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Brook (One Piece)

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Brook
One Piece character
Brook illustrated by Eiichiro Oda in the color spread of Chapter 726
First appearanceManga Chapter #442
Anime Episode #337
Created byEiichiro Oda
Voiced byJapanese: Chō[1]
English: Ian Sinclair
In-universe information
NicknameSoul King Brook
The Gentleman Skeleton
"Dead Bones" Brook
"Humming" Brook
"Mr. Afro Skeleton"
"The Humming Swordsman"
SpeciesHuman (deceased, skeleton)
GenderMale
OccupationPirate, Musician, Swordsman (Straw-Hat Pirates; formerly captain of the Rumbar Pirates)
Bounties383,000,000 (current)[2]
83,000,000 (after the timeskip)
33,000,000 (when alive)
Devil Fruit Power"Revive Revive Fruit" (English translation)
Yomi Yomi no Mi (Japanese)
Grants no abilities in life, but upon dying the user's soul is allowed to return to their body and live again.

Brook (ブルック, Burukku), widely known as "Soul King" Brook, is a fictional undead skeleton in the anime and manga series One Piece, created and written by artist Eiichiro Oda. He is the eighth member to join the Straw Hats and serves as the crew's musician. "Soul King" Brook was brought back to life by the Revive Revive Fruit and is a world-renowned rock star who can play any musical instrument.

Brook was once the leader of a battle convoy in a kingdom before becoming the musician swordsman and later captain of the Rumbar Pirates. Fifty-two years ago before the current story, the Rumbar Pirates left their pet the infant whale Laboon at Reverse Mountain and promised Laboon to return for him after they cirumnavigated the world.[ch. 487]. The Rumbar Pirates were killed in the misty Florian Triangle but Brook was brought back to life by the Devil Fruit he previously ate. Decades later, Brook loses his shadow to the pirate Gecko Moria, one of the Seven Warlords of the Sea, forcing Brook to stay out of the sunlight or face disintegration.

Five years later, Monkey D. Luffy recruits Brook to join the Straw Hats after restoring his shadow. Brook's goal is to circle the Grand Line and return to Reverse Mountain, reuniting with the whale, Laboon, and fulfilling the promise the Rumbar Pirates made. Within two years, "Soul King Brook" becomes a globally-renowned rock star. Brook then returns to the Straw Hats, and steals a crucial piece of Big Mom's treasure which helps reveal the location of the One Piece. After Luffy becomes recognized as an Emperor of the Sea, Brook is named one of Luffy's nine commanders.

Creation and conception

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A cosplay of Brook as a member of the Straw Hats.

Though Brook did not appear in the story until 2007, the idea of a skeleton musician was first conceived by Oda in 2000, about the time of Laboon's introduction. This was seven years before the first appearance of Brook.[5][6] Oda's concept art shows Brook originally had a western cowboy hat instead of an afro. This design was later incorporated as Yorki's cowboy hat instead.[7]

Character outline

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Personality

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Brook is a combination of a gentlemanly persona and a perverted sort. He speaks in a dignified, educated manner at most times, but has amazingly bad manners. He burps and farts at dinner, casually asks to see womens' panties, and picks in other peoples' food, to name only a few. He takes being a skeleton lightly, using any chance he can to joke about it.

Devil Fruit Abilities

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Brook carries a shikomizue, a Japanese cane sword, and is skilled in its use. He can also combine his shikomizue and violin to create sound-based attacks. He was once a fighter in the surprise-attack squadron of an unknown kingdom. Brook claims he can heal from most fractures to his body by drinking milk. His head can also be opened up and used as a storage device. Brook uses an unnamed fencing sword style and is a skilled fencer who can use quick stabs because of his skeleton anatomy.[8] In addition to his sword skill, Brook's lightweight skeleton body gives him great speed and the ability to jump extraordinarily high. His body is so light that he is even capable of running on water.[9] However, Brook is still powerless if submerged in water, like all Devil Fruit users, and will sink if he stops running.[10]

After his separation from the Straw Hats, Brook learns how to use his Devil Fruit ability to leave his skeleton body and explore his surroundings as a disembodied soul.[ch. 629]

