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Novel: JK Haru is a Sex Worker in Another World

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Last night I had to call 911 because a man was beating a woman outside my house. It was not a good evening to finish JK Haru. But I did finish it. I have many thoughts about this book, some good, some bad. There will be sleep lost for a few days while I deal with it. Much like Psycho-Pass, my brain has to work through the trauma of experiencing someone else’s trauma third-hand. So let me provide some context for my perspective.

In the 1980s, there was an anthology series called Sword and Sorceress. It began in 1984 and ran for 30 volumes through 2015. The first volume began with an introduction, The Heroic Image of Women: Woman as Wizard and Warrior by editor Marion Zimmer Bradley.* She was and remains a big name in 1980s fantasy literature. I was never a fan of her work at the time, although I ended up reading a great deal of it. I felt her work as a editor was vastly superior to her writing. It was her introduction to a later volume that changed my life. She talked about how the first volume contained stories about women proving themselves in sexist fantasy worlds, of women earning the right to be a warrior or wizard. In her introduction, Bradley paraphrased an earlier science fiction editor who spoke to prospective writers. Those writers were often at great pains to spend their time with the technical details of their technologies, at the expense of the story. Bradley noted that the early volumes had been at pains to establish women’s right to be a warrior or wizard and that future volumes would run stories that assumed that right. No more “why can’t women do x?” stories. Women can, women do, and then, you can just tell the story.**

That was in the late 1980s, more than 30 years ago. And yet, here we are still reminding everyone that women can and women already do everything they do. Over and over.

JK Haru is a Sex Worker in Another World by Ko Hiratori was a very rough read for me. Highschooler Koyama Haru is killed by a truck, along with her classmate, Chiba and they awaken in another world. This other world is structured like a RPG game and characters are given abilities at random. Only men get to be adventurers or soldiers and the world is overtly misogynist. Haru becomes a prostitute.

The bulk of the book is scenes of sex work, some consensual, some rape. You know I do not shy from violence, as long as it is between equals. This is not that.  The book’s climax is a worse-for-being-entirely-predictable gang rape of Haru and another prostitute and the other’s death. At which point, Haru decides she’s had enough. The book had made a point, but failed to develop the point it had made. Instead, it retreated into a fantasy revenge narrative, dropping the one potentially excellent plot point into a literal single line of conclusion. “It was raining.”

Yes, Haru does create change by the end of the book. That was a positive note. We are left at the end of the book with the belief that things can change for the better.

But I’m still left having read page upon page of sexual and psychological violence against women.  I’m pissed that once again, the humiliation of women is a plot point. It confused me that the author*** said this book is “for women.” What are women supposed to gain from it? “Life is unfair, but the most exceptional of you can take revenge for those who can’t,” isn’t really a lesson we had to be told, surely. Sex workers are always at high risk of violence. (From:17 Facts About Sexual Violence and Sex Work.) Sex work is work. Sex workers deserve to live without stigma. Sexual harassment is disease. Sexual assault is a plague.


In the end, the most crushing thing about the entire story is that not one man in the entire story had learned anything at all. ****
 

Ratings:

I am unable to rate this.  It wasn’t written poorly, but it wasn’t something I’d recommend for entertainment. Perhaps as a reading for a class on social justice. The ending is all right, but I really did not enjoy the ride.*****

 

Kudos to translator Emily Balistrieri and editor Aimee Zink for not just making this book make sense but for giving characters unique “voice.” That takes a lot of skill.

 

*Yes, I am aware that she is a child abuser. If you thought it might be some incredibly relevant point to make, please rest assured, it isn’t.

**I adopted this policy for the Yuri Monogatari project. Stories about coming out were done in V1 and from there contributors were expect to move forward and tell a story.

*** I do not know, nor do I care, if the author is male or female. It’s not really relevant to my reaction to the interview. The interviewer really needed to ask a follow up, like, “In what way is this ‘for women?’ Can you explain what you mean by that?” If I were asked for to suggest a book that outlined “female power fantasy” I would not recommend this book. Not only was more space in Sexiled taken up by women working together, it had a much less violent outcome.

