Quantcast
Channel: Okazu
Viewing all 2889 articles
Browse latest View live

Yuri Manga: Killing Me!, Volume 1 (English)

$
0
0

Volume 1 of Akiyama’s Killing Me!
was not exactly thrilling me
Carmilla’s invoked
As a kind of  joke
And that’s about as good as you can expect from this series.

Saki is a vampire who was apparently turned at about age 13 and she is love with fam-trad Vampire Hunter Miyoko who, frankly, sucks at her job. Saki’s in love with Miyoko, who is obviously in love back, but that is not the point of this manga. The point is that Miyoko sucks at killing Saki, who professes her love, which Miyoko passive-aggressively ignores. Haha!

This kind of story is not really violent, although guns appear, and not really a love story, although little hearts decorate Saki’s words.

Akiyama describes the story in the author’s note as “kind of like a Hamburg-steak rice-omellete covered in curry” with which I agree with 100%. It is a pile of glop that you may or may not find to be delicious.

 

Image from Sukaza City Pinterest

Ratings:

Art – moe
Story – One line
Characters – One joke per
Service  – Blood sucking children…so, yes
Yuri – That too

Overall – Go For It

Akiyama also describes this series as “kill-or-be-killed comedy.” We clearly have different ideas about the word “kill.”

And “comedy.”

Send to Kindle

Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – August 17, 2019

$
0
0

Yuri Events

You will find me this weekend in Montreal, talking about queer manga, and Yuri and traveling to Japan at Yurithon! Do join us for fun and laughs and candy and prizes!

The remainder of my schedule is:

 

Saturday: 15:00-16:30 in 513D: Must Read/Must Watch Yuri: 2019 Edition
Saturday: 18:00-19:30 in 513D: History of Queer Manga with James Welker
Sunday: 10:00-10:45 in 513B: A Yuri Otaku in Japan

Next month, I will be doing too much in a short time with the 100 Years of Yuri Tour!

 

Yuri Anime

Sentai Filmworks has released a trailer for the dub of Kase-san and Morning Glories dub.

 

 

 

Yuri Manga

We’ve added absolute piles of Yuri Manga to the Yuricon Store! In English:

Cocoon, Entwined, Volume 1 is already available.

tMnR’s If I Could Reach You, Volume 2, will be available in November.

Yuri is My Job, Volume 5 hits shelves in December 2019.

 

In Japanese:

Still Sick, Volume 2 continues the story of the otaku and the former mangaka.

Hayama-sensei to Terano-sensei ha Tsukiatteru, Volume 2 (羽山先生と寺野先生は付き合っている) is available now.

The adorably sweet, Sasayakuyouni Koi wo Utau, Volume 1 (ささやくように恋を唄う) is out now, as well.

Also quite sweet, Pixiv tale Jyoryusakka to Yuki (女流作家とユキ) continues in Volume 2!

In Strawberry Fields wo Mou Ichido, Volume 3 (ストロベリー・フィールズをもう一度) Akira finally comes to terms with her feelings about Pure.

 

 

Sailor Moon

 

Not really Yuri, the trailer for the first movie of the 4th Season of Sailor Moon Crystal, Sailor Moon Eternal  is up on Youtube.

The Sailor Moon show and cafe, Shining Moon Tokyo is on and it looks like I’ll be able to make a show! I’ll report back. ^_^

For 2020, Tokyo is creating a miniture cityscape called Small Worlds, which includes a teeny little Crown Fruit Parlor and Tuxedo Mask watching over Azabu-Juban. ^_^

 

Do you have questions about Yuri? Write in and ask and I’ll do my best to address them on the Okazu YNN Podcast, Become a YNN Correspondent by reporting any Yuri-related news with your name and an email I can reply to!

Thanks to all of you – you make this a great Yuri Network!

Send to Kindle

Yurithon at Otakuthon 2019 Event Report

$
0
0

Once again, I had the genuine pleasure to attend and panel at the Yurithon programming track of Otakuthon, in Montreal, Quebec.

Otakuthon is a large general anime convention, held in the Palais des Congrès in downtown Montreal. For people like myself, who enjoy touristing in a city as well as attending the event, Montreal is near-perfect. (With one exception – the construction is ridiculous. Whole streets in what is meant to be a walkable town are ripped up and blocked off. On Gay Pride weekend, while Otakuthon is on, in the middle of tourist season in August. Great idea, Montreal.)

My wife joined me on two panels, the amusing “Yuri Court” game, where we prosecute or defend Yuri series and the traveling to Japan as a Yuri Otaku panel. For the History of Queer Manga, we has Historian James Welker, who was absolutely brilliant and fascinating. And of course I ran my Must-Read/ Must-Watch panel, letting folks know about good stuff coming out right now that they should be reading. (I will try to get this up some day in the near future, but I make no promises.)

I tried to sit in on the Queer webcomics panel but no one arrived to run it. I briefly considered jumping in, but thought it wouldn’t be fair to the folks looking for gay content, as it’s not really in my wheelhouse.

4 Panels over 3 days is perfect. Enough to keep me busy, to provide a chunk of programming, but also give me time to shop! The real benefit of the Otakuthon Dealer’s Room, is that it is very large, with a big Artist’s Alley. I always meet new folks there. This year we spoke with Koyamori, Lollipop Sisters, both of whom had really unique art.

This year we bought one piece of original art by Kelli Kiakas, from her Giggly Game series in which she draws the childhood games we played in the style of 1930s comic/animation art. We bought “Marco Polo” because it made us both laugh.

"Marco Polo" Giggly Games Series, by Kelli Kiakas http://foolishcaptainkia.com/site/

We had multiple amazing meals, including a poutine at a fancy French restaurant. It was reallly gooood poutine. Best we’ve ever had. Yes, there can be a “best.” ^_^ Here’s a rundown of the weekend’s food:

Biiru
Japanese izakaya(ish) featuring what James named “wafusion”. Exceptional.

Bistro Boris
French, beautiful garden seating, amazing food. Very, ridiculously dark. We needed phone flashlights to read the menu. The poutine we had here was the best we’ve had. Pattie had foie gras, I had duck risotto.

The cafe at Le Westin Hotel (we can’t find the name. Not the Gazette, but the cafe by the Saint-Antoine Tower elevators) has good coffee and croissants and were super friendly. The vegetable tartin was spectacular.

Reuben’s
Montreal’s version of Junior’s. Smoked meats, yum.

Now the fun part, where I will assuredly skip someone and break their heart. Many sincere thanks to everyone who made this event an absolute blast: Meggie and Kim, once again gracious and cute conrunners. James for joining me on panels, for the first and, I hope, not the last time. Fujimoto Yukari-sensei for coming to the panels and to dinner and just being a delightful person to speak with. Mark for being a great laugher and long-time Okazu friend. We look forward to more French-language manga reviews from you! Nick T for being someone I was delighted to meet in person. I had been on his Nickcast some months ago and we had so much fun. It was a genuine pleasure to put a face to the name.  Special thanks to Severine, for conveniently being in Montreal while I was there; dragging you into the colorful world of anime fandom and shiny cosplay was a delight (and smoked meats are always a good thing.) I want to shout-out to Sam Pinansky of the J-Novel club, who are putting out a bunch of Yuri novels! And of course, my wife who is brilliant and funny on panels and all the time.

If you attended any of my panels, thank you! The audiences were great. I forgot to remind people to not ask my opinion of series in the Must-Read/ Must-Watch panel and, since it was my fault, I gave my opinions. I expect some of those people will be recovering for a while and I’m sorry, but not really. If you will insist on asking me what I think, I’m going to tell you. ^_^

I basically come to Yurithon to give away candy and books, and eat smoked meats (Montreal’s version of pastrami, essentially) and at Biiru, so all objectives were achieved.