Musical talent

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Brook is an excellent musician, displaying the ability to play any instrument at a highly skilled level.[11] He is usually seen playing the violin.[ch. 486] Brook can even influence people with his music to the point of making them fall asleep.[ch. 454] While separated from the other Straw Hats, and incognito as "Soul King" Brook, he gains world fame, filling concert halls with fans.[ch. 600] He is also a skilled fencer who uses a shikomizue (a Japanese cane sword) in battle.[ch. 454] His reduced weight allows him to jump extraordinarily high and to run across water.[ch. 443, 493] Eventually, Brook learns how to use his Devil Fruit ability to leave his skeleton body and explore his surroundings as a disembodied soul.[ch. 629]

History

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A cosplay of Brook as he appeared when he was first alive.

Rumbar Pirates and Laboon

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Over fifty years ago, Brook was once the leader of "a battle convoy in a certain kingdom." Then he became the musician swordsman of the music-themed Rumbar Pirates, and later Brook took over the crew as the new captain. The Rumbar Pirates were all killed, but the power of the Paramecia-type Revive-Revive Fruit (ヨミヨミの実, Yomi Yomi no Mi) allowed "Dead Bones" Brook to rise again and live a second life as a skeleton.[ch. 443][12]

Already pirates before the era of Gold Roger, the Rumbar Pirates and the baby whale Laboon enter the Grand Line. Laboon took a particular liking to "Humming Brook"'s peculiar afro and his enchanting music. Promising to return after sailing the Grand Line, the crew left Laboon at the lighthouse at Reverse Mountain, stating that the Grand Line is too dangerous for such a small whale.[3] The crew captain "Calico" Yorki (キャラコのヨーキ, Kyarako no Yōki) is forced to flee the Grand Line after he catches a disease, leaving Brook to be captain.[9]

Death, resurrection, and isolation for 50 years

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Brook's crew was slaughtered by an unknown pirate crew after they entered a mysterious, misty area of the sea known as the Florian Triangle.[9] They played one last song for Laboon as they died, which Brook recorded with the use of a Tone Dial.[ch. 489]

Because Brook ate the Revive Revive Fruit, the spirit of his soul returned to the Grand Line. However, he got lost due to the intense fog in the Florian Triangle. After wandering for some time, he finally found his body, which had decayed to nothing but bleached bones leaving only his afro (which remained due to strong roots).[9] Brook was returned to life as a walking, talking skeleton. During the time he spent alone on his former crew's ship, he had almost no contact with other human beings, leading to eccentric behavior at odds with social norms and a constant urge to make bone jokes and puns.

Eight years before meeting the Straw Hat crew, he was captured by Gecko Moria, who stole his shadow and placed it in the body of the legendary samurai Ryuma.[8] Because he could no longer be exposed to sunlight, a side effect of having no shadow in One Piece, Brook remains in the Florian Triangle, under the protective cover of the thick fog, until he meets the Straw Hat Pirates.

Joining the Straw Hats

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Brook is first introduced as a skeleton inhabiting the region of the Grand Line known as the Florian Triangle. He is a former member of the Rumba Pirates, a crew of musicians who sailed the Grand Line from West Blue over fifty years prior to the current time frame of the story.[3] Fifty years later, Brook's goal is still to fulfill his late crew's promise, and to that end he joins the Straw Hat Pirates.[ch. 459][12] He carries a recording of the crew, whose last survivors played their cheery song "Bink's Sake" with their dying breaths. He fears Laboon will not recognize him (being all bones now) without his afro, so he does all he can to protect it. Roronoa Zoro and Brook share respect for one another, likely because they are both swordsman, and in the battle with the flying fish riders in chapter 494, they do a team attack showing their abilities as two skilled swordsmen.[13]

Soul King

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"Soul King" Brook in the anime.