**** Arguably Sumo is the exception. He was never a threat and in the end became an ally. Whether that would be enough, we’ll never know, but we do know the sweet kids Haru played Kickin’-the-Can with did not grow up to be allies, which I would have hoped.

*****Yes, there will be a sequel. I am reviewing this book and how well this book handles its own material in this review.

If you are about to comment with *any* version, of “well….” or “but…” or “actually…” stop. It won’t be approved. In fact, I am going to be very strict about comments on this post.

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Yuri Manga: Comic Yuri Hime December 2019 (コミック百合姫2019年12月号)

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The end of the cover story of Comic Yuri Hime December 2019 (コミック百合姫2019年12月号) is a little melancholy, surprisingly. But this issue, which marks the third year of being a monthly magazine was, as it has been all year, quite strong.

The opening story is a new gambit, “Lonely Girl Sakaraenai,” a high school story about a great student who is a shitty test-taker and the girl who changes her life.

“Tada no ichinichi” was one of three stories I read in one day that featured bubble tea, and almost immediately after that I read an angry treatise by a Japanese columnist about how bubble tea had become the new “get off my lawn” moment in Japan. Every generation just cannot stop being angry at whatever the next one enjoys. ^_^

“Yuri is My Job” comes to a shocking climax. Well, shocking for Hime, anyway. Mitsuki seems pretty surprised at herself, as well. I’m rooting for her, because I always root for people who tell the truth, no matter how bluntly. ^_^

Yuri about women in bands is picking up speed with two entries in this issue: “Omae ni Kikasetai Uta gaAaru” about beginnings and endings, and “Sasayakuyouni Koi wo Utau” in which Himari and Yori both find somewhere to be. Volume 1 of Hello, Melancholic! came out in October, so there was no chapter this issue. (I like to pretend when the artists get a month off its to give the creators a bit of rest, but it’s actually so they have time to do signings and colors /cover work and extras for the collected volumes. No rest for the weary.)

“Umineko Bessou Days” turns dark, with the appearance of Mayumi’s toxic “friend.”

Thankfully for us, “Hayama-sensei to Terano-sensei ha Tsukiatteiru” and “Itoshi Koishi” remain heart-warming. Phew!

As always there are way more series in the issue that I’m reading than those mentioned here and several I am not. In general, I really like that the magazine has a nice mix of things I’m enjoying and some stories I completely don’t care about with a bunch in between. In my opinion, that means they are doing it right. ^_^ 2019 was another year of doing it right.

Ratings:

Overall – 8

The January 2020 issue has hit shelves already and the cover color palette has changed considerable for the new story. I’ll be getting my copy this week and will let you know what I think!

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Yuri Manga: Strawberry Fields wo Mou Ichido, Volume 3 ( ストロベリー・フィールズをもう一度)

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In Volume 1, we met Akira, a high school student who tended to avoid other people and Pure the transfer student who calmly informs Akira that in 7 years, they will be lovers. In Volume 2, we watch Akira warm up to the other girl. The book ends as Pure confesses her feeling (once again) in front of the whole school. Akira, finally ready to reciprocate Pure’s  feelings, runs after her, only to find her…gone.

In Strawberry Fields wo Mou Ichido, Volume 3 ( ストロベリー・フィールズをもう一度), we find out that we’ve been reading a book about time-travel all along. Pure wasn’t making it up – she came from a future in which they had been lovers. So, why was she traveling backwards at all? Because Akira’s brother Ruri had caused the timeline to diverge from its original path.

Ruri meets a woman, Sumire, with the ability to reverse time and hopes that, by using her power, he can save his mother from dying in an accident and keep his family together. But the more they meddle, the further away they get from his desired outcome. And, Sumire realizes that if he brings his mother back, he and Akira will never be born. So they decide to try to re-establish the right timeline. Pure discovers their time machine and reverses time to find Akira again.

We see alternate timelines with Pure and Akira missing each other over and over, then futer alternate timelines where one or the other of them is hurt in an accident, but they stick together and eventually they manage to find their original timeline…or one that is functionally the same. They do indeed become lovers and while Mom remains deceased. Ruri and Akira are never going to be friends with their Dad’s new wife, but they do like their younger half-sister. Pure and Akira are married and they live happily every after, as we see in a short epilogue.

