18 Feb, 2009

Let Dai, Vols. 1-15

By: Melinda Beasi

By Sooyeon Won
Published by NETCOMICS
Rating: 16+

9781600090196Jaehee Yoo is a smart, responsible high school sophomore whose life is changed forever by a single chance meeting. One afternoon in Seoul, Jaehee spots a group of young gang members mugging a girl. He attempts to intervene, and is soon introduced to the leader of the gang, Dai Lee, a cruel, seemingly conscienceless boy to whom he is inexplicably drawn. After several increasingly violent encounters, Jaehee finds himself being initiated into the gang and falling into an obsessive romantic relationship with Dai. As others in his life are drawn into Dai’s world and the suffering that inevitably brings, Jaehee struggles between his obligations to friends and family and his bond with Dai, against which he feels increasingly powerless.

Let Dai is ridiculously melodramatic, unrelentingly violent, borderline misogynistic, deeply implausible, and an incredibly compelling read. The first chapter begins with the narration, “Love was like a banquet of pain,” setting the story’s melodramatic tone from the start, but this is not a bad thing, by any means. Sooyeon Won’s sense of drama and flowery language is one of the series’ greatest charms, capable of reverting even the most jaded adult woman back to her thirteen-year-old self. Won is Emily Brontë, E.M. Forester, and S.E. Hinton all rolled up into one tragically romantic girl-pleasing package. Outside the hazy, love-drunk filter of the series, Jaehee and Dai would almost certainly be unbelievable as real-life boys, but they are so lovingly and richly written, it hardly matters. Even in the final volume, as the story’s delinquent heroes are discussing F. Scott Fitzgerald and Pablo Neruda, reciting poetry, and declaring, “It’s just like the way I love you,” to each other while bicycling attractively over a forest path, it’s impossible to stop reading.

Much is made of Dai’s impact on Jaehee’s life and the lives of those around him, but the character who actually changes the most over the course of the series is Dai. At the beginning of the story, he is written as a classic sociopath. He has no regard for his safety or the safety of others, no remorse, no empathy, no tolerance for compassion, nor does he see any value in those qualities. He is unapologetically cruel, and feels no responsibility for his own actions or desires. It is desire, however, that ultimately forces him to grow. On several occasions, Dai declares that he will not forgive Jaehee for choosing to help or fulfill a commitment to someone else, yet eventually he must in order to come back to Jaehee, whom he appears to genuinely love.

Dai’s growth is slow and sometimes deceptive. For instance, at one point he arranges to have his former gang brutally beaten in front of a girl whom they gang-raped in a questionable attempt to make amends. Of course, this action’s true aim is to free Jaehee from guilt over the incident so that he can (according to Dai’s logic) be released from his obligation to the girl and commit himself more fully to Dai. Still, there are real changes in Dai as the story goes on, as he is forced to learn to respect Jaehee’s hopes and feelings and how those extend to people other than himself.

If Dai’s journey is about learning to accept the needs of others, Jaehee’s is about learning to accept himself. Strangely, though the entire series is filled with narration in which Jaehee talks about how tragic and painful Dai’s influence on his life will be, for the most part Jaehee appears happier in his life with Dai than he was before. Yes, he’s hurt people and experienced loss, and he’s certainly felt a great deal of pain over how their relationship is received by others, but he admits more than once that he doesn’t like the parts of himself that are selfless and reliable, and is genuinely thrilled with the freedom he feels when he is with Dai. It may seem odd to support a character’s quest to become more selfish, but in this case, there is a sense that if the right balance can be found, Dai can teach Jaehee to live more for himself and for the moment, and Jaehee can teach Dai to feel responsibility for others. It is this, more than anything, that makes it possible for the reader to continue to root for the relationship even as other characters are being hurt in the process.

While the story’s initial approach to its primary relationship is filled with dire warnings of pain and suffering that hover dangerously close to homophobia, Jaehee’s appeal for his mother’s acceptance of his sexuality later on in the series is very nicely written. The author unfortunately clings to Jaehee and Dai’s obsessiveness as a bit of a crutch, allowing them to repeatedly express their devotion to each other without quite admitting what that means. Both characters claim that the gender of the other “doesn’t matter,” and their on-screen sexual relationship is surprisingly chaste. Still, Jaehee’s plea for understanding and the arguments made against it by Jaehee’s mother will be sadly familiar to many gay teenagers (and adults) who have come out to their parents, and the eventual resolution between them feels very genuine.