While separated from the other Straw Hats, and incognito as "Soul King" Brook, he gains world fame, filling concert halls with fans.[ch. 600] Despite Franky speculating he might not ever return to the pirate life,[ch. 601] Brook rejoins the Straw Hats after it is revealed he is a pirate.[ch. 602]

On the elephant island of Zou, Brook and the Straw Hats learn from the elders of the talking animal Mink tribe that to find the One Piece located at Laugh Tale, one must find the Four Road Poneglyphs that together reveal the coordinates to Laugh Tale. Two of these Road Poneglyphs were being held by two of the four pirate Emperors of the Sea, Big Mom and Kaido.[ch. 818] Luffy and Brook later infiltrate Whole Cake Island, home to Big Mom, to recover their crewmate Sanji the cook. Brook attempts to steal Big Mom's road poneglyph.[ch. 831] In the process he fights Big Mom and realizes his Devil Fruit matches up well against her Soul Soul power. Brook notes that acquiring the Road Poneglyph is crucial because it allows the Straw Hats to win even if Sanji did not return to the crew.[ch. 851] Brook managed to steal a copy of the Road Poneglyph and hide it in his head.[ch. 855] Brook later smashes Big Mom's picture of Mother Caramel, one of her only weaknesses.[ch. 863] Big Mom and Kaido form an alliance to take down the Straw Hats, but are defeated by the Straw Hats' Ninja-Pirate-Mink-Samurai Alliance.[ch. 1051] Brook becomes recognized as one of Emperor of the Sea Monkey D. Luffy's Senior Officers.[ch. 1058]

Appearances in other media

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Brook is featured as a playable character in the video games such as Gear Spirit, Unlimited Cruise, and the One Piece: Pirate Warriors series.

Reception

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Brook ranked in the Top 30 of several Shōnen Jump character popularity polls, making it to the 26th position in the worldwide character popularity poll.[14]

Brook was called "a perfect illustration of One Piece‘s brilliance. So many characters initially seem silly and wacky, but turn out to have tragic backstories which give that wacky presentation a haunting gravity."[12]

References

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  1. ^ One Piece: 10thシーズン スリラーバーク篇: Piece.01 (DVD) (in Japanese). Avex Mode. 2009.>
  2. ^ Penber, Rei (2022-08-29). "One Piece 1058: Crocodile And Mihawk Return". Game Rant. Retrieved 2022-08-29.
  3. ^ a b c Oda, Eiichirō (2008). "487. That Song". Getting There Again. One Piece (in Japanese). Vol. 50. Shueisha. ISBN 978-4-08-874521-3.
  4. ^ Oda, Eiichirō (2008). Getting There Again. One Piece (in Japanese). Vol. 50. Shueisha. p. unknown page. ISBN 978-4-08-874521-3.
  5. ^ 『尾田栄一郎先生』 その2 ["Master Eiichiro Oda" Part 2]. Manganohi.jp (in Japanese). Kodansha, Shueisha, Shogakukan, Hakusensha. Archived from the original on February 4, 2008. Retrieved November 6, 2008.
  6. ^ "Interview with Eiichiro Oda" (in Japanese). manganohi.jp. Archived from the original on 2008-02-04. Retrieved 2008-11-06.
  7. ^ One Piece Magazine 10
  8. ^ a b Oda, Eiichirō (2007). "462. Oz's Adventure". Oz's Adventure. One Piece (in Japanese). Vol. 48. Shueisha. ISBN 978-4-08-874442-1.
  9. ^ a b c d Oda, Eiichirō (2007). "443. Thriller Bark (スリラーバーク, "Surirābāku")". Adventure on Ghost Island. One Piece (in Japanese). Vol. 46. Shueisha. ISBN 978-4-08-874382-0.
  10. ^ Oda, Eiichirō (2008). "494. Duval's Tragedy" (デュバルの悲劇, "Dyubaru no Higeki")". The Eleven Supernovas. One Piece (in Japanese). Vol. 51. Shueisha. ISBN 978-4-08-874563-3.
  11. ^ Oda, Eiichirō (2008). "486. Piano (ピアノ)". Adventure on Ghost Island. One Piece (in Japanese). Vol. 50. Shueisha. ISBN 978-4-08-874521-3.
  12. ^ a b c Carey, Kirsten (1 February 2024). "Brook Still Has One of the Saddest Backstories in All of 'One Piece'". The Mary Sue.
  13. ^ Oda, Eiichirō (2007). "459. Being Dead Isn't an Apology". Cloudy with Occasional Bones. One Piece (in Japanese). Vol. 47. Shueisha. ISBN 978-4-08-874411-7.
  14. ^ Valenzuela, Ernesto (May 17, 2024). "One Piece: All Straw Hats Ranked By Popularity". The Escapist. Retrieved August 21, 2024.