields they
had sown.

     When the morning sun rose, the buds had sprouted.

     At midday, the flowers were beginning to bloom.

     #P108,T#  Seeing the gun by his side, Shuna was left breathless.
#P108,B#  A half a day had elapsed, and it was completely rusted.  His
sword, too.  And his clothes were falling to pieces.

     #P109,TR#  He didn't want to waste any more time.  Things would
change here with each approaching hour.

     #P109,TL#  The heads of grain were already beginning to change
color.

     #P109,MR#  Shuna crossed the waterway.

     #P111#  Just as Shuna's hand touched the heads of grain, the giants
twisted their bodies, weeping and praying in unexpected voices.  "Oooh,
oooh," they began to howl.  And at the same time, in Shuna's mind,
someone's voice was ringing - "Stop it!  Stop it!"  Shuna ignored this,
and forcibly took the heads of grain.

     #P112,R#  At the same time, Shuna's body was swept with shock as he
fled, and a sharp pain pierced his heart.

     #P112,L#  Clenching his teeth, clutching the grain tightly, Shuna
ran out of the field.

     #P113#  In confusion, he ran, escaping the forest.  The sea was
getting stormy.  With eyesight dimming from the pain, Shuna jumped into
the dark sea.


(CHAPTER SIX:)  #P114#  TEA

     #P115#  After escaping, Tea and her younger sister made their way to
this poor village of the north.  The days and months of a full year
seemed to stream by.

     #P116#  The two of them became good workers.  An old woman took them
into her home.  And when they weren't doing their normal jobs, the two
worked hard at reassuring the yakkul.

     #P117#  The old woman was sort of strange and ill-tempered, but she
wasn't a bad person.  Tea knew well that the complaining of an
unfortunate older person was common indeed.

     #P118,T#  The two were always hungry, and in that respect they were
not unlike the people of this village.

     #P118,BR#  Tea was a brave young woman, not the sort to weep, but
when the day was ended, not unlike a lover, she fell into a deep
depression.  #P118,BL#  What could have happened to Shuna?  As a sensible
young lady, Tea knew that she should not wait so patiently, but she
feared for Shuna's safety and it felt as if her very heart would burst.

     #P119,T#  The villagers weren't so backward, and they warmly
welcomed the sisters.  These people hated slave traders and they liked
people who were good hard workers just like they were.

     #P119,BR#  That night, as always, her heart was terribly heavy and
the yakkul, too, was sniffling.  For the longest time, it wouldn't calm
down.

     #P119,BL#  Suddenly, Tea felt as if she'd heard something like
Shuna's voice calling for assistance.

     #P120,R#  Tea saddled up the yakkul without hesitation and went down
to the to the south.  But when she came to the entrance of the village,
beyond which point there were no houses, she saw what looked like a
wretched devil making his way up the road to the valley.

     #P120,L#  Tea called out Shuna's name.  Slowly, Shuna turned toward
her, with hollow-looking eyes.

     #P121#  Tea took Shuna to the storeroom where they themselves lived.
Shuna was oblivious to everything.  Without so much as a memory, a word,
a name, a feeling... Fearing the fire, he crouched in the darkness and
ate greedily.

     #P122,T#  The bag that hung around Shuna's neck looked like
something important, so Tea opened it for a look.

     #P122,MR#  Golden heads of grain...

     #P122,ML#  She felt a warmth coming to her heart, and the tears
nearly fell.

     #P122,BR#  Taking a needle and thread and cloth that she'd woven,
Tea began to repair Shuna's clothes.  What had his body been through?
Tea could not even guess.  #P122,BL#  Tea only knew that this time, like
she'd said, she would be watching over him to give him help.

     #P123#  It was winter already.  Except when he was crouching to eat,
Shuna continued to sleep through this long and gloomy time of year.  Tea
told neither the old woman nor the people of the village of the thing
Shuna had.

     #P124,T#  Slowly, spring came.  Early one morning, Tea brought Shuna
outside with her.

     #P124,B#  Unobserved, they plough a little garden, and with the
stones unearthed, they constructed a home for Shuna to hide in.

     #P125#  Everyday, while the people still slept, Tea brought out food
and water.  The old woman complained, "The food will soon run out," but
Tea continued to bring out her own rations.

     #P126,T#  Shuna was clutching the bag.  He could not easily plant
the seeds.  Slowly, patiently, Tea taught him.  And in the middle of the
night, Shuna dug up the seeds he'd planted, one by one, and replaced them
in his bag.  #P126,BR#  Despite this, Tea worked harder than ever.  If
they could harvest from the small amount Shuna had, they would have even
more.

     #P126,BL#  At night, after her work at the house was done, she spun
thread and weaved cloth.  #P127,TR#  And even when she was exhausted and
saw the little light burning on the mountain, it gave her a warm feeling.

     #P127,TL#  It was at Shuna's refuge that the wood fire burned.
Gathering a small amount of firewood everyday, and kindling the fire,
became the job of the younger sister.

     #P127,BR#  One morning...

     #P127,BL#  Creeping from his house, Shuna stared steadily at the
garden.  The golden species had sent forth its first sprouts.