During the very same weekend, New York City hosted Flamecon and I hope we’ll be getting a report on that later this week, too. I can think of worse ways to spend my Augusts, alternating between Flamecon and Yurithon. ^_^ I hope to see more of you in both places~!

Send to Kindle

Yuri Manga: Risou to Koi (理想と恋)

$
0
0

We are interrupting today’s planned programming to review a manga volume that has hit two benchmarks in Okazu’s history. Both good. ^_^

Risou to Koi (理想と恋) by Hino Youhe is a collection of several stories of adult life manga – of which I liked every single story. I do not believe this has ever happened before.

The entire concept of the volume is lovely, in fact. “My Ideal, My Love” is the English subtitle and that is pretty much what it’s about. A woman falls for someone who is her perfect ideal, and find herself learning about the person behind that ideal…and then falling in love with the person. In every case, the journey is mutual.

In one story, a woman who works for a delivery company realizes that’s she’s delivering packages to her favorite pop idol. The idol realizes that’s she fallen for the delivery person when an injury forces the company to send someone else. They bridge the distance when they recognize their feelings are mutual.

And every story is pretty much like that. A baker is attracted to a clothing designer, who is forced to admit that she’s a starving artist and cannot go clothes shopping. The two start going out, but stick to things that one can do for free, like picnics.

The final story is multi-chapter, taking up the second half of the book. A woman attends a local theater production and become smitten with the lead actress.  She joins the theater group, where she has to really think about her life and what she wants out of it. This story has the second benchmark moment – an actual coming out scene. The troupe leader mentions that he’s gay, to which Mayuko grudgingly admits that she is not interested in men. But later as she speaks with the lead, Ruri, who is pressing her on what her ideal is, Mayuko says that she is gay…and that she wants to be ordinary. Immediately after which, Ruri continues to encourage Mayuko to see her own talent and the walls she’s built around herself. Ultimately, Mayuko confesses her feelings and is feeling all lost in self-loathing, but Ruri is there to catch her and support her and we suspect that Ruri is a very good thing for Mayuko and vice versa.

This was a really nice book to read. Every story left me feeling hopeful. The obi reads “Rave review from Morishima Akiko-shi!” and to that, they could, if they want, add “rave review from Erica Friedman!” because there was nothing about this volume I didn’t like. Art was adult and cute and clean, the stories were solid, all the characters were likable and the conflicts were real-world issues, that were handled with kindness.

Ratings:

Art – 9
Story – 9
Characters – 9
Yuri – 9
LGBTQ – 8
Service – 1 on principal only

Overall – 9

A very strong volume by an author from whom I hope to see more.

 

Send to Kindle

Yuri Manga: Glass no Kutsu wo Nugisutete (ガラスの靴を脱ぎ捨てて)

$
0
0

The name Kiriyama Haruka should be familiar to us by now. We’ve seen work from this author in multiple “Shakijin” working-life Yuri anthologies.

And today we are looking at a collection of stories by this creator that center working women’s lives. Or, more properly, some of the more typical tropes of working women’s lives.

It’s a pretty specific distinction, because by now we have, actually, seen all the basic plotlines of romance between women working in offices. Cool together character and disaster employee, two women get drunk, wake up in bed. Women hiding they are together in the office, women coming home from work to their partners. A year into this new subgenre of Shakaijin Yuri and I’m already looking for artists looking past the “get drunk, wake up in bed” storyline.

And most of these stories fit the bill. The collection begins with three work friends getting together for an after-hours drink and it turns out two of them are a couple.

An artist and her assistant are extremely cute together.

A woman who works for an insurance company ends up meeting the online video idol she admires. (Yes, shades of Risou to Koi.)

The best story in my opinion was a story of a couple, struggling with their idea of what they want from their relationship right before they get married. I liked the recognition that commitment can cause friction in even a strong relationship. This one also felt very realistic.

And in a lovely final story, a woman whisks her lover away on a much-needed overnight vacation to restore balance to her beloved and to them as a couple.

Ratings:

Art – 7 sometimes a little sloppy
Story – variable 8
Characters – 8
Service – 2 Very mild partial nudity
Yuri – 10

Overall – 8

It was all very pleasant, easy to look at and no one I wanted to strangle. ^_^ More importantly, there were a couple of stories with some good real-world touches.

Send to Kindle

Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – August 24, 2019

$
0
0

Yuri Manga

Yuri Life by Kurkuruhime has hit shelves in English. Read this cute slice-of-life story about adult women who share their lives. (You can read my review of the JP volume from last summer.)

If there is a single question I’m getting most frequently now, it’s people asking for Yuri manga with transgender characters. In English, we have a relatively limited selection for this: Wandering Son which is incomplete; Riyoko Ikeda’s classic Claudine, The Bride was a Boy comic essay. Well, Tokyopop has picked up Caly’s French-language Yuri romance about a transgender girl and put it out in English as Breath of Flowers. Volume 1 is on the Yuricon Store!

Tokyopop also has released Yuri Bear Storm, Volume 3. Now we have all of Kureha and Ginko’s story. The manga is less visually striking than the anime, but the story holds together better. (You can read all previous reviews here.)

Ah toka Uh shika Ienai Manga, Volume 2 (あーとかうーしか言えない ) just hit shelves in Japan. Volume 1 got high marks in my review.

If teacher x student is your particular fantasy, you might be interested in Ichijinsha’s Kyoushi to Seito no Yuri Anthology  (教師×生徒の百合アンソロジーコミック).

Akili, creator of popular webcomic Stretch has a new webcomic, Vampeerz, (ヴァンピアーズ) about…as you might guess…school girl vampires. The link will take you to Chapter 1 online (in Japanese) for free.

Via ANN’s Rafael Antonia Pineda, we have the news that the first volume of saburouta’s CITRUS+ will get simultaneous online release in Japan, North America, South Korea, Germany, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Spain, and Argentina in November. Seven Seas page for the series has further info. Now, if only we can get them thinking globally by language instead.

 

Yuri Anime

Yuruyuri 10th Anniversary anime will be shipping in November, according to Alex Mateo at ANN.

This is old-school and only ever Yuri-ish, but Steel Angel Kurumi, by the team known as Kaishaku (the same folks who created Kannazuki no Miko,)  is getting new merchandise for the first time in…probably forever. This series came out in the days before merchandise was a thing. ^_^

 

Yuri Events

From Twitter, there will be a Bloom Into You pop-up shop at the Shibuya Marui until October 31. There will be official original goods.

Also from Twitter, Serena says that the Yuri/GL Philippines group will once again have a booth at Cosplay Mania 2019 in Manila.

I missed this because I was away, but Ehime prefecture ran a pilgrimage based on the A Tropical Fish Yearns for Snow series – the manga will be released in English in November from Viz.

 

Yuri Visual Novel

Via YuriNavi, Innocent Grey’s FLOWERS Shiki (FLOWERS 四季) will be available on Nintendo Switch.

 

Sailor Moon News

ANN’s Alex Mateo reports on the new Sailor Moon Musical, starring members of idol group Nogizaka46, which will be traveling to Shanghai in November.

Sailor Moon – Shining Moon Tokyo – restaurant is open in Azabu-Juban (the section of town where Usagi lives) in Tokyo until October 31!

