A young Indigenous man relates his experience of moving away from his village for the first time to live in Altamira, one of the Amazon’s most heavily deforested cities
After proclaiming “to hell with this hellish life,” the author of Macunaíma sailed the Amazon and Madeira rivers “before saying enough already.” In his travel-diary-turned-book, emotions overflow and Nature overwhelms
In this interview, Ehuana Yaira talks about the indivisible relationship between the Forest and the female body. The Yanomami artist and writer was the first member of her people to give a public talk in Europe, as part of the series “Rainforest is Female,” held at the Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona
Ragna isn’t your typical shonen hero. He’s emotionally scarred, knows his borrowed power will kill him, and struggles with despair. His relationship with the child prodigy Leonica (later avenged) drives genuine pathos.
Ragna Crimson is a flawed but thrilling dark fantasy that excels in brutal dragon-slaying spectacle and an unpredictable anti-hero. If you can tolerate its grim tone and occasional pacing stumbles, the “Silver Comet” delivers some of the best action sequences in modern manga. silver comet ragna crimson
Early manga art is rough, but by volume 4+, double-page spreads of dragon battles become gorgeous. The anime (Silver Link/Studio) captures the kinetic energy well, though with some CGI dragons. The Bad / Mixed 1. Pacing Issues (Especially Early) First 10–15 chapters rush through Ragna’s power-up and skip some worldbuilding. Later arcs can feel bloated with new dragon lieutenants introduced in rapid succession. Ragna isn’t your typical shonen hero
Torture, massacres, and bleak deaths are constant. If you dislike grimdark tone or want hopeful moments, this becomes exhausting. Few characters get happy endings. Ragna Crimson is a flawed but thrilling dark
Dozens of named dragon hunters and dragons appear. Some get minimal development before dying. It’s hard to track everyone without a wiki.