Because I hadn’t really taken the time-travel thing seriously at the beginning, this book took me three readthroughs to make it make sense. And then I double checked myself against the author’s note, where the correct order is laid out. The alternate timelines in the middle of volume three confused me the first time around and I almost gave it up as a series that was just messy…until it all clicked. Then I re-read it to make sure I caught everything that was said. I don’t think I’ve given too many books that kind of time, honestly. And I’m not entirely sure this series was worth it.  The plot felt like it had been run through a blender a bit with a lot of exposition at the end. The author’s note felt exactly like a waiter “explaining” food that was pointlessly overcomplicated. ^_^;

But the girls get each other and it does end with a big old wedding (which makes no sense, but why would we insist on sense now?) which was kind of nice so I let it go and just enjoyed the whole mess for what it was. The art was nice enough.

Ratings: 

Art – 7
Story – 7
Character – 7
Service – 2
Yuri – 6

Overall – 7

Not super memorable except for the whole time-travel thing, but it was a pleasant diversion.

 

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Yuri Manga: Sayonara Rose Garden, Volume 2 (さよならローズガーデン)

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Volume 1 introduced us to Hanako, a Japanese woman who has traveled to England from far-off Japan to meet her favorite author, during Victoria’s reign. To support herself, Hanako has taken up being a maid, and she is hired to be the personal maid for the daughter of a Duke, Alice. Alice is not sickly at all, but there is something melancholy about her. Alice promises to introduce Hanako to Victor Franks, Hanako’s favorite author.  We learn that Alice has previously fallen in love with her governess. As Volume 1 closes, it is apparent to Alice’s fiance, Edward, that Alice’s feelings for Hanako are heading in the same direction.

In Volume 2 of Sayonara Rose Garden (さよならローズガーデン), Alice is struggling to keep it together and Hanako is struggling to understand her. When she learns of Alice’s love affair with her old governess, Hanako is completely accepting…only now she has a secret she is keeping from Alice! When Hanako takes ill, Alice discovers her secret and is, frankly, shocked, They have something unexpected in common, but what does it mean for them? Alice, moved to try and figure out what they are to one another gives up her last secret, and introduces Hanako to Victor Franks, at last.

As I said, in Volume 1, this book feels at times like it was originally intended to be a penny dreadful or horror set in Victorian England. It’s not. It is a bit melodramatic, several of the “secrets” were either hinted at broadly or plainly given away to us, so only Alice or Hanako who feel surprise. That aside, there’s any number of times where the conversations around Hanako and Alice feel as if they might become darker…they certainly could do…but they don’t. Instead we’re allowed to focus entirely on the drama between Alice and Hanako and the even more dramatic struggles Alice is having with herself.

Dr. Pepperco’s art is solid, a little lightly melodramatic or over-decorated as needed to give this “Victorian England” color. Clothing is carefully rendered, faces are less so. But the story is solid and I’m still enjoying it.

Ratings:

Art – 7
Story – 7
Characters – 8
Service – 3
Yuri – 6

Overall – 7

Luckily you too will be able to enjoy this series very soon, as Seven Seas has licensed it! Goodbye, My Rose Garden Volume1 is heading our way in spring. I’ll look forward to your reactions.

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Many Thanks From All of Us at Okazu

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It’s Thanksgiving here in the United States and as usual, I want to take a moment to thank you all for taking the time to read and comment and share our posts here at Okazu. Thank you for your support of Yuri anime and manga and especial thanks to Okazu Patrons! With your assistance we were able take our100 Years of Yuri celebration on tour and around the world!

This year I also want to thank all the folks at the following companies for their support and investment in Yuri and queer manga: Funimation, J-Novel Club, Kodansha, Sentai Filmworks, Seven Seas, Tokyopop, Viz Media, Yen Press.

Thank you all, I’m very, very grateful to all of you.