 

Other News

In case you missed this – Archive of Our Own (AO3), one of the Internet’s largest fanfiction sites, run by women, won a Hugo Award last week. If you have a story on A03, you are now a Hugo Award winner. ^_^ (I do, in fact, have one story there. I recently wrote a Swan Lake fanfic because no one else has ever done the pas de deux between Odile and Odette that we deserve. ^_^) Anyway, Casy Fiesler takes a look on Slate as to Why Archive of Our Own’s Surprise Hugo Nomination Is Such a Big Deal.

Kim Morrisy on ANN has a report that Boruto’s creator Kodachi Ukyo supported LGBTQ representation in media on Twitter this month.

 

Do you have questions about Yuri? Write in and ask and I’ll do my best to address them on the Okazu YNN Podcast, Become a YNN Correspondent by reporting any Yuri-related news with your name and an email I can reply to!

Thanks to all of you – you make this a great Yuri Network!

Send to Kindle

It’s Lucky Box Time!

$
0
0

Today we are getting rid of some Yuri Stuffs, so it’s time for some Okazu Lucky Boxes!  And you know that you totally want utter crap that I’m cleaning out of my house! ^_^

This time we have 5 Lucky Boxes:

Yuri Boxes: 3 Medium size boxes and 1 Large Premium box. All the boxes contain a random assortment of manga, books, candy, toys, random pieces of paper things I put in there. The Premium box has two rare-ish Yuri artbooks, one is hardcover, as well as the usually assortment of nonsense. This box is perfect for long-time, hard-core, you’ve seen-it-all Yuri fans!

We have an additional NOT-SPECIFICALLY-YURI box, filled will Replicant and Figure magazine issues, garage kit catalogs and the like. Some random artbooks and generally “other.” This is a box for folk who like figurines. This is not pictured, but it looks just like the large box pictured here. (‘Cause it is.)

When you email me, please refer to the box you want by the title and #. First come, first served and these always go fast! These are listed out so I can cross them off as they go.

Premium Box #1 – $60 – Claimed
Medium Box #1 – $30
Medium Box #2 – $30 – Claimed
Medium Box #3 – $30 – Claimed
Not-Specifically-Yuri Large Box o’ Magazines #1 – $40

I can 100% guarantee these boxes are filled with absolute pure stuff, with no guarantees of any other kind. No returns, because, let’s face it – either you like the fact that you’re spending money on someone else’s stuff, or you don’t. If getting a box of you have no idea what is not your thing, skip this! ^_^

***

How to be eligible to buy a Lucky Box: Follow these instructions carefully. Please. Thank you. Failure to follow all of these instructions will disqualify you. It’s not personal, they go fast and I don’t have time to track you down for a piece of information.

1- You must live in the Continental USA (contiguous 48) only, no APO/FPOs – sorry about that, really. It’s vexing, I know.

2 – You must be over 18, I am not policing which books you get and since these boxes have doujinshi and other items, I really don’t know what you’re getting.

3 -Email me at anilesbocon01 at hotmail dot com with the subject “Lucky Box”. Use an email you check regularly.

4. *****Please include your name, age, mailing address. ***** Tell me which box you want by name a #. Even if you’ve given me your address previously, please include it, I am very lazy.

5- I will contact you at that point and give you details about payment by Paypal. Please be prepared to check your email and get payment out so this post doesn’t linger. Thanks in advance.

This whole process will be handled with utmost capriciousness, as usual. ^_^ 

Ready? Get your Lucky Boxes!

Send to Kindle

J-Novel Club Lines Up Yuri Light Novels

$
0
0

This summer J-Novel club announced a number of Yuri light novels for English-language distribution.

This is the beginning of a really ambitious program, about which I spoke briefly at Otakuthon with founder Sam Pinansky (the same Sam Pinansky who started Anime Sols kickstarters for classic anime series.)

Here is a rundown of the first set of licenses, with a reminder that these are Light Novels, which generally are written to an 8th grade reading level and sensibility. While there are a few LNs that really reach above this, like the Maria-sama ga Miteru series, most are dead set in the written, reading and thinking style of 12 year-old boys. ^_^;

Here’s the full line up of this first batch, with synopses and a little light editorializing:

Sexiled: My Sexist Party Leader Kicked Me Out, So I Teamed Up With a Mythical Sorceress!

Tanya Artemiciov is a talented Mage-class adventurer who just got kicked out of her party by a sexist scumbag. So what’s a girl to do? Go to the wasteland and blow stuff up of course! One small problem though: she inadvertently frees a mythical Sorceress named Laplace who was sealed away for the past 300 years… Surprise! Turns out this so-called “wicked” Sorceress is actually pretty cool. Laplace wants to start a party of her own, Tanya wants revenge, and the solution is obvious: team up. It’s time to kick ass, kiss girls, and dismantle the patriarchy!

E: I’m mostly looking forward to this, despite having maxed out on isekai/D&D adventures in my teens, and expecting the word “boobalicious” to appear. More than once. ^_^

You know, I’m not looking for high art here, but this had better be fun! Lady, you have a sword and an evil sorceress – there had better be vengeful violence.

 

Otherside Picnic

Her first encounter with Toriko Nishina was on the Otherside after seeing “that thing” and nearly dying. Ever since that day, exhausted university student Sorawo Kamikoshi’s life changed. In this Otherworld, full of mystery, which exists alongside our own, dangerous beings like the Kunekune and Hasshaku-sama that are spoken of in real ghost stories appear. For research, for profit, and to find an important person, Toriko and Sorawo set foot into the abnormal. A tale of two girls’ bizarre exploration and survival, brought to you by an up-and-coming Sci-fi author!

E: I’m looking forward to reading this one a lot, having read the first volume of the manga. It seems to be a little more imaginative and science fiction than the others. I might save this one for last, just because I expect it to be good.

Miyazawa is not a bad writer, from the stuff I’ve already read, so consider me on board for this.

 

Side-by-Side Dreamers

Saya Hokage, a high school girl who is unable to sleep due to insomnia, encounters Hitsuji Konparu, a girl who can put anyone to sleep as a “lover” in a dream. When Hitsuji’s senpai – Ran Aizome – sees potential in Saya, she ends up joining them and their group of Sleepwalkers. As it turns out, unbeknownst to the common citizens in their town, a battle has been unfolding between the Suiju – beings that possess people’s spirits in the land of sleep – and the Sleepwalkers, who have the power to move about freely in their dreams. Sleeping together as a team, Saya and her newfound group are doing a good job hunting Suiju. That is, until an unexpected darkness comes along… Will the girls be able defend humanity’s sleep?

E: Another Miyazawa story and an interesting premise. Could be anything from okay to fantastic. I’m betting on at least “good.” ^_^

And you know what I always say about entertainment – all it has to do is be entertaining.

 

Last and First Idol

“Bye-bye, Earth! My idol activities here were so much fun!” 4th Hayakawa SF Contest Special Prize 48th Seiun Award (Japanese Short Story Division) 27th Dark Seiun Award (Guest Division) 16th Sense of Gender Award (Future Idol Award) Last and First Idol earned the first ever special prize in the Hayakawa SF Contest, and the first debut work to win the Seiun Award in 42 years! This existential widescreen yuri baroque proletariat hard sci-fi idol story has carved out a new legend in science fiction history! Also includes Evolution Girls, in which some gacha-expert friends race to find the truth of the universe, and Dark Seiyuu, a brand-new space opera about voice actors! Gengen Kusano’s astounding debut collection!

E: OMG, “yuri baroque proletariat hard sci-fi idol story”. Who wouldn’t want to read that?! I mean…and all those awards.

I guess this is going to be my first review of the bunch, just for that synopsis. Holy crap that sounds awesome.

