by Hajime Isayama
Published
July 16, 2013
Pages
203 pages
Language
English
Publisher
Kodansha Comics
Hardcover
$20.06
Paperback
$7.67
Audio CD
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In this post-apocalytpic sci-fi story, humanity has been devastated by the bizarre, giant humanoids known as the Titans. Little is known about where they came from or why they are bent on consuming mankind. Seemingly unintelligent, they have roamed the world for years, killing everyone they see.
For the past century, what's left of man has hidden in a giant, three-walled city. People believe their 100-meter-high walls will protect them from the Titans, but the sudden appearance of an immense Titan is about to change everything. Winner of the 2011 Kodansha Manga Award (Shonen) and nominated for the prestigious Osamu Tezuka Cultural Prize for 2012.
In a world overrun by towering, human-eating Titans, the remnants of humanity shelter behind enormous walls. The fragile peace shatters with the sudden appearance of a colossal Titan, breaking the outer wall and unleashing chaos. As terror grips the last bastion of mankind, young Eren Yeager, driven by a thirst for vengeance after witnessing a harrowing loss, vows to annihilate the Titans.
Together with his friends Mikasa and Armin, he joins the military, entering a fight that will determine the survival of humanity's future.
Humanity battles extinction as gigantic Titans breach their walls. Eren Yeager’s quest for revenge drives the narrative forward. Friendship and courage become the core strengths against overwhelming odds.
Set in a world dominated by fearsome Titans colossal creatures that feast on humans Attack on Titan Vol. 1" presents a startling vision of humanity’s struggle for survival. Shrouded in suspense and mystery the story opens with the long-standing peace fractured by a horrific attack that leaves the characters in shock and despair.
Through vivid and intense art Hajime Isayama masterfully conveys the psychological and physical challenges faced by Eren Mikasa and Armin as they navigate this hostile world. Their journey is filled with unexpected twists as betrayals and alliances form leading to the unveiling of dark secrets about the Titans themselves. Eren's transformation into an impassioned warrior is central to the plot driven by a deep sense of loss and a burning desire for justice.
Readers are drawn into his relentless pursuit to destroy the monstrous beings that threaten all he loves. The narrative raises pivotal questions about society freedom and courage as the characters face moral dilemmas and the harsh realities of war. Filled with adrenaline-pumping action sequences and poignant moments the story captivates the audience leaving them yearning to uncover the truth behind the Titans' existence.
This volume sets the stage for an epic saga that intricately intertwines themes of bravery sacrifice and the unyielding human spirit poised to engage readers with a profound and harrowing adventure.
The intricate storytelling entwines philosophical themes with action inviting readers to ponder deep existential questions Isayama's artwork delivers powerful imagery capturing the terrifying scale of the Titans and the raw emotion of the characters The blend of suspenseful plot twists and rich character development keeps readers on edge eager for more with every page.
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Based on 9369 ratings
I guess I am the only one that had not read or seen Attack on Titan ///n/// straight to the point: I love it. Giants in fiction end being a bit like just bigger men, not here! I have never seen giants like these, the details of the titans' mouth is so weird and for some unknown reason, I could not put my finger on it, looks so plausible that you could believe it quite natural. There are many characters that live in a fortified city, a city that could be from a XVIIth century level of technology and appearance. Is the last place in which the humanity is surviving the attack of inscrutable titans. Which one is the main character? I thought it was Eren but, having read only this volume, humanity as a whole seem almost vanishing and the titans are the ones in which the story is focused. The style of drawing, is not my cup of tea but it is excellent, it matches the images of XVIIth century prints and the expression of all the characters are well rendered. I am going to get the rest of the volumes :P
That was a super dark read. So much was happening. I love it. I wish I didn't wait too long to read it! Well, better late than never. 😅
I chose this rating because the drawings were really really good but I didn't always know what was going on due to what the characters were saying. I really like the design of the characters but I don't really understand the science-y stuff in the story like how the gear works. I would recommend this to anyone who likes a story with action, drama, kinda romance, and can handle gore. Honestly, an overall great book but kinda confusing in some parts for me. I will definitely read the next volume.
Totally recommended, this volume is a start to a great adventure that everyone should read
I bought all of the currently available volumes of the manga at the same time, so I'm going to do a review right here of the whole thing. I won't include any huge spoilers. The setting of this world is basically the apocalypse; the majority of humanity has been wiped out by huge man-eating humanoid creatures called Titans. The survivors of humanity hide behind huge walls to protect themselves, and only a brave few, the Survey Corps, venture from the safety of the walls to fight against the Titans. For a hundred years, humanity has lived inside these walls in relative peace, without fear of being eaten by those monsters. All that is about to change when the Titans attack. Enter Erin Jaeger, a boy with intense drive, and a strong will to kill the Titans and see the world. His adopted sister, Mikasa, has a naturally aptitude for anything she tries, and she'll protect Erin with her life. Their best friend Armin is physically weak, but his intelligence is second to none. Together they'll try to survive in a world that seems to become deadlier by the day, and try to help save humanity from extinction. I've never read a manga before reading this, and I have to say, it'll be hard for anything to match Attack on Titan. This story draws you in with complex characters, elitism, and (for a lack of a better term) ninja action. If gruesome images bothers you, than a manga about man-eating monsters may not be best for you, but if you think you can get through it, you won't be disappointed. This is an excellent series and I cannot wait for more.