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MURCIÉLAGO, Volume 12 (English)

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I’ve never reviewed Volume 12 of MURCIÉLAGO because it’s probably one volumes with the least lesbian content in the series. It does, however, contain a tale of obsessive love that, while incredibly bizarre, is not at all creepy (in the sense of it being straight up horror and not sexual in any way.)

Someone is killing the traditional swordmasters of Japan. Kuroko and the gang are called into to track down the killer, who appears to be a phantasm. In actual fact, she is a phantasm, the soul of a deeply broken woman who would have been the greatest sword wielder had she lived. Instead, killed by her sister, she has possessed her sister’s body and in enacting her vendetta. To combat her, Kuroko challenges her to a duel, but Kuroko may have, at last, met her match.

This volume still has more straight up action than almost any previous volume, which is both really interesting and not at all interesting, as the art is less worried about the specifics than the general effect.

A short epilogue lets us join in with Kuroko as she takes sniper Reiko out for some new clothes. We get to see Reiko play dress up and are left knowing that she’s buying them for her girlfriend, which is the only Yuri we get in the volume, but I’ll take all the Reiko I can get. ^_^

Ratings:

Art – 8 For this series, it’s quite good
Story – Same as above
Characters – 8
Service – 3
Yuri – 1

Overall – 8

An even more action-packed and fight-filled volume of MURCIÉLAGO than usual.

Next up, we’re gettin’ weird. Again. ^_^

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Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – November 30, 2019

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Yuri Manga

While most retailers are browbeating you into buying things for other people, I’m here gently reminding that you should also consider getting some things for yourself! Especially as your friends and family might not understand what you want. ^_^; To that end, tomorrow I’ll be doing a few pre-holiday season Okazu Lucky Boxes. Most will be Premium Boxes which means media and books, and Yuri goods and doujinshi and candy from Japan, as well as the usual assortment of utter crap from a variety of sources. (People give me things. I buy things. I find things. You know…the usual.)

We’ve also put a bunch of new and very exciting items on the Yuricon Store!

Yagate Kimi ni Naru, Volume 8 is out in Japan and has now surpassed a million copies in print! Via Comic Natalie, creator Nakatani Nio has drawn a picture to celebrate this milestone. Also on the Yuricon Store is the pre-order for the English edition of Bloom Into You: Regarding Saeki Sayaka, Volume 1, the first of the light novel series following the Student Council Vice President in her early years. I’ve reviewed this book in Japanese and liked it best for perfectly capturing Sayaka’s voice.

Also super exciting, we’ve listed The Conditions of Paradise, an English-language edition of Rakuen no Jouken, by Morishima Akiko. I’m excited to see one of my favorite older one-shot manga brought over.

Less super exciting, but still pretty pleasant, is Ikemen-sugi desu Shiki-sempai!, Volume 2  (イケメンすぎです紫葵先パイ! ) a first love story I find to be quite nice.

And for those who loved the first volume, we have lesbian sex worker anthology sequel Rezu Fuuzoku Anthology Repeater / レズ風俗アンソロジー リピー.

LGBTQ News

Via YNN Correspondent Yeo, ShipperinJapan on Twitter has receipts that anime Hoshiai no Sora (Stars Align) has a discussion about trans rights, trans lives, names and pronouns with empathy. This great conversation is captured in two parts on their twitter feed. I commented that in 1994, seeing Haruka and Michiru as a couple on TV was so meaningful…and in 2019, Maki’s conversation with Yuu is just as powerful. Progress, my friends, looks like this. It’s small, incremental and lays the groundwork for the next step. Do not let anyone tell you that these issues don’t exist in Japan.

The fine folks at the Comics Beat have put together Gift Guide: 50 queer comics for everyone on your list, which I have bookmarked and will be buying myself presents from for months to come. A number of these have been read and reviewed here, many others have not, so definitely take a look.

 

Yuri Anime

The fourth Promotional Video for Oshi ga Budokan Ittekuretara Shinu is available and weirdly…it looks better than the manga?! I live in hope.

ANN’s Alex Mateo reports that Funimation has added Puella Magi Madoka Magica to their streaming catalog.

AnimEigo is releasing the new Gunsmith Cats OVA Explosive Edition for general distribution after their successful kickstarter.