 

Seriously Seeking Sister! Ultimate Vampire Princess Just Wants Little Sister; Plenty of Service Will Be Provided!

Long ago, on the continent of Ephenia, there existed the feared tribe of vampires called “True Bloods,” whose great strength allowed them to reign supreme over all other tribes. However, a millennium has passed, and any trace of them has vanished off the face of the planet. That is, until the youngest and most talented royal daughter of the True Bloods awakens in the modern day. Vampire Princess Ristia has only one wish—a cute little sister! Monstrously strong, skilled in magic, and incredibly beautiful, people regard her as an “angel,” but she assures everyone she’s just a normal girl. Can this “normal girl” be the elder sister she so desires? Follow this (unusual) vampire through a fanservice-filled sibling-searching fantasy adventure.

E: I tried to read this, despite the fact that every single thing about it is lined up against me liking it. ^_^;

As I read it, I had a lot of feelings. I’m currently re-reading Count of Monte Cristo in which Dumas’ grasp of and love of human nature and his humor and delight in life is so clear and wonderful. As I read Seriously Seeking Sister, a part of me wept for the me that read Madelyn Arnold’s Year of Full Moons, or Jane Rule’s Desert Hearts, back when I was young and foolish and would never had read a vampire isekai imouto-fetish story written for an audience who need to be assured that, despite her chronological age of a millennium, the main character is not-yet 18 and be told her matching bra and panty set are blue.  The translation is not adapted, it’s pretty much a literal translation and I have no doubt David Evelyn did a fine job of communicating just how not-all-that-well-written this book is.  That said, if you think a vampire isekai imouto-fetish story is up your alley, here is Yurimother’s review of it! Enjoy both review and book. I will never think less of you for enjoying something I don’t. That’s why it’s good that there is variety in the world. ^_^

 

J-Novel Club is looking to expand their Yuri offerings and, as I said, is planning an ambitious rollout, so if any of these sound good to you, give them a try! I think there’s a lot to look forward to!

Send to Kindle

Yuri Manga: Comic Yuri Hime September 2019 ( コミック百合姫2019年9月号)

$
0
0

After a lovely cover image by Shiromisakana to give this issue flavor, Takashima Eku’s “Sasayakuyouni Koi wo Uta,” an over-flowing with emotion first love story starts off Comic Yuri Hime September 2019 (コミック百合姫2019年9月号) with a good feel. It’s not ground breaking, but I really like it.

One slice-of-life high school story is followed by another, as “Tsurezure Biyori” continues. Koharu and Mafuyu share a watermelon-flavored kiss, as one does in summer.

“Hayama-sensei to Terano-sensei ha Tsukiatteiru” remains painfully adorable as date night ends up being interrupted by Hayama-sensei being a kind soul and helping a lost child.

“Kaketa Tsuki to Donuts” finally hits a jump-off point, as Uno-san starts to push back at the limitations of her “perfect” life and finds herself getting to know Satou-san better. Satou is a very honest and grounded person; she’s the kind of character we need to see more of, to teach other characters (and readers!)  to live your life, not what’s expected of you.

I skipped the next third of the magazine, straight to Ohsawa Yayoi’s “Hello, Melancholic,” which is hitting a number of buttons I had no idea I still had. I remember what it felt like to play music with others, when it all just worked. I have a particularly fond memory of a post-performance marching band jam, when were all locked out of the bad room and just played an arrangement of “My Favorite Things”…and it was just perfect. Hibiki obviously wants that for Minato and for her emotional wounds to heal… I do, too.

Oh thank the gods “Luminous Blue” did what I wanted it to do! ^_^ I was getting a little worried, but I can see that Iwami Kyouko-sensei has her characters well in hand.

“Watashi no Yuri ha Oshigoto desu!” by Miman-sensei has also finally taken the turn into the story it’s been running parallel along and fully committed and I am here for it. I am so looking forward to seeing where this goes. – and how it gets there.

This issue includes a short prose story called “Love Song wo Sakebu wake” by Suo, which is also available on Pixiv. We are definitely witnessing a shift in Yuri…

Ratings:

Overall – 9

…next issue of the magazine will include a bouldering comic; we’re seeing a foray into prose from Hayakawa publishing putting out more science fiction Yuri and LN’s from J-Novel club. Yuri is changing and that’s always a good sign of a healthy genre. ^_^

The October 2019 issue is out and we’re gonna pick it up today! I am slightly caught up for a day. ^_^

 

Send to Kindle

Yuri Manga: Yuritora Jump ~ Ultra Jump Yuri Digital Anthology~, Volume 2 (ユリトラジャンプ~ウルトラジャンプ百合アンソロジー~ Vol.2)

$
0
0

Last year Ultra Jump (Shonen Jump‘s older brother magazine) did an awkwardly titled Yuri anthology called Yuritora Jump.The title’s awkwardness comes from it being an “Ultra Jump” off-shoot, so  Ultora Jump ウルトラジャンプ becomes Yuritora Jump ユリトラジャンプ…yeah…, no, it doesn’t work in Japanese either and people keep making fun of it. ^_^;

I could have sworn I did a review of the volume, but don’t see it anywhere. ^_^; There wasn’t much in it I liked, except the excellent story by Hayate x Blade creator Hayashiya Shizuru-sensei. (Quick synopsis of Tanerabo manga do it! (『たねラボ manga do it』) : A manga editor asks an author for any kind of a Yuri story except isekai and the author keep proposing nothing but isekai. The proposal I liked the most was a girl asking to fight her onee-sama at a school for warriors in a series titled “Shiritsu Amazoness.” It was a fantastic mashup idea…I would love to see it for real. ^_^ This year, the Yuri Anthology by Ultra Jump magazine artists got a second volume. Generally speaking I enjoyed this much more than the first volume.

Yuritora Jump ~ Ultra Jump Yuri Digital Anthology~, Volume 2 (ユリトラジャンプ~ウルトラジャンプ百合アンソロジー~ Vol.2) is a digital comic and is available globally on Bookwalker Global for a mere 500 yen. The cover is a bit less infantile than Volume 1 and this time there are two stories which I really liked.

The first story that I want to tell you about is, again, by Hayashiya-sensei. Called “FRIDAY IS THE DAY” in English, this may well be the story I have waited all my life to read. In a gym, two women compete in a no-holds barred, brutal, Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) competition, after hours. The two of them seem to be working through some kind of grudge, but as the other folks in the gym watch this increasingly violent fight, it becomes apparent that this fight is a confession of love. As the fight ends with the two women confessing their feelings, the spectators break out into applause.

This is what I mean when I say I want to read a sports manga.  Funny, as all of Hayashiya-sensei’s work is, ridiculous, violent as fuck. It was beautiful. Can I have a 8 volume series of this? Please~~~? I would be so happy.

Aoki Juntaro and Shina Yoshinao paired up to create “Italian Beef” (イタリアンビーフ) a Yakuza daughter vs Yakuza assassin story that was also a happy romance wrapped in death and destruction.

Hrm. I see to have a type.

Despite my fixation with fighting manga, there were a number of rather pleasant school girl stories. Fewer really annoyingly infantile entries. If you have $5 and can only get one of these volumes…go for this one!

Ratings:

Overall – 8

Everything is so variable, but overall, I read and enjoyed way more of this volume than the first.

Frankly, the whole thing was worth it for FRIDAY IS THE DAY.

