1. Rebekah Loper says:

    There is not a further season of Library War planned, because there is a movie sequel to the anime. The sequel is called Library War: Wings of Revolution. I have yet to find it on DVD or released anywhere in the US. Though *cough* if you know where to look, it can be found.

    The anime covers the first 11 (I think) volumes of the manga, and the movie sequel covers manga volumes 12-15, though the very ending conflict (while still ending the same manner for the same people involved) plays out differently. The manga is actually an adaptation of four novels written by Hiro Arikawa.

    The episode with the reference to Farenheit 451 is all made up for the anime, and the further relationship between Komaki and the MBC guy is sadly not in the manga, either. However, the ending with the ‘agnosia’ issue with Dojo was also completely made up – the fire incident did happen in the manga, but with a completely different person, and it honestly played out better that way. Even when I saw the anime before reading the manga, I thought that whole thing was contrived for drama, and was relieved to see I was right when I did read the manga.

    The conflict rules are pretty glossed over in the anime, but are covered better in the manga. Essentially, the Library Defense Force is not allowed to do battle outside of library property (or, in the case of the museum exhibit, where they’ve been asked to provide security). The Media Betterment Forces have to notify them before initiating battle, so that members of the public have time to evacuate safely and not be in harm’s way.

    To fight in public areas, both the LDF and the MBC are required to get permission from the Ministry of Justice beforehand, but of course that bias is skewed so far it’s not even funny, since the Library Defense Forces are managed by local governments (like cities/municipalities), and the Media Betterment Forces are managed by the national government. It’s unclear whether the Library Defense Act was something recognized at the national government level, or just adopted by the local governments, and they self-regulate themselves, essentially. In American terms, the LDF is basically a militia.

    Additionally, there are also three live action movie adaptations of Library War (a series). They are: Library War, Library War: Book of Memories, and Library War: The Last Mission. The first and third can be found on DVD/Bluray in the US, but Book of Memories was a made-for-TV special in Japan and as far as I can tell has not been released anywhere with Region 1 coding, or with English subtitles. There are fan-made subtitles available, though.

  2. notleia says:

    I wondered if that was worth looking at on Crunchyroll, but you seem to have confirmed my assessment that it’s more gimmick than substance.

    And I don’t know if this counts as a balancing Happy Nice Time anime review, because half-hearting a topic like censorship seems neither Happy nor Nice of a time. Also where’s my Natsume Yuujin-cho review Burnett I want an excuse to gush about Nyanko-sensei.

What do you think?