Difference between revisions of "Sailor Moon the Novels"
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* mixing the continuities of the [[Sailor Moon (anime)|original anime]], the dubbed anime, and the [[Sailor Moon (manga)|manga]]. | * mixing the continuities of the [[Sailor Moon (anime)|original anime]], the dubbed anime, and the [[Sailor Moon (manga)|manga]]. | ||
− | * oddly heavy product placement and pop culture references, most of which were inappropriate for a story set in Japan. | + | * oddly heavy product placement and pop culture references, most of which were inappropriate for a story set in Japan, with the exception of Pokemon, which originated in Japan. |
* breaking the fourth wall.<ref name="GenvidRev">[http://www.sailormoon.ws/archives/111304.html The Sailor Moon Soapbox - Review: Mercury Rising] - Cordelia LeFay</ref> | * breaking the fourth wall.<ref name="GenvidRev">[http://www.sailormoon.ws/archives/111304.html The Sailor Moon Soapbox - Review: Mercury Rising] - Cordelia LeFay</ref> |
Revision as of 10:22, 15 October 2009
Sailor Moon the Novels was a series of novels written by Stu J. Levy (#1), and Lianne Sentar (#2-#8), and published by TokyoPop under their now-renamed "Mixx Readz" imprint in 1999. Naoko Takeuchi was also credited on their covers, but had no hand in writing them, and was merely the creator of Sailor Moon. The novels were aimed at the 8-12-year-old age range, and are currently out of print.
The novels followed the English dub setting of the city or town of "Crossroads," the exact location of which was left vague; given a comment in at least one of the novels, it seemed to be located in Japan.
Reception
The novels have received some criticism from fans for:
- mixing the continuities of the original anime, the dubbed anime, and the manga.
- oddly heavy product placement and pop culture references, most of which were inappropriate for a story set in Japan, with the exception of Pokemon, which originated in Japan.
- breaking the fourth wall.[1]
- ending in mid story. They novelized the first season but ended it with the death of Nephrite, or Nephlite as he was called there.
On the other hand, the novels have received some praise for covering some episodes that were cut from the dub, which at the time of the novels publishing would have been the only way of knowing what happened in these episodes (unless one imported the laserdiscs from Japan). They were also credited as, for the most part, having believable and good characterizations of the characters and for reading like a dub episode would.[1]
Books in Series
- Sailor Moon the novel 1: A Scout is Born
- Sailor Moon the novel 2: The Power of Love
- Sailor Moon the novel 3: Mercury Rising
- Sailor Moon the novel 4: Mars Attacks
- Sailor Moon the novel 5: Eternal Sleep
- Sailor Moon the novel 6: Scouts on Film
- Sailor Moon the novel 7: Cel Mates
- Sailor Moon the novel 8: Diamond's Not Forever
Trivia
- In the English dub, Juuban Municipal Junior High School was renamed "Crossroads Junior High." Because the novels were based on the dub, Lianne Sentar took that name and applied it to the town as a whole.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 The Sailor Moon Soapbox - Review: Mercury Rising - Cordelia LeFay
External Links
- The Sailor Moon Novels, Published by Tokyopop.com, a Mixx Entertainment Inc.Company - Lianne Sentar's offical page about the novels