 

Send to Kindle

Yuri Manga: Vanilla Nonhuman x Nonhuman Yuri Anthology ( バニラ人外×人外百合アンソロジー)

$
0
0

In the middle of a number of very excellent working life Yuri, I found myself facing down a manga anthology that was vastly out of my wheelhouse. Vanilla Nonhuman x Nonhuman Yuri Anthology ( バニラ人外×人外百合アンソロジー) was…not bad. It had a niceish mix of non-human as in animal girls and non-human as in supernatural.

The stories about supernatural non-humans appealed to me far more than the animal-eared girl stories, but even so, Mintarou (whose bouldering Yuri manga began in the recent issue of Comic Yuri Hime,) has a cute little story about the animals at a zoo who take on human form at night and the romance between a wombat and a Tasmanian Devil.

Likewise the love story by Nanamiya Tsugumi between a raven and a goose, I think, was kind of bittersweet.

My favorite story by Takeshima Shin (creator of Mansoufutou no Gikami Meikyuu), was also kind of creepy. A shinagami helps heal the emotional wounds of a girl who has lost her lover.

Unsurprisingly a number of the stories had very infantile art and, like the cover, paired characters I couldn’t get behind as a couple, but overall, I was able to read and enjoyed a number of the stories in this collection. So if nonhumans are your thing, this seems like a decent enough attempt at a Yuri collection of same!

Ratings:

Overall – 7

Lots of moe, a little creepy sometimes at the same time.

 

Send to Kindle

Yuri Manga: Cocoon, Entwined, Volume 1 (English)

$
0
0

This past winter, I took a look at Mayu, Matou, Volume 1 in Japanese which I had wanted to read before the English-language volume hit shelves. Today, I’m taking a look at the much-anticipated English-language release from Yen Press, Yuriko Hara’s Cocoon, Entwined. Volume 1.

My initial review covered the most visible of the symbols in this volume – namely, hair. More specifically, that hair chews up the scenery in nearly every panel. In my original review I said, “their hair is the main character and the people attached to that hair are merely abstractions.” which is still partly true.  The characterizations of both people and place are overtly inspired by Maria-sama ga Miteru’s Ibara no Mori, with Saeki very clearly a Sei-stand-in. Whether either Hoshimiya or Yokozawa is ultimately her Shiori or Youko, we’ll have to  stick around to learn to find out.

What I was able to enjoy this time around, is the building of a love triangle in which only one participant has any idea that they are participating. This story builds up in non-linear, almost episodic fashion and it’s easy enough to take each chapter on its own without applying it to a macro narrative, but by the final chapter, a very solid whole has been constructed. One finds that there is a backstory; histories, both institutional and personal, and a clear dynamic between the characters and the situations.

I still would caution anyone skeeved by hair as a fetish/major imagery/plot point/conflict that hair takes up a lot of space in both the narrative and on the page. But aside from that, it’s a pretty intriguing story, with solid art. I look forward to the next volume. The translation has been handled smoothly although any added Keigo formality has been stripped from the dialogue by translator Amanda Haley. It makes for a slightly more casual read in English. I feel as if I am reading by looking through a curtain of hair, but the story, I hope, will be worth it.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 8
Characters – 8
Service – Hair
Yuri – 3

Overall – 8

High marks for this unique look at love and obsession at an elite girls school, the classic Yuri manga trope.

Thanks very much to Yen Press for the review copy for today’s review.

The story has grown on me, and no I will not make a stupid hair joke here. Fill one in on your own time.

Send to Kindle

Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – August 31, 2019

$
0
0

Animation News

Steven Universe the Movie premieres commercial free on Cartoon Network 6PM Eastern US time on Monday, September 2. If you’re not already a fan, Cartoon Network is leading up to it with all the Steven Universe episodes this weekend (ask me what my plans are!) My wife and I have had this series on on a loop for the last several years. We watch a few episodes every night and when we get to the end, we start over again. It’s basically the thing that’s keeping us grounded these days. Check out the movie trailer on Youtube.

In case you missed it, Carole and Tuesday, has hit Netflix this week. This is not a Yuri story, but it is a beautiful story of a friendship between two women, built upon music – and the music is good. There is a lesbian character early on, but she is a throwaway. Nonetheless, she’s great for the moment she’s in the story. ^_^

Yuru Yuri‘s 10th anniversary opening theme has a PV anime. Check it out on Youtube.

 

Okazu News

Be -or become!-  an active Okazu patron paid through September 5th and you will gain access to a sneak peek from the Big Book o’Yuri! This time, we’re giving you a look at our comprehensive Yuri Events history chapter, which covers from the earliest known Yuri events into the near future, before all this information disappears into the oubliette of SNS obscurity. Subscribe to Okazu on Patreon! Support Yuri interviews, and news, and help pay Guest Reviewers. $5/month makes a huge difference to us!

 

Yuri Events

The participating circles list is available for Girls Love Fest on September 16 in Tokyo. If you’re going to be there, give me a shout!

Celebrate  “100 Years of Yuri” with $10 off every shirt with this coupon. If you get the classic t-shirt, that’s more than half off!

 

Live-Action News

File this under amazing news about good friends: Lesbian novel Punk Like Me, by author JD Glass, a long-time Yuricon supporter and personal friend, is getting a live-action television adaptation on OUTtv, a Canadian LGBTQ programming channel. You can subscribe to it monthly and it’s available as part of Amazon Prime, so keep your eyes peeled for this exciting series!

Every Xena: Warrior Princess episode is streaming online for free (probably region locked to North America). I rewatched the first episode and was charmed all over again by how goofy and ridiculous it is. Thanks Syfy!

Bonus Xena news, Vita Ayala promises that their Dynamite Entertainment’s new Xena comic series is “even gayer”. ^_^

 

Yuri  Manga

Via Comic Natalie we have a couple of “Yuri Comedy” series to be on the look out for:

Bakeneko Satsuki no Shimai Jiken (化けネコ葉月の姉妹事情) about two girls and a ghost cat.

From Champion Red, (so we know it’s not going to be respectful of women’s bodies or dignity,) comes Ateuma Kanojo (当て馬カノジョ), a story that Comic Natalie paints as a good title if you enjoyed the cuckolding of NTR.

 

Other News

Via Comic Natalie,  Japanese magazine Weekly Bunshun WOMAN is featuring Yuri titles in a special issue “Yuri Manga now is amazing!” The issue includes an interview with Shimura Takako.

To wrap up this week, I want to tell you about a personal project I am very proud of! I was invited to contribute to an exciting publication of mid-20th century science fiction. If you love science fiction amnd/or are looking for great writing by women, this is the book for you! Rediscovery: Science Fiction by Women (1958-1963). This collection is available as a paperback on Amazon or as an e-pub directly from the publisher. I hope you’ll read and review this, because this is an important piece of women’s literary history and we want people to know about it!

 

Do you have questions about Yuri? Write in and ask and I’ll do my best to address them on the Okazu YNN Podcast, Become a YNN Correspondent by reporting any Yuri-related news with your name and an email I can reply to!

Thanks to all of you – you make this a great Yuri Network!

Send to Kindle

LGBTQ Live Action: Signature Move

$
0
0

I have been waiting for this movie since 2017, when it was making rounds of the film festivals to great acclaim. Amazon picked it up and I finally had a chance to watch it.

Signature Move, directed by Jennifer Reeder and co-written by Fawzia Mirza and Lisa Donato, follows Zaynab, an immigration laywer, who is feeling stifled living with her widowed mother…a mother who, predictably, wants her to be married.  Zaynab copes by taking up Lucha-style wrestling, which she is learning from a client. She meets Alma, and their romance throws her life into disarray.

