Learn the whole story of Naruto and his fellow ninja Sasuke and Sakura by reading the translated English versions of the original manga as they appear in your country.
Check your local public library or school library for the early volumes of Naruto manga, beginning with "Naruto, Volume 1: The Tests of the Ninja." If your librarian has not heard of the word manga you may want to refer to the title as a graphic novel.
Purchase volumes of Naruto as you are ready to read them or order the boxed set of the first 27 volumes on Amazon (see Resources below). The boxed set is printed in hardcover and is sold at a savings of nearly half what you might pay for all 27 paperbacks if you bought them one at a time.
Keep a checklist showing which Naruto manga you have read, which ones you have and which ones are available but not yet in your collection. This will keep you from duplicating purchases or reading the manga out of order, and may also help provide you with a ready answer if someone asks you what you'd like for a gift.
Find friends at school or in your neighborhood who are also Naruto enthusiasts. One of the pleasures of reading a manga series like Naruto is the opportunity to talk with friends and compare notes about past mysteries and future possibilities in the ongoing saga.
Begin reading Naruto or any true manga at the back cover. Even English translations follow the back-to-front and right-to-left flow of the Japanese originals. If you open the manga at the front as you would for most books in English, you'll probably find a headline on the inside page that says, "You're Reading in the Wrong Direction!"
Read the comic panels on each manga page from right to left, and top to bottom. Fortunately, within each panel you'll find the English letters and words arranged from left to right.