Victoria Davis interviews Anime Voice Actor Morgan Berry on Her Lead Role in Lesbian Love Story Kase-san and Morning Glories for The Mary Sue. Berry says she identifies as genderfluid, which I found interesting. I haven’t gotten the Sentai edition, but if someone has watched the dub and would like to review it, please feel free to contact me!

 

Yuri Game

SukeraSparo’s Yuri Game Kundan Folklore (クダンノフォークロア) is being released as a smartphone game for JP phones on iOS and Android.

 

Other News

I’m not running to read this, but if anyone picks up Yurizuki no Danshikoukousei no Hanashi (百合好きの男子高校生の話) a comedic Twitter comic about about high school boys who love Yuri, feel free to pitch a review. At least let us know what you think.

Sara Century on Syfy takes a look at the early days of female characters in the Thor comics in When Women Came To Asgard.

Here’s a fun thing to end with Comic Walker has climbed on the Yuribu train! Check out their digital selection at Yuri KuRaBu, i.e.,Yuri Club. (百合倶楽部).

 

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! Write me with any questions you have, and I’ll do my best to answer them on my YNN podcast, when I revive it this winter!

 

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Pre-holiday Premium Okazu Lucky Boxes are Here!

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I’ve got a bunch of stuff that we picked up during the 100 Years of Yuri Tour in Japan and you’d probably like some cool Yuri goods from The Bloom Into You pop-up or some JP DVDs, so it’s time for some Okazu Lucky Boxes!

Because of course there is, a snow/sleetstorm is hitting my area as I type. That means these will be ever so slightly delayed in shipping. I love you enough to shove loads of random crap into boxes and put my back out carrying them…I don’t love you enough to drive on ice to mail them.

This time we have 5 Lucky Boxes: 4 Premium Large and 1 Premium medium. All the boxes contain a random assortment of manga, books, Japanese candy, toys, pieces of paper things I picked up because they were cool, postcards and random other items of interest. ALL of the Large boxes contain a DVD as well as all the rest of the stuff.

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.

Large Box 1 – Claimed!
Large Box 2 – $75
Large Box 3 – Claimed!
Large Box #4 – Claimed!
Medium Box 1 – Claimed!


Sailor Moon Supers Anime, Part 2 Disk 1 (English)

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Sailor Moon SuperS, Part 2, Disk 1 functionally ends my interest in this entire season, with an episode that is supposed to be about Hawk’s Eye seducing Makoto, but ends up being about Ami seducing Makoto and Makoto seducing Hawk’s Eye, which I am fairly certain was the actual intent of the episode. Bad lessons about waiting for someone aside, I have always loved the image of Makoto and Ami dancing.

(When this series is all over, I will draw up the *actual* relationship chart. The Stars pamphlet was not just wrong about Haruka and Michiru. ^_^)

The rest of the disk is given over to the literal humanizing of the Amazon Trio, who learn that they are anthropomorphized animals, but decide that they do have a dream after all…to become human. I find this completely unbelievable. What animal wants to be human? We can’t swim, or fly or run, we can’t smell, we’re feeble compared to animals. But whatever, they get their dream as they are removed from the story, leaving us to wonder can hawks, fish and tigers be genderqueer? This is not, probably, the actual intent of the episode.

We are then introduced to the second set of bad guys whose story is not appropriately told and who desperately need a 21st century rewrite. Not for their sexuality, but for their history which will be dumped over our head at the end of the arc, like Gatorade at the conclusion of a sportsing thing. The Amazoness Quartet are important! Why do they get such a shitty arc?!? Chibi-Usa is the point of this whole forsaken season, you’d think that these being her Senshi might get a fucking mention. But that is definitely not the actual intent of this season, more’s the pity.

Back to this disk. Ami’s power-up episode was so much-better drawn than anything else on the disc, someone really put time and money into her. Rei’s episode was over-colored, like they had fixed it post-broadcast. But in every way Viz had control of, the disk was as good as SuperS can be.