     #P128,R#  Seeing the green sprouts, Tea's little sister laughed in a
bright voice.  The child that had not laughed since the manhunters had
burned her country was now spinning round and round, dancing.

     #P128,L#  Since that time, a faint smile had come to Shuna's face.

     #P129#  The day for the festival of the summer solstice was near.
The old woman called Tea.  "You are becoming of that age where you should
like to become intimate with a good strong worker."  She told her to
select her groom from among the young men of the village.

     "I don't want to, and if you want to throw me out of the house,
that's fine."

     "Just be quick," she said, not accepting Tea's words.

     The night before the festival, Tea sewed Shuna clothes from the
cloth she'd woven.

     #P130,T#  That day, in front of every person in the entire village,
Tea would conduct the selection of her husband.

     #P130,BR#  The old woman adorned Tea, putting her in the best
clothes from her own youth.

     Seeing Tea's old woman, all the young men of the village began to
murmur.

     #P130,BL#  Tea said, "Whoever can handle our yakkul will be my
husband."

     #P131,TR#  The proud yakkul used its antlers skillfully, and one
rider after another fell off.  #P131,TL#  The entire village could not
stop laughing.

     #P131,B#  After the last of the suitors had failed, Tea's little
sister led a familiar youth forward by the hand.  The young man wore
clothes of yakkul fur.  Immediately, the villagers knew that the faithful
mount would not run away from this master.  The old woman was mortified,
but the villagers, satisfied, returned to their homes.

     #P133,T#  One clear day, Tea was working in a distant pasture,
cutting grass.  Suddenly, an icy wind blew, and black clouds advanced
from the mountains.  #P132#  The brief summer of the northern provinces
had come.  It was strange how lush and green the small garden became, and
how, with this, there came a lightening of Shuna's expression.  #P133,B#
Tea ran toward it.

     Soon, there was thunder, and ice pellets mixed with rain began to
fall.

     [At the besieged garden Tea found Shuna.]

     #P134#  Tea encouraged Shuna to spread a cloth, protecting the
field.  Large pellets of hail struck them both violently, and chopped
down the grass around them.  At that time, it was very dark there, and
the storm blew thunderously.

     #P136,T#  The two of them had defended the field.  As the storm was
passing, the blue sky peeped out at her face, and Tea heard her own name
being called.  #P136,BL#  "Tea..."

     #P137,R#  Shuna had recovered his speech.

     #P137,L#  Bursting the dam, Tea's tears flowed.  The girl who hadn't
cried since her village was burned was taken by Shuna in his arms and
wept violently.

     #P139#  Slowly, the crops took their color, and like he himself,
were ripening.

     Shuna recovered.

     #P140,T#  Fall...

     #P140,M#  Finally, the day came.

     #P140,BR#  Someone was knocking at the door.

     #P140,BL#   Tea opened the door.

     #P141#  Carrying the sheaf of wheat he'd harvested, Shuna stood
there, looking like someone just back from a long journey.

     "Shuna..." (Tea said.)

     #P143#  Quietly, but with the profoundest joy, the two sat down side
by side.

     It was over...

     Now, the moon traveled across the sky, and wandering after it were
manhunters.  At any rate, they'd survived that ordeal before.

     #P144#  With a view to return to the valley of his birth, Shuna
stayed in that area another year.  With the villagers, he battled the
attacking manhunters, driving them out into the desert.  After the last
harvest, the wheat field was expanded, making the next harvest much
bigger.

     #P145#  When the day of departure arrived, they were able to leave
half the seeds of the golden wheat with the people of the village.  The
people regretfully bid them farewell.  Even the old woman, who continues
to lament about not having one of the young villagers as a son-in-law,
gave Tea her late husband's rifle.

     #P147#  Shuna's journey isn't over.  The road back to his valley is
long.  No doubt, there were other problems, but that is a story that will
be told another time.

                                 END


THIS TRANSLATION IS NOT TO BE COPIED FOR PROFIT UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES.

This version of SHUNA'S JOURNEY, originally translated by Kevin Leahy for
Anime Hasshin members in 1990, has been made available to anime fandom
courtesy of the Hayao Miyazaki Discussion Group.  Please retain these
credits if you post this translation anywhere or if you make hard copies.

------------------------------ cut here ---------------------------------

Date:     Fri, 30 Aug 1991 15:10:56 EDT
Subject:  SHUNA'S JOURNEY availability -- Kinokuniya book stores
From:     Steven Feldman, list administrator <AR402004@BROWNVM.BITNET>

     Copies of SHUNA'S JOURNEY, a/k/a THE JOURNEY OF SHUNA, can be
obtained through the Kinokuniya bookstore chain.