Despite the all-consuming quality of Jaehee’s relationship with Dai, Won manages to maintain a good-sized cast of fully realized supporting characters as well. Standouts here are Eunhyung Song, Jaehee’s almost-girlfriend whose traumatic encounter with Dai’s gang breaks her in ways from which she will never recover, and Naru Hagi, a carefree, narcissistic classmate of Jaehee’s who lends an unexpected warmth to the series. Both of these characters are just as richly developed as the two leads (perhaps even more so in the case of Eunhyung) and their personal stories are incredibly compelling.

If there is one truly regrettable thing about Let Dai it is the story’s treatment of women. It can be unfair to assume that a character’s attitudes reflect the author’s, but Dai’s hatred of women is so pronounced it is difficult to ignore. Dai is first introduced beating up a high school girl, and things go downhill from there. Certainly his character is complex and deeply troubled, and the author does not mean to suggest that his actions are okay, but it does appear that she means them to be romantic, or at least attractive on some level, which is difficult to swallow. Misogyny in stories written for women is incredibly disturbing and far too common in boys’ love, and as fantastic a read as this story is, it comes uncomfortably close to crossing that line.

NETCOMICS’ online distribution of Let Dai is a pretty good deal for those who aren’t keen on re-reads (about five dollars total to view all fifteen volumes) though the quality of the scans could stand improvement. Much of the text is difficult to read at the lower of the two available screen settings, and some is virtually unreadable in either setting, particularly the frequent sections that feature gray text (lightly outlined in white) on gray or textured backgrounds. In another comic this might be an insignificant problem, but the large blocks of narration that continue throughout Let Dai make the quality of the text paramount.

Sooyeon Won’s art is beautiful, and her characters burst, lifelike, from the page. Even the darkest, most violent moments are aesthetically pleasing. The visual storytelling is very clear and easy to follow, only hindered by the quality of the onscreen reproduction of the text.

Complete in fifteen volumes, Let Dai stands out in a market flooded with one-shots and short series that can never achieve the same impact as an epic tale well told. Regardless of any complaints that can be made, this story is riveting from start to finish, visually appealing, and intricately crafted to please its target audience.

All fifteen volumes of Let Dai are available online at NETCOMICS.com and in print editions.

16 Responses to "Let Dai, Vols. 1-15"

1 | there it is, plain as daylight. » Let Dai, Vols. 1-15

February 18th, 2009 at 2:37 pm

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[...] a quick link here to my review of the full series of Let Dai over at Manga Recon. I have mixed feelings about this series (hence the fairly lengthy review), but [...]

2 | Connie

February 19th, 2009 at 1:40 am

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This surprised me by becoming one of my favorite series EVER, even after I disliked all the violence in the early volumes and was a little put off when I couldn’t tell if Dai was serious about Jaehee early on.

It’s true what you say about the female characters in the series, though. Dai’s last tirade about Yooneun was probably one of the worse offenses. As well-written as all the characters are in this series, the girls definitely got a backseat. It makes me even more curious to read her other series, Full House, which I believe has a female main character. It’s hard for me to imagine it being better than Let Dai, but it’s apparently very popular.

And I liked those scenes at the end where they were quoting poetry to each other. It was like the flowery narration had reached some sort of zen state. It went past ridiculous to just plain funny.

3 | Melinda Beasi

February 19th, 2009 at 8:16 am

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@ConnieAnd I liked those scenes at the end where they were quoting poetry to each other. It was like the flowery narration had reached some sort of zen state. It went past ridiculous to just plain funny.

That is just spot ON. Yes, exactly.

Ahhhh I’d like to read her other series too. I’d like to see what she does with a female protagonist, and of course if Let Dai is any indication, it’s got to be a great read.

4 | MangaBlog » Blog Archive » Matt Thorn, Spider-Man, and more!

February 19th, 2009 at 9:38 am

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[...] Biased Manga) Connie on vol. 5 of I Shall Never Return (Slightly Biased Manga) Melinda Beasi on vols. 1-15 of Let Dai (Manga Recon) Julie on vol. 11 of Love*Com (Manga Maniac Cafe) Kiara [...]

5 | Lianne Sentar

February 19th, 2009 at 6:48 pm

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Let Dai is a brilliant and completely unique work, and I think you wrote a great analysis of it.

However, I’m not fully sold on the “sexist” argument. Dai HIMSELF is sexist, certainly, and that’s brought up at some point. But I don’t think his sexism is at all accepted by anyone else, and when Jaehee chooses Dai over the girls from time to time, it’s because he loves Dai and not because he thinks “boys are better than girls” or anything. Hell, he REALLY tries to work things out with the girls.