Ratings:

Art – 6 Weirdly inconsistent
Story – 2
Characters – 4
Service – Ami and Makoto dancing is my kind of service
LGBTQ – 4 for Ami and Makoto, 0 for the rest of the season

Overall – 5 This low score is no fault of Viz or the VAs or anyone, I just really dislike this season from here forwards.

I was sort of half-assedly live-tweeting me watching this on Twitter and people were actually following it for some reason. So I’ll probably keep doing that. But the part I want to tell you about was my dream.

I had a dream that I was going to some amusement park where there was going to be a Sailor Moon Store with everything that had ever been sold. When we got there, it was actually some guy’s collection, so we couldn’t buy any of it. BUT – and this is the important part – there was a set of white matte bisque china plates with each Senshi shown in silhouette, half of their face on the plate rendered in their color. No lines, just the color cutout of half their face on the plate. I can see them vividly and thought they were the most beautiful things. I want someone to make them so I can own them. Anyway, that was the dream.

I sat through probably a dozen “Rashiku Ikkimashou” playthroughs of the end credits Saturday and I still don’t hate it. I have no idea why.

Sailor Moon Supers Anime, Part 2 Disk 2 (English)

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In Sailor Moon SuperS, Part 2, Disk 2, we finish up the Inner Senshi’s power up episodes with a shared episode between Makoto and Minako. It’s a fine lover’s quarrel, with some bold fashion choices by Minako, who favors “space idol, Jetson style” and Jun-Jun, who goes in hard for “Pat Benatar Music video couture.” (And if you miss either one or both these references, even after Googling, then just ignore them. They aren’t worth the effort to explain. Just acknowledge the cultural or age gap and move on.)

We then turn our eyes to Chibi-Usa with our full attention.

Have I ever told you how much Araki Kae’s voice grates on me? Well, let me tell you. We were introduced to her as Chibi-Usa, and of course she is meant to be grating, as Usagi is meant to be shrill. This was back in the days when there were Video rental stores and one of our local stores had an extraordinarily decent anime section.* So we were renting nearly everything they had.** One of the anime was Fushigi Yugi, which they had in full, in both dub and some sub. The first volume we watched in dub, but Ruby Marlowe’s voice made us irritated, so we switched to the sub…only to find that Miaka was played by Araki Kae. Clearly Miaka was a whiny grating character and there was nowhere to turn. So, though it’s not her fault, Araki Kae’s voice rubs me raw.

Midway through this disk, I decided this would be an excellent time to listen to the dub. Since I didn’t care what was going to happen, plotwise, I could just put it on and see how it went. I don’t usually choose dubs when I watch home video, not at this point for any reason other than I’m a seiyuu otaku. I’ve got no problem watching them, I sometimes put on Cartoon Network or something and let the dub of a cartoon I don’t care about it run. In fact, I’ve only ever see episodes of Naruto in dub. Dubs are perfectly fine.

This dub was honestly excellent. It took me a while to get the hang of everyone’s voices, but by the last episode of the disk I was able to just appreciate their work. Amusingly I had left subtitles on, so I could see where dialogue was changed. In general the changes worked well and in one or two moments, I actually preferred the English script over the somewhat dated and – if we are to be honest –  sexist, dialogue.

And then, Stephanie Sheh blew me away. There was a scene, possibly all of the Inners and Mamoru, sitting around talking about Chibi-Usa maybe being in love and Sheh said something and I literally stopped what I was doing and stared at the TV. She wasn’t dubbing a cartoon…she was Usagi. At no point did I feel like I was watching a dub…I was just watching Usagi. That was amazing.

I’m actually looking forward to watching some of Stars in dub now. So kudos to the VAs, because that was some damn fine work.

Ratings:

Art – 7 It seems to have settled down again
Story – 3 I just don’t care about Chibi-Usa or Helios
Characters – 5
Service – Makoto and Minako 4ever
Yuri – 0

Overall – 5

 

*Those were halcyon days as the *two* video rental places in town actually competed to have better anime sections. Then the places outside my town joined in and soon, we could rent a massive amount of anime from the 5 closest rental stores.

