The status indicator reflects the current state of the work:
- Abandoned: Work that has been discontinued
- Notes: Initial collections of thoughts and references
- Draft: Early structured version with a central thesis
- In Progress: Well-developed work actively being refined
- Finished: Completed work with no planned major changes
This helps readers understand the maturity and completeness of the content.
·
certainty: certain
Confidence Rating
The confidence tag expresses how well-supported the content is, or how likely its overall ideas are right. This uses a scale from "impossible" to "certain", based on the Kesselman List of Estimative Words:
1. "certain"
2. "highly likely"
3. "likely"
4. "possible"
5. "unlikely"
6. "highly unlikely"
7. "remote"
8. "impossible"
Even ideas that seem unlikely may be worth exploring if their potential impact is significant enough.
·
importance: 8/10
Importance Rating
The importance rating distinguishes between trivial topics and those which might change your life. Using a scale from 0-10, content is ranked based on its potential impact on:
- the reader
- the intended audience
- the world at large
For example, topics about fundamental research or transformative technologies would rank 9-10, while personal reflections or minor experiments might rank 0-1.
Memories of Emanon is a series by Kenji Tsuruta, and Shinji Kajio. It is
based on Kajio's 1983 short story of the same name. The story is set in the winter during 1967 where a young man meets a "17-year-old hippie chick"
named Emanon while aboard a ferry. Emanon is a dialgoue-driven manga with a minimalist narrative. It constantly probes at the
intricacies of memory and identity, suggesting that the human condition itself may be shaped by the accumulation of remembered experience.
Presentation
The artwork in this manga could only be described as a Fever Dream. It has photorealistic influence, and paths, surroundings, ect.
were drawn with architectural precision. The characters are drawn with naturalistic proportions but less intricate detail than the enviroment, making
her subtly "pop out" against the highly detailed world.
Narrative
The story centers around our unnamed co-protagonist and his building relationship with Emanon shortly after their startling meeting.
They tell stories, discuss serious topics, and every topic imaginable. The story shows how a fleeting moment can be so wonderful, deep, and
[] and yet simultaneously insignificant on the grand scale of time.
Form & Structure
Most chapters include some watercolor paintings of Emanon that attempt to portray the complex themes that are being discussed.
The dialogue is quick, snappy, and easy to follow along with. Whilst even the most subtle of emotions are well-portrayed by Tsuruta
photorealistic line work.
Context
Takeaway
My takeaway from this manga is that each and every fleeting moment of life has meaning. Even if only those few moments
that we hold on to are the ones that shape our conscious being, it is the compendium of every moment, every memory, and feeling
no matter how fleeting that is expressed in the beauty of humanity and its continuity.
Rating
Critic Rating: ★★★★★★★★★★☆ (96%)
"A beautifully minimalist and philosophical meditation on memory and identity, with stunning artwork and subtle emotional depth. The architectural precision and watercolor scenes elevate the experience, making it unforgettable."
— Kris Yotam
Viewer Rating: ★★★★★★★★☆☆ (89%)
"A visually gorgeous and thoughtful manga, though its minimalist narrative and heavy philosophical dialogue may feel too abstract for casual readers."
— Kris Yotam