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This is horror, and it's not for the faint of heart. So, if you've just had breakfast, watch out. Don't say I didn't warn you. Tomie is a horror manga, a vast collection of stories. This is only volume 1 of all the Tomie stories that Ito created!! I heard from a reviewer that the second volume shows a significant improvement in quality, which is good to know. However, I'm not sure if I really need to read another 400 pages of this story or this theme that repeats in every tale. I'm not as obsessive as Ito or the countless boys driven insane by Tomie. Tomie is a supposed-to-be gorgeous (in manga, it's challenging to create the kind of wild beauty he aims for in this style - cute, like in Yotsuba, is possible, but gorgeous?) teenage girl who makes certain boys she meets fall head over heels in love with her. How crazy? Well, that seems to be the point! These boys literally go nuts, lose their minds, and for some unclear reason, they kill Tomie to relieve the agony of lust. You might ask, why not just have sex with her? Tomie seems to invite it. And indeed, some of them do, but this manga is more about crazy desire, blood, murder, and Lovecraftianly gross images. Sex is too nice for Ito to depict. But don't worry, Tomie-loving readers. If you mourn her loss, she has the power to regenerate herself from, say, her own decapitated head. Any body part will do, actually. Or preferably each and every body part, so we can drive all lusty boys to the charnel house or to their deaths. There's blood everywhere in these stories. And in the photographs some guys take of her, you can see these gross Tomie-growths emerging from her very head. Yuck, unless you're into horror, and then you'll be overjoyed. Freud help me, but I think there might be some Calvinist guilt issue underlying this obsessive story where every boy who lusts after Tomie must destroy the object of his lust and also be destroyed for his lust. The stories don't offer anything particularly new, no real surprises, or any significant development. It's just a collection of individual Tomie stories, where he explores the same idea in a slightly different way in each one. And yet, it's masterful in its intentions. I actually liked it, anyway! I have to classify this as a femme fatale story, similar to Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips' somewhat less successful Fatale noir series, where the beautiful blonde bombshell also leads men to madness, suicide, and murder in different stories throughout the ages. In Museum of Terror, it happens in a similar way, but it's just straightforward horror, which works better than the horror noir crime approach of Brubaker and Phillips. But I like both. I really do. Read Eisnein for the best review of Ito, without a doubt. As Eisnein points out, Ito has a history of horror obsession that might be unrivaled in the history of literature. In Ito's Uzumaki, for example, he manages to create a creepy horror manga based on the increasing proliferation of... spirals. 800 pages of spirals, yes! Everyone in a small town is driven crazy by spirals, everywhere, and increasingly, taking over everyone's minds. I actually liked this even better. It's so strange. But you see what I mean about the obsession issue with Ito. When he gets an idea, he clings to it for years... Ito is amazing. And successfully creepy, especially if you're a horror fan!