The acting is superb. Alma and Zaynab have instant chemistry. Alma’s personality is easygoing and garrulous, while Zayna’s pent up emotions make her instantly sympathetic. The scenes with Alma and her Mexican family are full of color and smells and sounds – the life of a happy household, while Zaynab’s Pakistani mother loses herself in Pakistani television dramas and searches for a husband for her obvious-to-us very gay daughter. I very much enjoyed Mirza’s portrayal of Zaynab – cool, but horribly awkward and ultimate goofy, against Sari Sanchez’ gregarious and straightforward Alma.

The dialogue moves fluidly between Mexican Spanish, Pakistani Urdu and English with accompanying background music, which made for a fluid spoken and musical soundtrack. The cinematography never gets in the way of the story, which is set in Chicago, but could be any city in America.

Wrestling here stands as loud, colorful metaphor for Zaynab’s journey of self-acceptance. Zaynab’s mostly closeted, unwilling to be seen as being gay in public. The masks that covers her face in the scene above is a not-very subtle image of the way she hides from life. “I feel like you’re keeping me secret, “Alma says, but Zaynab is keeping herself secret, as well.

I particularly liked that the sex wasn’t more important than the relationship, or the inner lives of the characters. And I loved every single one of the supporting characters. They made the movie charming and wholly enjoyable. A perfect Sunday afternoon watch that left me with a smile on my face.

Ratings:

Cinematography – 8
Characters – 9
Story – 8
Service -1
LGBTQ – 8

Overall – 8

I would totally watch a television series with this cast.

Send to Kindle

Queerness in Sailor Moon: Is It Progressive or is it Just Progress?

$
0
0

Inspired by my current reading material, Volume 5 of Sailor Moon, Eternal Edition,  I have been thinking about the concept of “queerness” in Sailor Moon. This essay has no thesis – that is to say, I am not trying to prove a point, or make any conclusions, I’m simply musing on a topic that has fascinated me for many years. Our ideas of, ideals of and language about gender and sexuality have altered tremendously in the last 25 years. I’m not the first, nor will I be the last to discuss Sailor Moon as an iconic series for queer fans. I encourage you all to share your thoughts and experiences in the comments. All respectful comments will be welcome – even and especially, those that disagree with any of my thoughts. As I say, I’m not making a point here, I’m merely thinking out loud in text. ^_^

To begin with, I’m going to write up the list of characters in the original anime or manga (and, thus Crystal) that I consider overtly queer. You may not agree, and you may also not consider this list comprehensive. This is what I consider to be a survey of the as-explicitly-as-we got queer characters. I’m leaving out common fan pairings, like Rei’s obvious feelings for Usagi (which was surfaced in her song during Sailor Moon Super Live,) Hotaru and Chibi-Usa, Ami and Makoto, because while they are all a totally valid way to interpret the characters and their dynamics, they were not created with explicit intent to be seen as what we now think of as “queer.”

Part 1: Queer Characters in Sailor Moon

Season 1: Sailor Moon / Dark Kingdom

Zoisite and Kunzite – Two of the four generals of the Dark Kingdom, serving under Queen Beryl, Zoisite and Kunzite are explicitly written as lovers in the first season of the original anime. Zoisite’s death in Kunzite’s arms is the motivation for a desperate attempt to defeat Sailor Moon which amounts to a suicide by the final general. They are portrayed very much as a Kabuki pair, with Zoisite playing the part of the onnagata, the actor who plays women’s roles.

 

Season 2: Sailor Moon R / Black Moon

Fiore – In the Sailor Moon R movie, Fiore’s story reads as a love story gone bitter, a kind of gender switch Kijo (which matches with Mamoru’s gender switched role as “damsel” in the series.) Fiore’s resentment of not being Mamoru’s beloved turns him into an avenging alien/demon set on the destruction of Earth and Sailor Moon.

 

Season 3: Sailor Moon Super / Death Busters

Haruka and Michiru – This perfect couple can be seen in multiple ways. Takeuchi famously declared them lesbian lovers in several interviews, and she also mentioned that Haruka was originally meant to be a Takarazuka performer. In the text of the manga, Michiru declares Haruka to be a man and a woman, which was understood by Japanese fans to refer to Ribon no Kishis double-hearted lead, Safir. In 21st century terms, Haruka is genderfluid and can be seen wearing both women’s and mens’ clothes in artbooks.

Haruka and Michiru are consistently portrayed as a couple, in all versions of the series. Never as openly as  we might hope, perhaps, but the Sailor Moon musicals now have a long tradition of playing up their flirtation, their bickering and their innuendo, as well as having them launch across the stage to die in each other’s arms in seasons where that is relevant. ^_^

In Sailor Moon Super S Special and Sailor Moon Stars, their relationship is surfaced in scenes where Michiru proclaims that she has no interest in saving a world without Haruka, and the two tease each other in intimate terms. A quarter of a century after they first appeared, there’s still a lot to say about them.

 

Season 4: Sailor Moon SuperS / Dead Moon Circus

Fisheye – One of the Dead Moon Circus’s Amazon Trio, Fisheye is not human, but in human form, is assigned male at creation. The entirety of Fisheye’s arc is, however, testament that this is incorrect. Fisheye primarily presents as female in human guise and has a clear preference for men, making her a fairly strong transgender character. (Stronger, I would argue, than the Starlights, who were not originally intended to be men. )

 

Season 5: Sailor Moon Stars / Galaxia

Sailor Lead Crow and Sailor Aluminum Seiren – As Animamates, Crow and Seiren do not get a lot of screen time in the original anime, but the time they do get is memorable. When they encounter Haruka and Michiru, they are the only ones in the entire series to comment on the rose petals which accompany them. (In my head canon this is their gaydar.) They bicker often and Crow appears to have little respect for Seiren, but as their arc goes on, it becomes clear that they can be seen as a romantic couple.

Sailor Stars – In the Bishoujo Senshi Sailormoon Volume V Original Picture Collection, Takeuchi says that she was “shocked” to learn they’d be men before transformation, which indicates that the manga Starlights are all women passing as men, much as Haruka does originally. Nonetheless, in the original anime, the Sailor Starlights are gender variant, which opened up a whole new way for the audience to experience and identify with the characters.

 

Part 2: Is Queerness in Sailor Moon Progressive?

On Twitter, as I was pondering the place of Queerness in Sailor Moon, specifically, I saw a post on Twitter by E. Simins talking about anime being progressive, generally. This tweet got me thinking – in a good way. And here are some of the fruits of that thought. One of the series tweeted about was Sailor Moon because it has such positive representation of what-we-now-call-queer characters.  I wanted to expand on the general idea.

In thinking about the idea that anime is “progressive” I would have to say that to be progressive, I would require an anime to have more than just positive representation in the narrative (or, more realistically, accidental positive representation.) I would want to see call to action. So much of what people see as progressive thought in past anime series is either a misinterpretation (willful or misguided) about intent or origin. So if we talk about Haruka and Michiru as a “Takarazuka couple” in which Haruka is otokoyaku and Michiru is musumeyaku, we’re sort of handwaving the queerness, because Takarazuka can be interpreted as queer, but is not inherently meant to be seen that way. We’re supposed to see a man and a woman in a heterosexual partnership in a Takarazuka show. On the other hand, we know that we are supposed to see Haruka and Michiru as two women in love. Are we supposed to we think of their relationship as a positive representation of an inherent butch/femme dynamic, as genderfluid/femme couple or as a stereotype of hetero-normative male/female dynamics?

If we really want to talk about Sailor Moon being progressive in 2019, we kind of have to look at progress across time as well as geographically.