I bought them a long time ago but one day I was bored at noticed they where available under my kindle unlimited sub. My mind was blown immediately. It's probably the most convenient way to consume manga. On the actual book. It's filled with the right balance of suspense and dread. I am not unbiased at all. The first couple of episodes of this anime still blow my mind and the manga probably carries that feeling because of that knowledge. I would still recommend it, specially for the interview with the author and the world building that gets a bit more time.
I find it absolutely hilarious that there are people who could read Attack on Titan and think that it's got some kind of xenophobic or nationalistic/isolationist political message in it. Because seriously--did those people even READ the story? Are they so unable to read the (not even that subtextual) subtext that they don't realize that AoT is a huge CRITICISM of any kind of overly isolationist, dictatorial government? If the main characters' passionate, curious attitudes toward freedom and going out to see what's beyond the walls of the tiny world they were born into in volume 1 wasn't hint enough, just keep on reading and the story will spell it out for you--why it's so important to face one's fears head-on and push outside your little "safety bubble" of complacency and LIVE (and it'll do it while being thrilling, entertaining, gut-wrenchingly moving, and surprisingly humorous at times, and will remind you about both how awful and how amazing human beings can be in the worst of times). As for the feeble and completely inaccurate claims of xenophobia, etc, our handful of slower-witted readers have suggested, I'd actually say Attack on Titan is one of the MOST inclusive, non-xenophobic (and NON-MISOGYNISTIC, while we're at it!) manga to come out of Japan in the past two decades, especially in the popular shounen manga category. While most shounen manga like to stick to a heavily (or entirely) Japanese setting with mostly Japanese heroes (which is totally fine, since these stories were written by Japanese people for the Japanese market), AoT goes out of its way to a) set the story in an identifiably western land with identifiably western-looking characters with western-sounding names (German, in fact, for the majority: Jaeger, Franz, Thomas, Annie, Reiner, Bertholdt, Erwin, Armin, Levi). Though interestingly, the author Isayama Hajime goes a step further by making the population ethnically DIVERSE on top of that--we have Mikasa Ackerman, whose Asian heritage and Japanese name are discussed frankly to be what they are (Asian/Japanese). Then we have characters like Franz, Ymir and Hanji Zoe who have clearly darker coloring and facial features that make them identifiably black, middle-eastern, and either middle-eastern or Indian/South Asian, respectively. In fact, in general, Isayama breaks so many molds of the "conventional look" of comics characters to make his characters visually diverse and inclusive--Mikasa Ackerman, the main heroine, is shown to be visually more muscular and thus, logically, *heavier* (yet still feminine and beautiful) than the main boy character (and her love interest) because she is blatantly shown to be physically stronger than him. There are very tall girls like Ymir and Nanaba, as well as very short ones who still kick butt (like Annie) or not (like Krista), girls with larger/not-cutely-Disney-Princess-like noses like Annie, boys who are petite and effeminate/delicate-looking like Armin, and boys who are super-tall (Bertholdt) or super-buff (Reiner) as well. The biggest badass in the entire series is a petite, muscular 30-something-year-old man who is SHORTER than almost all the kids and has the kind of baby face petite guys do in real life--but you would never see any of these types of people in any other manga (or western graphic novel, come to think of it. Especially the diversity among the women--western graphic novels require all major female characters to have the same slim, buxom body type and flawless, pretty faces with cute/petite noses, etc). But even aside from all the awesome inclusiveness in the looks and personalities of the characters, what makes AoT so special to me is that Isayama also has a very wide, inclusive view of all types of people in his heart and that inclusiveness and ability to see all people, regardless of race, looks, attitudes, etc, as PEOPLE who are worthwhile and worth having compassion for, is what makes his cast and their relationships so striking, unique, memorable, and imbued with the power to touch the audience. As for the whole premise of the story--of these humans, hiding (or more appropriately, TRAPPED) behind walls to hide from these giant, insensible, inhuman terrors--the POINT of the story is that the heroes and the handful of brave, perhaps foolish, people who join the Survey Corps are not content to live trapped inside the boundaries they were born into, even in the face of the deadly, terrifying hell that awaits them outside those boundaries. It's a story not just about the Japanese or any particular ethnic group--it's about humanity as a whole, and how magnificent the indomitable human spirit is that would choose freedom in the face of death-defying odds and fear over a life of safe complacency. It's the same struggle human beings the world over have faced since civilization began (Henry David Thoreau's "Most men lead lives of quiet desperation" essay, and "Just Around the Riverbend" from Pocahontas are just two of many, many examples)--do you stay in a safe, mind-numbing existence, or have the courage to push outside your safe zone and LIVE? THAT is what Attack on Titan is about.