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東京喰種 / Tokyo Ghoul #1-3

Tokyo Ghoul Monster Edition 1-2-3

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Ghouls live among us, the same as normal people in every way—except for their craving for human flesh.

Ken Kaneki is an ordinary college student until a violent encounter turns him into the first half-human half-Ghoul hybrid. Trapped between two worlds, he must survive Ghoul turf wars, learn more about Ghoul society and master his new powers.

This monstrously massive compendium of Tokyo Ghoul volumes 1-3 contains the early days of Ken Kaneki’s struggle to navigate two worlds, survive Ghoul turf wars, learn more about Ghoul society and master his new powers. This hefty tome—with extra-large archival pages showcasing Sui Ishida’s art and all the color art from the VIZ graphic novels—is perfect for megafans to gorge on.

624 pages, Unknown Binding

First published November 21, 2017

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About the author

Sui Ishida

242 books2,501 followers
Also known as 石田スイ.

Sui Ishida (石田スイ, Ishida Sui), born December 28, Fukuoka Prefecture, Japan, is a Japanese manga artist
In 2010 he won the Young Jump 113th Grand Prix award with Tokyo Ghoul (東京喰種, Tōkyō Kushu). In March 2011, the same oneshot was published in the 2nd Issue of Miracle Jump. And later in September 2011, Tokyo Ghoul started as a series in Weekly Young Jump 2011-41 Issue. In December 2011, he made another oneshot about Rize that was published in December 2011 in Miracle Jump 6th Issue, which was later collected in the 6th volume of Tokyo Ghoul.
In 2013, he also started Tokyo Ghoul: Jack in the digital magazine Jump LIVE.

Sui Ishida is his penname; nobody knows his real name or what he looks like.

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Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews
Profile Image for Tym.
1,336 reviews80 followers
December 29, 2018
Highly enjoyable well writte, the only real downfall is that the art can be a little hard to follow.
Profile Image for Michael Sorbello.
Author 1 book317 followers
October 20, 2020
This is a review of the entire series.

Tokyo Ghoul begins with a streak of incredibly bad luck disguised as good luck. Reports of strange murders involving cannibalism and monster attacks have been haunting the city of Tokyo. What started as rumors quickly becomes reality as more and more victims show up dead. The creatures behind the attacks are believed to be ghouls. They don’t quite fit the normal definition of ghouls, they’re not hideous, rotting, undead monstrosities. They look like humans, they talk like humans, they act and even pretend to eat like normal humans, there’s no way of telling a ghoul from a human until you end up as their next meal. Ken Kaneki and his childhood friend Hide continue to laugh the incidents off as superstitious rumors and continue about their daily life as they normally would.

Things start to seem too good to be true when the shy and socially awkward bookworm Kaneki scores a date with the girl of his dreams, a beautiful, mature and intelligent young woman named Rize. Not only is Rize completely out of Kaneki’s league, but she also happens to share his infatuation with complex horror literature and philosophy. Things seem to be going unusually well for Kaneki, but it turns out that his lovely date is only interested in his body—eating his body, to be more specific. (And not in the hot kinky way either.)

Rize is not only an extremely dangerous ghoul, but she’s what’s known as a binge eater; ghouls that kill and consume without remorse or concern of the population or the safety of other ghouls. She’s the one responsible for most of the brutal killings and cannibalism incidents in the area and poor Kaneki just so happens to be her latest target. Just like that, a dream date quickly descends into a bloody nightmare as Kaneki is nearly tortured to death by Rize in an empty construction site where no one can hear his cries of pain.

Kaneki seems to get lucky when Rize slams him around the construction site and ends up knocking a large hunk of metal down on herself from all the destruction she caused, and ends up killing herself by accident just before she can deliver the final blow to Kaneki. The commotion causes a disturbance in the neighborhood and police are called to investigate the scene. The nearly dead Kaneki is rushed to the hospital along with the corpse of the bloodthirsty ghoul Rize so her organs can be transplanted into Kaneki.

All’s well that ends well, right? Wrong. The streak of bad luck continues. The morally questionable rescue of Kaneki ends up transforming him into the first half-human half-ghoul hybrid because of the ghoul organs implanted in his body. Losing his taste for his favorite foods, developing violent urges and twisted desires to consume the flesh of his fellow humans, Kaneki is forcefully pulled into the demented underworld of ghoul society which has existed alongside human society for many years in secret.