Looking at older series in which queering them makes them queer, or the queerness can be interpreted differently, is too much like saying fanon is more important than canon (which can be valid, don’t get me wrong!)  It certainly was more overtly progressive than American animation in the mid-1990s. But would that make it “progressive”? Compared with something like the predatory lesbian of 1985’s Patriot Games, yes, clearly. But is that a reasonable comparison? I don’t think so. So…let’s not compare it to western media at all. Apples to apples.

So, to discuss whether anime in general or Sailor Moon in particular is progressive, let’s take something not a 25-year old series. How about Asagao to Kase-san /Kase-san and Morning Glories?  Both manga and anime are very positive representation of two young women falling in love. The anime was explicitly handled in a way to show “love is love.” High marks on positive representation. 10/10 for that.

Let’s compare Kase-san to Sailor Moon. Haruka and Michiru are represented as a queer couple. They were *intended* as a positive representation of two women in love. So are Kase-san & Yamada. So, relatively equivalent. Now…here’s the major question. Is there any progress between the mid-1990’s portrayal and the late 2010’s one?

Sort of.

Kase-san and Yamada are explicitly more a “couple.” So that’s one more step for representation.

How about social or political “progress”?

Not so far.

Kase-san and Yamada have discussed living together, but there has been no discussion of real-world challenges’ of talking about their relationship to family, to government, to anyone. No concerns about health or finances (okay, legitimately, they are in college, so that’s not a super important priority, but…)

What I am saying is that I see Kase-san as a positive representation – with intent – which is a form of progress, but not “progressive” in the sense of calling for social or political change. Give us Kase-san and Yamada at a Rainbow Pride parade……where an older couple of a famous race car driver and violinist come out and make rousing speeches for social progress and *then* I’ll be like, “Yes, this is progressive!” ^_^ (Which calls to mind the live action 2008 Japanese drama Last Friends, which did star a non-binary motocross rider Ruka and her beloved musician friend Michiru and it did explore issues of gender and sexuality, at least a little.)

I believe that at 16 years-old Haruka has never really thought about her gender or sexual identity, because she’s worried about the end of the world and more concerned with her identity as a Senshi. But ….after Stars, after dying twice, after building a family with Michiru, Setsuna and Hotaru…a few years later at, say 20, what is she thinking? How is she identifying herself? We can’t know with certainty, because the story will never tell us. We have the original anime, the anime adaptation of the manga, and the manga, but we don’t have the “25 years have passed and *we* understand gender and sexuality differently” version.

What happens in that version, when Hawkeye tells Fisheye, “We’re all boys here.”? What if Fisheye turns to Hawkeye and says, “No. We’re not. You two are boys. I am not.”

What happens in that version when Minako asks Haruka “are you two lovers?” or Usagi asks Haruka “are you a man or a woman?”

We can conjecture what those things might look if they were created now…but we have to accept that they might not be all that fundamentally different. I might not ever be “progressive.”

Fans of anime, despite watching media that does have positive queer representation don’t always themselves translate that into real-world progress. Although that is changing for the better in most cases, *.*gate notwithstanding. If anything, the reactive, reductive, anti-progress factions’ existence argues that progress has happened. Fans, like all humans, tend to view their entertainment through the lens of their experience. ^_^

Representation might be critical to progress, but by itself it is not “progressive.”I can acknowledge that Sailor Moon was inclusive/diverse for the time in which it was created, having been part of progress without it having been progressivee . And I can accept that anime or manga I want to see pushing that needle forward might never actually go where I want it to go. ^_^

So…what is a good example of a manga that is overtly”progressive”? Shimanami Tasogare is a manga by and about sexual and gender minorities. So that stands out as a manga that is asking for genuine social change.

Whether Sailor Moon is “progressive” is open for discussion, but Shimanami Tasogare clearly asks us to move forward. And that’s progress.

 

Send to Kindle

Sailor Moon Eternal Edition, Volume 5 (English)

$
0
0

Volume 5 of Sailor Moon, Eternal Edition is….not what I’d hoped it would be.

Don’t get me wrong, it’s a beautiful book, with the “holographic cover” and color images that grace this definitive edition…but it’s that this is the definitive edition that sort of bugs me.

One of my big complaints about the 20th anniversary edition was the choice for transliteration of Haruka’s, Michiru’s and Setsuna’s family names. I argued with the translator who rightfully insisted that the transliteration she chose was correct. I equally insisted that it may have been correct, but it is fugly. Sadly, this 25th anniversary edition has continued using them.

Ten’ô, Kai’ô, Mei’ô

Tenoh, Tenou, Tennoh, Tennou, Ten’ou, Ten’oh but… … Ten’ô?  Vile.  It is an abomination. I do not care that it is “technically correct.” I care that it jangles my nerves and ruins my ability to read the story smoothly because it just looks so awful.

Let’s just stop here and take a look how names are transliterated in the real world. You may know the name Ichiro. He’s kind of a famous major league baseball player. His  name is 鈴木 一朗, which is transliterated as Suzuki Ichirou or Suzuki Ichirō and is commonly just written Ichiro in English.

     

The second jersey belongs to 佐藤 友亮 Satō Tomoaki, transliterated as Satoh Tomoaki, a Japanese baseball player with the Saitama Seibu Lions. I only picked baseball players, because they typically have their names on the jerseys, but this applies for most Japanese athletes. Haruka is an athlete.

When we see Haruka in her racing gear in the original anime her name is very sensibly transliterated Tenoh, as it is on this collectible card.

 

 

Ten’ô. There is no sane reason for this choice. 天王 =てんのう Tenou. Frankly for scan, I would have chosen Tenoh, Kaioh and Meioh,, but Tenou, Kaiou and Meiou would have been *fine*. I hate Ten’ô so much, it’s an insult to my eyes every time I see it. It may be correct, but it is terrible.

In every other way, this volume is just fine, but this was – and will continue to be – such an affront that I actually am considering not getting the rest of this series in this edition and just sticking with the Japanese, which will not irritate me. I was so looking forward to a sensible correction to this hideous choice in what is meant to be a magnificent definitive edition in English. It really scarred what is otherwise a momentous edition, as we meet genderfluid Haruka, her partner Michiru, and Setsuna miraculously comes back to life with no explanation whatsoever, bringing Sailors Uranus, Neptune and Pluto together, with their three talismans.

It’s a great volume about which we could talk for hours. To make me feel better about the name issue, I’ve written a short scene for the the “25 years have passed and *we* understand gender and sexuality differently” version I conjectured yesterday in my discussion of Queerness in Sailor Moon. In this version,after the Outer Senshi are introduced, we get an better answer to a question Usagi asked Haruka days ago:

“I never wanted to upset you,” Uranus’s face took on that look of endless sadness that make Usagi ache for her.

“Your Highness,” Neptune’s eyes were wet, “Uranus is both a man and a woman. She is a Guardian of both, with her attributes and strengths limited to neither.”

“I don’t understand,” Sailor Moon looked back and forth at the two women she wanted so much to fight with, not against.

“I’m genderfluid,” Haruka said gently. “I can present as a man or a woman as I want. When I dress as a man, I am seen as a man, and when I dress as a woman, I am seen as a woman.” She smiled tightly, “When I am dressed as a Senshi, I am seen as a Senshi.”

“Oh!” Sailor Moon nodded, “I understand.”

Michiru continued, “Each of us has…”

THERE. Fixed that scene. I feel better. I was >this< far from setting off yesterday in a complete 21st century rewrite of this entire season to fix all the many, many problems. But instead I wrote about queerness.