Also, it’s true that there are “girls are this” comments throughout the series, but I think it’s clear that the community (and its adults) are pretty old-fashioned, so saying “boys are expected to be crude but girls are expected to be well-behaved” or whatever is just a product of society that’s sometimes accepted by the teenagers and sometimes ignored–like reality.

I’m usually hyper-sensitive to sexism and I just really, really didn’t feel it from this series. Can you elaborate any further?

6 | Melinda Beasi

February 19th, 2009 at 7:34 pm

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@Lianne Sentar – Hi Lianne, thanks for taking the time to comment on this! I will have to find some alternative method for finding specific examples for you, because I don’t have print copies of the books, and my 48 hours with those volumes on NETCOMICS is expired, but I promise to return. I will point out, though, that I’m not so much accusing Dai of sexism, because I don’t think he’s any less sexist than his society as a whole. I’m accusing him of misogyny. Dai actually hates women, and I’m always uncomfortable with that in stories written by/for women, especially when it occurs in a character female readers are supposed to find attractive. I promise to return with examples when I can procure them!

7 | Lianne Sentar

February 19th, 2009 at 8:59 pm

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Melinda –

Don’t worry about examples – I agree with you that Dai hates women. My question is do you think that makes the WORK misogynist? Dai is very sexy aesthetically, but he is NINE KINDS OF CRAZY, and therefore I don’t think Won was trying to present him as the “sexy bad boy all girls have crushes on.” Dai is a beautiful, rabid wolf in a society of lambs, and his beauty just makes him more invasive and thus more dangerous. If he hates women, that’s just part of his character…I don’t think there was an overarching misogynist message or anything. In fact, the comic establishing Dai’s misogyny and then having him follow through with that (beating girls senseless, etc.) gives the girls credibility as people and characters within the work, because most works for girls would give girls “special treatment” at the cost of character/plot integrity in order to not offend the readers’ sensibilities. (Example: Fushigi Yuugi wanted to deal with the terrors of rape, but then never had the girls actually raped.) In Let Dai, girls are characters, Dai hates them because that’s part of who he uniquely is, he doesn’t spare them when he’s in a rage, and the girls have to deal with that violence. That’s…well, that could even be argued as feminist. Female characters being spared a misogynist’s fists for the sole fact that they’re females and the majority of readers are female is a bit of a cop-out, and also mildly sexist, in a way. Does that make sense?

8 | Melinda Beasi

February 19th, 2009 at 9:28 pm

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@Lianne Sentar – Yes, that does make sense, and admittedly that’s why I kind of wrote a disclaimer into the review, by calling it borderline misogynistic, and mentioning that I knew the kind of assumption I was making could easily be unfair. I think the reason why I think there’s a good chance Won expects us to find Dai sexy all around (including the woman-hating) is because Jaehee does, and I feel that we’re meant to identify with Jaehee. Jaehee doesn’t approve of Dai’s treatment of/attitudes toward women, but it also doesn’t affect his feelings for Dai. He’s willing to accept that as a truth about Dai, and there’s some level on which that bothers me. Not enough to stop reading the story, obviously (which also bothers me a little, if I’m being honest), but enough that I felt compelled to mention it while reviewing.

9 | Connie

February 20th, 2009 at 2:09 am

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You raise some good points, Lianne. I thought about it a little more… Dai is pretty bad, and I kind of agree with Melinda that there is a slightly misogynistic tone to the series because of that, but it’s more because there is just so much of Dai, and we see so much of his behavior that it can be hard to look past it to the other characters sometimes, regardless of how Dai or anyone else is portrayed.

I thought about the other characters some. I like what you said about Jaehee doing his best by the girls, because that is 100% true, and I think that Eunhyung was a pretty strong and realistic character. The portrayal of Yooi’s stuck-up female friends and Dai’s mother occurred to me, but for every female background character cast into a stereotype, there were males playing out the same roles, and there were a lot more male thugs than female (plus, the female gang members supported one another in a way that the male ones did not). And there was no counter for Miss Jin, who was also a pretty great character.

Thinking about it, I wasn’t sure how I felt about Yooneun, though. She winds up being the main female character, and while she is strong (she has no problems telling off classist snobs, or even Dai, for that matter), she does have a lot of negative female stereotypes. She’s clingy and possessive of Jaehee, long after it’s made clear that she will never be his lover. She has that ridiculous promise with Yooi that she finally uses in the most selfish way possible. And she is probably guilty of using Eunhyung as a tie to Jaehee, as Dai points out, but I find that really hard to fault her for. All these things make it extremely easy for a female audience to dislike Yooneun, I think. On the other hand, none of these are fatal flaws or really all that sexist (with the possible exception of the Yooi’s promise thing), and they are even reflected, in pretty much every case, in other characters.