Kaneki has no choice but to adapt to the ways of the ghouls if he wants to survive, all while keeping his identity a secret and trying to live a normal human life. Thus begins a tragic horror story where a psychologically tortured boy is constantly exposed to the worst aspects of human nature and the savagery of ghoul society. Is Kaneki the first ever outcast that doesn’t belong to human or ghoul society, or is he the first and only person that has the potential to bring the two clashing societies together? Kaneki begins to realize that there’s more to the incident with Rize and the surgery that changed him forever, and he slowly unravels the secrets of the nastiest ghouls and the most corrupt humans working in mysterious ways behind the scenes. After a while, you’ll begin to question who the real monsters are.

Caught between two dangerous worlds, Kaneki grows through immeasurable suffering, bridging the gap between humans and ghouls by learning to love and fear them in equal measure. Tokyo Ghoul builds an emotional story about morality, discrimination and self-discovery. It utilizes the literary themes of Kafka such as metamorphosis and the exploration of absolute gray morality.

Kaneki’s development is literally an emotional roller coaster. He goes through so many changes in beliefs, morals, personality and identity that he struggles to keep track of who he really is as all of the different sides of himself constantly try to conquer and slaughter each other in his severely fractured brain. He can’t decide if he wants to fight against humans for the sake of the ghouls, to fight against ghouls for the sake of humans, or try to come up with some crazy master plan to fight against both of them or neither of them in order to find a way to stop the conflict between all sides once and for all. All these confusing thoughts and morals create a storm inside him and the greatest conflict of all is perhaps the conflict of Kaneki’s own conflicted sense of identity.

Overall, the story has a strong start that immediately throws you into a dark and twisted drama, a tedious middle section that's held back by pacing issues, poorly explained terminology and too many unimportant side characters that don’t get nearly enough development or screen time, but it gets back on its feet with a really strong final few arcs that leave you with many questions and potential answers regarding human morality. It has an impressively large cast connected by limitless plot twists and clever intricacies, deep protagonists with many layers, flashy fight scenes with unique weapons and bodily horror mechanics called Kagune, and it pulls on the heartstrings as you slowly begin to realize that humans and ghouls have a lot more in common than either one would care to admit.

***

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Profile Image for Bethany.
148 reviews5 followers
January 5, 2018
Well this was a pleasant surprise- several of my students have been telling me to read this, and it never really called me. Just looked like manga, and I have never really gotten into manga. This was pretty fun to read though. I was expecting the X Men plus Twilight plus a lot of gore, and what I got was X Men plus man-eating monster story plus a tidy little social commentary on assigning and withholding personhood and the right to life.
Profile Image for ANTHONY FLORES.
207 reviews3 followers
March 2, 2024
Ya esta si es la vencida con Tokyo Ghoul es la primera vez de las tantas veces que quiero terminarlo que avanzo tan largo.

La historia con cuenta la vida de Kaneki Ken, un tipo que le atrae una chica bien bonita que, por cuestiones del destino, le habla y entablan una amistad.

La chica es Rize y el se compromete a acompañarle a su casa. En el camino, unas vigas caen desde un edificio en construcción y al parecer los dos mueren pero, tiempo después, Kaneki despierta sintiéndose diferente.

¿Qué habrá pasado?

Esa es la premisa que tenemos en este manga, que siendo la edición monster, nos tira tres tomos de putazo y que amo completamente.
Profile Image for Jamie.
55 reviews3 followers
May 21, 2021
i love this series so much. no matter how many times i read it i always end up crying
Profile Image for Anthony Lanh.
18 reviews
December 19, 2021
Admittedly, I enjoy the anime's art style for the combat more than the manga, but the book is beautiful
Profile Image for Nadia Ranaputri.
47 reviews6 followers
January 30, 2024
I can see this as a new favorite after Attack on Titan. The characters, story, and worldbuilding....everything about it has me hooked. Such a fantastic series so far
Profile Image for Danielle.
417 reviews3 followers
August 8, 2024
I very much enjoy tokyo ghoul. This is a reread after watching the whole series.
Profile Image for Alina.
231 reviews
January 19, 2025
"I don't belong anywhere." "Neither? That's not true. You are the only person who has a place in both worlds." 😭
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews

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