**Except – and I remember this clearly – we could never bring ourselves to rent Ping-Pong Club, which looked abysmal, even compared with all the outright anime porn we watched. I mean, when the story looks shitty as compared with Demon City Shinjuku, it is not good.

Sailor Moon SuperS Anime, Part 2 Disk 3 (English)

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In my review of Disk 2 for this series, I forgot to mention that apparently the Inners got tired of the color coding their clothes thing. I can see that getting pretty boring after a little while. Meanwhile,in Sailor Moon SuperS, Part 2, Disk 3, Nehelennia is finally getting serious and threatening Zirconia and the Amazoness Quartet while she threatens the White Moon. And the Inners get serious about doing something about the bad guys, instead of faffing about with the Lemures. Mamoru begins the inevitable process of becoming a burden to everyone.

The Inners and the Amazoness Quartet face off and we get to listed to “Sailor Team Theme” (Minna, Henshin yo Makeup!”) in the background, which makes that scene a little worth it. Sailor Moon is more concerned with the nature of her enemies and Chibi Moon with the nature of her ally than the problem at hand.  Helios arrives and explains what the Dead Moon are, and we all on board the necessity of saving Helios. And what a surprise, Chibi-Usa has the Golden Mirror!

While I was waiting for the conclusion of this arc, I thought about ways the Sailor Moon franchise could weather the gap between the 30th anniversary and the 40th. Of course, there will be a 35th anniversary something but 35 isn’t as powerful magic as anniversaries with 0s. What I came up with were a series of novels, each focusing on a pair of the Senshi. If they didn’t want to bother with wholly original content, they could just insert each within an existing season. Mercury-Mars in a story within Season 1, Jupiter-Venus in Season 2, Uranus-Neptune in Season 3, Chibi-Usa-Pluto-Saturn in Season 4 and Usagi-Mamoru in Season 5. Put one out every other year. I’d buy ’em. Heck, I’d write ’em.

In the meantime we have learned that Nehelennia was basically a creepy stalker without the ability to distinguish between “I want it” and “It is mine.” Of actual interest is the Amazoness Quartet’s decision to defect. Especially in light of the fact they unwittingly awoke Nehalennia.  Interestingly, while Beryl was sort of vaguely sympathetic (albeit a creepy stalker) and Ail and An were sort of vaguely sympathetic and Professor Tomoe was vaguely sympathetic….Nehelennia is an asshole. But she does give us an important – and relevant – tidbit, “Devouring other people’s dreams is the way to immortality.” Given what we know of history, she’s probably not wrong.

Mamoru gets a powerup and I’m reminded that I feel that the story treats both he and Chibi-Usa a little unfairly. Usagi has her guardians, but both Mamoru and Chibi-Usa encounter their guardians as enemies and only learn the truth when it’s too late. Would it have killed them to let the Generals and the Asteroid Senshi be part of the narrative? Something else again for our 21st century rewrite in which old family gets to stick around, the way they do in the Nanoha series (when the story is allowed to progress, and not just recycled..)

Kaiju Chibi-Usa brainwashing the children of the city, having them to chant “moon crisis power” is not the choice I might have made for a story that ostensibly is about people’s “beautiful dreams.” A giant looming Chibi-Usa is certainly not any dream I ever had.

The final battle is mostly a waiting game, while everyone talks.

Overall, this is still my least favorite season, but that gave me time to really appreciate the fine job Viz did on it.

Ratings:

Art – 7
Story – 2 It gets even more unfocused at the end
Characters – 6
Service – There is some creepy shit in there, even aside from lolicon bondage and panty shots
Yuri – 0

Overall – 5

I have watched this season once again. I expect the next time I watch it it will be the 50th anniversary hologram release. Nothing less will entice me to watch this ever again, beyond the Super S Special episode with Haruka and Michiru.

 

Takarazuka: God of Stars / Éclair Brillant (GOD OF STARS -食聖-』/『Éclair Brillant 』)

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While we were in Tokyo for the 100 Years of Yurj Tour, a number of us went to see a Takarazuka musical revue. I wrote about it here on Okazu, immediately after. I determined that I would definitely be buying this on Blu-Ray, because it was so epic. And, having watched it again, everything I said stands.

