Barely Glancing Ahead: Searching for the Future in Inio Asano's Works
by Rebecca Silverman,Inio Asano may be one of the creators whose works don't allow for middle-ground opinions. There's something in the reactions to his work that smacks of “love it or hate it,” with readers either fully embracing his dark, psychological style of storytelling or decrying it as something that tries too hard to be edgy. Scroll through the Goodreads page for A Girl on the Shore as an example of the phenomenon and you'll find that most reviews are either five stars or 1/DNF (did not finish); the pages for any random volume of Goodnight Punpun will yield similar results. Goodreads and its ilk are hardly the gold standards for discovering quality literature, but it's still an interesting experience to see the vast spread of opinions on Asano's manga, and how very clustered those opinions are the ends of the rating spectrum.
Asano, who in 2010 was described by Japanese newspaper Yomiuri Shimbun as “one of the voices of his generation,” writes stories that blend dark magic realism with what feels very like Millennial malaise – the discomfort of a generation that was promised the same things their parents had only to begin working at a time when those were no longer easily attainable. If this sounds like generational whining, that's a fair assessment, and in a 2018 interview with us, Asano himself remarked “You can say that millennials in Japan are jaded and less motivated, but if you break it down further, you can say this generation does not expect much for the future and what they consider ‘happiness’ is different from past generations.” None of this is to say that Asano's characters aren't looking for happiness. Unlike their bright-eyed manga peers, they're focused on a different kind of fulfillment, one that takes on myriad forms across Asano's many stories.
Although this theme is present in most (if not all) of his works, 2014-2022's Dead Dead Demon's Dededededestruction is a particularly good example of it. Three years before the story opens, aliens invaded the earth, but when we join the plot, that's become old news.

Human relationships and their many shapes form a thread through Asano's works, and two of the most interesting on that front are A Girl on the Shore and Downfall, one written before Dead Dead Demon's Dededededestruction and the other in the middle of it. A Girl on the Shore is almost certainly the more infamous of the two because much of its page count is taken up by graphic sex scenes between two middle schoolers.

It plays a similar role in Downfall, albeit in a much more destructive way. Kaoru, the protagonist of that story (or at least the point of view character; he could charitably be said to be both protagonist and antagonist), has a history of viewing women as sexual objects, with the only “woman” he has a decent relationship with being his cat, although even that is fraught because of his initial encounter with a woman with cat-like eyes.

Perhaps none of his works encapsulate this as well as Goodnight Punpun. Unrelentingly grim, the story follows Punpun's hard-luck life as he saves his elementary school crush Aiko his entire world, only to realize at the end that he's been a ghost in his existence. It takes the crushing nihilism of Downfall, the unhealthy relationship of A Girl on the Shore, and the uncertain (and possibly unwanted) future of Dead Dead Demon's Dededededestruction and combines them into what feels like the most “Asano” of all his series. (Bits and pieces can also be tied to What a wonderful world!, Nijigahara Holograph, and Solanin as well, particularly the ending of that last one.) In some ways, that also makes Goodnight, Punpun Asano's most difficult series; Dead Dead Demon's Dededededestruction is roughly as long, but its hopeful elements, although couched in ennui, are still more easily seen.
One of the most striking elements of the series is the way that Punpun himself is always drawn as a cartoon bird. We see glimpses of his human body – notably when he's raped by an older woman – but he's drawn as Other for the majority of the series' run.

If there's one final defining element of Inio Asano's works, it is that: there is always a future, one way or another. His younger characters may lean into the idea that there won't necessarily be one, but every concrete ending (typically a death) leads to yet another possibility. There are concrete finales for some characters, but those left behind are forced to recognize that there is just a hidden bend in the road rather than a dead end. The girl on the shore is found, the band plays on, and the aliens' mothership just hovers over all. In Asano's stories, the future exists for just a little while longer, while the characters all try their best to keep moving towards it in their way.
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