                        KINOKUNIYA BOOK STORES:

            New Otani Hotel, Los Angeles ... (213) 687-4447
            Weller Court ................... (213) 687-4480
            Torrance ....................... (213) 327-6577
            Newport Beach .................. (714) 640-1505
            San Francisco .................. (415) 567-7625
            San Jose ....................... (408) 252-1300
            New York ....................... (212) 765-1461
            New Jersey ..................... (201) 941-7580

                           -- Steven Feldman <ar402004@brownvm.brown.edu>

+          +          +          +          +          +          +

Date:     Mon, 1 Jul 91 16:55:41 PDT
Subject:  Description of Kinokuniya Stores
Source:   Hayao Miyazaki Discussion Group <NAUSICAA@BROWNVM.BITNET>
From:     Larry Greenfield <Larry.Greenfield@OFA123.FIDONET.ORG>

     To Steven and all, regarding Kinokuniyas: you ask why isn't there
mention of Kinokuniyas on the net?  Heck, I don't know.  It's NOT a
fan-oriented store.  It's a Japanese-person-oriented store.  But anyone
can go in there and shop, and anyone can order from them.  The $4.40
price for Nausicaa GN #5 was what I paid (before Calif state tax) when I
went to pick it up.  I'm sure if they mail it out to you, they'll charge
for mailing it out to you, but other than that, and tax if you live in
the state of the store you call, there are no other surcharges.  It's a
great store to live by.  Their anime selection is large (not HUGE, but
fairly good), and they have lots of neato Japanese magazines, from
ANIMAGE to game/computer stuffs, to childrens stuffs, etc.  There is a
large Japanese/ Japanese-American population here, so...
     As far as I know, this store doesn't keep a mailing list, but they
WILL do orders for you on an individual basis.  They might also do
successive orders (ie, ordering a year's worth of a japanese magazine,
say), though I'm not sure, and am only guessing.  As I said before, the
only info I have is basically having lived next to one, although... now
that I think about it, I DID order books through the mail once from
Kinokuniya San Jose with a Visa card about 3 years ago.  They were very
helpful, and sent it out in the mail.  The mail costs vary, but it's just
typical mail costs (books, computer chips, etc.  A few bucks unless it's
really heavy), so it's no great cost there.  The same about as, say,
ordering from Nikaku... You know, just normal mail costs.  I ordered the
original "Mai"s from them (vols 1-6) about 3-4 years ago.  They came in 2
days (though I do live in the same state, about 500 miles south), and
were in good condition.
     If you know exactly what you want, and call and order it, and they
had it in stock, it's no problem.  If they have Nausicaa #5 in stock, and
you call, give a VISA card, they'll be happy to send it to you.  If they
DON'T have it in stock at the time you call, you'd have to ask them what
their mail policy is (as far as special ordering it via mail).  Their
walk-in order policy is friendly (fill out a postcard.  When the book
comes in,they send out the postcard, and you can come pick it up).  On
the instances that I've ordered like this, it's been pretty good
speed-wise (for a special order anyway... never more than 1 month,
usually 2 weeks or so)....
:::::Larry:::::

--
Larry Greenfield
Internet: Larry.Greenfield@ofa123.fidonet.org
Compuserve: >internet:Larry.Greenfield@ofa123.fidonet.org
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------

+          +          +          +          +          +          +

Date:         Mon, 20 Dec 1993 14:56:00 -0500
Subject:      [Kinokuniyas] Re: The most popular mangas in Japan
Source:       Hayao Miyazaki Discussion Group <NAUSICAA@BROWNVM.BITNET>
From:         Emru Townsend <emru@CAM.ORG>
In-Reply-To:  <199312200626.AA03419@Altitude.CAM.ORG> from "MURRAY \
              "The Big Mur\" INMAN" at Dec 19, 93 09:33:32 pm

> Have you (or anyone else for that matter) heard of "Jump"?  It
> was a weekly manga that was supposedly the biggest selling
> printed item in Japan.  It had about ten or so different manga
> stories in it and came out weekly.  Is it available here in the US?
> I would LOVE to subscribe to it if it was.  It is great for
> helping one speed up on their kanji reading and vocabulary!

Last I looked, Kinokuniya Bookstores had a subscription service for Jump.

Kinokuniya Bookstores
Costa Mesa, CA:
   Yaohan Center
   tel: (714) 434-9986
Los Angeles:
   tel: (213) 687-4480/4447
New Jersey:
   Yaohan Plaza
   595 River Road
   Edgewater, NJ
   tel: (201) 941-7580/941-4993
   fax: (201) 941-6087
Newport Beach:
   tel: (714) 640-1505
New York:
   10 West 49th Street
   New York, NY 10020
   tel: (212) 745-1461/1462
   fax: (212) 541-9335
San Francisco:
   Japan Center
   1581 Webster Street
   San Francisco, CA 94115-9948
   tel: (415) 567-7625
San Jose:
   675 Saratoga Ave.
   San Jose, CA 95129
   tel: (408) 252-1300
Seattle:
   519 6th Ave. South
   Seattle, WA
   tel: (206) 587-2477
Torrance Store:
   tel: (213) 327-6577
Weller Court Store:
   tel: (213) 687-4480

--
     Emru Townsend, aka: emru@cam.org, switch@bix.com, Fido: 1:167/133
                 Live and in color from Montreal, Quebec!
        "The door slammed shut behind me!  Must've been a breeze."
                               "Or a trap."
                       "Or a trap... who said that?"