You sort of made me realized just how well-balanced all the characters are, and I can enjoy the series that much more because of it now ^_^

10 | Connie

February 20th, 2009 at 2:18 am

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I should also add that I think the misogynistic tone in the beginning might be a deal-breaker for some people, because there’s nothing to balance out Dai’s assault on Yooneun or Eunhyung’s gang-rape in the first volume. My biggest problem with the series is actually the violence, since it was initially very off-putting for me, and I can imagine it turning off a lot of potential readers. Let Dai wouldn’t be nearly as effective without it though, so I can’t say I would have it any other way.

11 | Melinda Beasi

February 20th, 2009 at 8:39 am

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@Connie – Connie, you’ve made some really fantastic points here, on both sides of the question, really. I’m very torn on the subject of Eunhyung’s strength. I think she’s an incredibly relatable character, and really well-written, but I wish Won had let her triumph in the end. I can’t be more clear than that without putting huge spoilers in these comments, but I hope you’ll understand what I mean. Yooneun, though… well, there’s a reason she never even really made it into the review, despite playing such a big role in the series. I agree, she’s written to be disliked, and though it wasn’t your intent at all, I think listening to you talk about her has strengthened my resolve regarding my misogyny accusations. Heh. I’m not suggesting that female characters should always be likeable, because that would be ridiculous, but I do think she’s positioned as a weak sort of villain due to her ceaseless pursuit of Jaehee, even after it’s clear that he loves someone else, and that this is unfortunate. I think she could have been written as a less pathetic character and still served as a “rival” from Dai’s skewed perspective, and it would have removed quite a bit of what reads (to me) as misogyny in the series. I think you’ve unintentionally put your finger right on it for me, actually. Part of what makes it seem like Dai’s attitudes towards women *might* reflect the author’s, is that by writing Yooneun the way she did, Won makes some of Dai’s feelings about Yooneun seem almost justifiable. All this said, I still really enjoyed this series, and I hope that’s clear. :)

12 | Lianne Sentar

February 20th, 2009 at 10:33 am

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Haha! Yeah, Yooneun sucks, I think we all agree. ^_^ The fact that she’s female and wallows in a lot of negative female traits can turn off a female reader, certainly, even if Yooneun isn’t representative of all girls in the comic. Personally, I LOVE the antagonism between her and Dai. It scares the crap out of me. After how clear he’s made it that he hates her and REALLY hates her with Jaehee, she keeps turning up at the wrong places, and you can just feel his rage converting into violence as he storms up. It always made me want to scream at Yooneun to run as far away as possible. ^_^ But that’s why I like the comic, and I why I really like Dai as a character. The story is just this slow-churning cauldron of negativity that suddenly boils over into terrifying violence, then settles again, then calms, then boils over again even faster. Most shoujo wouldn’t dare to even SCRAPE the issues Let Dai dives headfirst into, and I love that. Yeah, Melissa – I can see how the misogyny will upset some readers. And Connie, you’re totally right that the violence can do the same. But if a reader can stomach those things, they make sense in the context of the comic and help make it the unique work of art that it is.

13 | Lianne Sentar

February 20th, 2009 at 10:36 am

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Oh, and despite all the various issues presented in Let Dai – dealing with rape, dealing with violence, homophobia, misogyny, forgiveness, revenge – I like how there are only two real overarching themes in the comic that Won is clearly preaching: 1.) Violence begets violence and 2.) GET YOUR TETANUS BOOSTER SHOTS.

14 | Melinda Beasi

February 20th, 2009 at 11:16 am

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@Lianne Sentar1.) Violence begets violence and 2.) GET YOUR TETANUS BOOSTER SHOTS.

Lianne, that made me laugh out loud! :D

15 | there it is, plain as daylight. » Let’s Talk About Manhwa

March 19th, 2009 at 10:17 am

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[...] reviewed so far has been BL manhwa (and by “most” I mean “three”): Let Dai and Totally Captivated, both from NETCOMICS, and One Thousand and One Nights from Yen Press. All of [...]

16 | Recommendations for NETCOMICS Sale! | There it is, Plain as Daylight

August 24th, 2009 at 3:31 pm

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[...] sale offers a veritable treasure trove of fantastic reads–gloriously melodramatic epics like Let Dai and Totally Captivated, emotionally stirring one-shot U Don’t Know Me (written by the same [...]

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