Ratings:

Art – 8 Visibly stronger than earlier volumes
Story – 7 Kind of a mess by our standards now, but amazing for the time
Characters – 7 Same. Hotaru becomes incredibly interesting from this point on.
Yuri – 5 Haruka trying to seduce Usagi off her case is something; still needs a real love scene between her and Michiru
Service – Same as above

Overall – 7 with a point off for the name issue. 6

Ten’ô, Kai’ô, Mei’ô must die. It’s just so awful.

 

Send to Kindle

Yuri Manga: Nikurashii Hodo Aishiteru (憎らしいほど愛してる)

$
0
0

Nikurashii Hodo Aishiteru (憎らしいほど愛してる) subtitled in English “I love you, to hate you,” is a new adult life story about two woman who work together who are having an affair. Asano-san is the hyper-competent manager, Fujimura is a rising star in the company. The two make a formidable couple and are admired by the division in which they work.

Asano, who is married,  appears to be satisfied with the nature of their relationship – meeting after work for meals and sex is the outlet she needs. But Fujimura is increasingly dissatisfied with the arrangement. She finds herself falling in love with Asano, and wants their relationship to be more than a diversion.

The story isn’t full of grand soap operatic content. It’s more filled with the kind of gut-churning small mistakes that fill an adult life.  Asano goes home to a husband she doesn’t feel like she knows and pressure to leave the job she loves to become a mother. Asano and Fujimura try to return to just being colleagues, but cracking under the stress, Asano makes a grave error that puts her division’s work at risk.  The entire division kicks in to help fix the problems; Fujimura is there to help prop up Asano during their important late-night push to get everything done. Too tired to go home they share a hotel room once more, and, at last, Asano realizes what is important to her.

In the final pages, Asano tells Fujimura that she’s getting divorced and in a very public confession, tells Fujimura her feelings in front of a Christmas illumination.  Aww. ^_^We see them 6 months later sharing an apartment and a life.

I really liked this book. Yuni’s art is slick and adult. The bed scenes are intimate rather than  servicey.  The initial premise, which is not yet all that common in Yuri manga, is the same plot as a zillion lesbian romances of the 1990s. ^_^ As a result, it felt both fresh and incredibly comfortable at the same time.

Ratings:

Art – 9
Story – 8
Characters – 8
Yuri – 9
Service – 3 Nudity, but mostly tastefully done.

Overall – A strong 8

Asano’s journey is not unique, but the characters are developed well-enough for the story, which feels very much ready-made for an evening television drama. That would be nice, wouldn’t it? ^_^

Send to Kindle

Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – September 7, 2019

$
0
0

Yuri Events

There will be no YNN report ntXt week, as we will be in the middle of the 100 Years of Yuri Tour of Tokyo! Check in regularly to learn how cool Girls Love Fest, the Bloom Into You popup shop and the Sailor Moon restaurant are. ^_^ I’m nervous as heck, as we’re starting off with a small typhoon, but happy travels everyone.

Yuri Manga

A few new items up on the Yuricon Store!

Galette, No. 11 (ガレット )  is hitting shelves in Japan as I type this. This means that the next issue is the completion of their 3rd year. That’s always a huge hurdle, getting through 3 years, so fingers crossed for everyone that they continue to grow.

Resonant Blue (レゾナントブルー) is a new girls’x garden anthology from the folks bringing us the Avalon anthologies.

A new school life drama Kyou, Koshiba Aoi ni Aetara ( 今日、小柴葵に会えたら)…

…and a new “adult” adult life drama, Tonari no Heya kara Aegigoe ga Surundesukedo… / 隣の部屋から喘ぎ声がするんですけど… the first chapter of which I believe was in Ultra Jump’s Yuritora Jump anthology.

Lilyka is DMP’s newest imprint, focusing on Yuri doujinshi. They are releasing a series I picked up last winter at Comitia, SHWD, an action series about beefy, athletic women in a monster-disposal special unit. If you’re looking for something a little science fictiony, a little less school, check it out.

Mochi Au Lait has a previously released online series debuting in Comic Rex‘s November issue, Ikemen Onna to Hakoiri Musume (イケメン女と箱入り娘) about a too-cool woman mistaken for a man.

 

Yuri Anime

ANN has the second promotional video from Hirao Auri’s Oshi ga Budokan Ittekuretara Shinu, idol group love comedy.

 

Become a YNN Correspondent by reporting any Yuri-related news with your name and an email I can reply to – thanks to all of you – you make this a great Yuri Network! Special thanks to all of our Okazu Patrons, who make this report possible!

 

Send to Kindle

100 Years of Yuri Tour, Part 1

$
0
0

Hello and welcome to a story you did not expect to read. ^_^  The day we left for Toyko a major typhoonhit, so the first day of the tour was spent stranded in Narita. The trains were not running because there had been damage to the tracks. We still have no idea why the buses were not running.  Narita closes down at 10PM, did you know that? We were about 20 people from the front of the line, when they closed the bus counter. The airport handed out sleeping bags and crackers. Dinner was some senbei and a packet of dried vegetable chips which were legitimately tasty, so there was that.  ^_^

When they distributed the sleeping bags, we kind of all knew it was time to accept we were stuck. I was actually asleep on the floor when I was woken up by my wife – a new bus had been chartered that would take us to Tokyo Station. We took it and grabbed cabs to the hotel, so we finally got to sleep at about 4 AM. 

Nonetheless, there we all were, the next morning, ready to go!

First stop, we hit up the Yayoi-Yumeji Museum for a historical first step, to discuss women’s lives in Japan a century ago. The current exhibit was about kimono and fashion in the early 20th century. It was magnificent. (I have a few pics, I’ll add in when I have a chance!) There was a corner on author Yoshiya Nobuko and they even had a kimono of hers! The whole thing was a great start to the trip.

Two of our party went to the Swallowtail butler cafe on Otome Road. The verdict was that the food is excellent and the experience is really unique. They won’t let you do anything for yourself, in a kind of over-fastidious approach to service. ^_^

While they did that, the rest of us went to Yamashiroya for shopping. We crashed for a few and then went to dinner with James Welker, who was entertaining and charming as always. 

Day two is going to be a lot of shopping, with Harajuku and Shibuya on the plate. Report later!

 

Send to Kindle

100 Years of Yuri Tour, Part 2

$
0
0

Today was a shopping intensive day for the tour – we had places to get to! Our first stop was Harajuku, for some shopping. Katherine and Amy started us off with a visit to Alice on Wednesday, a lovely little Alice in Wonderland/Through the Looking Glass themed store, where everyone picked up important items like parasols and jewelry. ^_^ To get in, you have to walk through a teeny-weeny little door. ^_^

Then off to the Sailor Moon store, of course. Then Kiddyland for character goods, equally of course, then lunch with a vaguely Hawaii theme. 

We then sweated our way over to Shibuya (the weather here is quite hot, unusually so after a typhoon) for the Bloom Into You popup store, which was small, but the goods were really lovely – clearly new original art. I couldn’t help myself, I bought a Sayaka t-shirt and some small items, at least a few of which will be for Lucky Boxes. ^_^

We followed this with a visit to Mandarake and Animate, where we all picked up more stuff we *totally* need. ^_^ Animate Shibuya has a small Yuribu, with a reasonable variety of multi-format items, including an original Drama CD, manga, novels and magazines.

I took some pictures, but the connection here is kinda shitty, so take a look at this link for what I’ve shared so far.

Today we’re headed down to Kamakura to do a little Aoi Hana wandering. 

Send to Kindle
Viewing all 2889 articles
Browse latest View live