Hoshi-gumi Takarazuka Grand Theater Performance Musical Full-Course “GOD of STARS- Sacred Meal” / Space Revue Fantasia “Éclair Brillant” (星組宝塚大劇場公演 ミュージカル・フルコース 『GOD OF STARS -食聖-』/スペース・レビュー・ファンタジア 『Éclair Brillant 』) was flippin’ fantastic. It was everything Takarazuka all rolled up into one nutty narrative, with catchy music, crazy costumes, charismatic actresses and a bunch of songs that get lodged in your head for a week.

The story was almost exactly as I remembered it. I had wondered why I initially thought Red Boy was the Monkey King, but upon rewatch I understood why – in the first scene, Irene’s mother and she talk about how Saiyuki was her favorite story. You may be familiar with the manga/anime franchise, but the name is the Japanese rendition of the Chinese epic we know as The Journey to the West, which stars Sun Wukong (Son Goku), the Monkey King. Ah-hah! It wasn’t my imagination, there was a reference. I feel a bit better about that.

The first scene introduces us to Irene Chow, whose father makes the best gyoza. We then switch scenes to heaven where
Celestial being Red Boy is celebrating his existence as “God of Stars,” when he meets with an accident.

We then find ourselves in Singapore watching Top Chef Hong Xing-Xing being confronted by Irene for his attempt to gentrify the waterside dive area known as Paradise Hawkers. Ousted from the show and his life by sponsor “Golden Group” CEO Eric, Hong is replaced by Dragon Lee, and framed for crimes. He finds himself alone, stripped of everything except his pride, and ends up at Paradise Hawkers…where he once again meets Irene. They bond over both not having parents: Hong has never known his and Irene’s mother left when her father started drinking, then he left too. She’s running the the family restaurant alone, but she has no cooking skills at all.

Hong attempts to regain his position and his pride by challenging Dragon Lee to a cooking contest. Hong heads off to the mountains to study cooking at “Kobayashidera” while Irene follows a lead to find her mother in Shanghai.

The day of the big challenge comes and Hong arrives, with Irene’s father in tow! His Celestial parents come down having found Red Boy at last, and we are all reunited with our families. Irene and Hong get each other, Dragon Lee and Chinese pop star Christina live happily ever after.

What I very much enjoyed about the show was the music, which was very catchy and ear-wormy. I’ve been singing “Ore koso God of Stars” on a loop in my head since watching it, replaced from time to time with ”Eien no Kirameki,” I think was the title of this show’s version of the word “love” on repeat. (“Ai shinjite, Ai wo mitsumete Ai wo yume mite…”)

The revue portion, which did not seem very long when I watched it live, did drag a bit. Kurenai Yuzuru does not dance, really, not even the “spin-and-pose” style that passes for dancing most of the time in Takarazuka. She merely stands and moves her arms a bit. It was not inspiring, but I had ceased to watch her much anyway, in favor of Makoto Rei, who played Dragon Lee.

The DVD has one bizarre technical glitch in the revue portion during a rendition “That’s Life” by three of the otokoyaku. The glitch, in which the singer’s mics cut out,  appears to be from the actual show, because you can hear the singers from time to time, barely behind the music. It is bizarre because they left it in and didn’t just use a different performance for the Blu-Ray.  As it was “That’s Life” I didn’t count it much of a loss. ^_^;

Still absolutely outstanding were the performances by both Makoto Rei as Dragon Lee and Maisora Hitomi as Christina Chang.

My wife had not joined us for the show in Japan, but after our raves, she joined me for this viewing. Her verdict was “It was cute. I enjoyed it.” which is all I can ask.

Ratings:

Staging: 8 Less moving parts than usual, but still, the scenery was super fun.
Story – 9 Who wouldn’t like a story about a celestial being reincarnated on earth as an Iron chef?!?
Music – 8 Loads of fun, well sung, and this time, for the first show I have ever seen…written by a woman.
Dancing – 8 Bits of it were fantastic, just not the bits done by Kurenai

Overall – 9

I have now seen in person Takarazuka performances set in France, Austria, China and Singapore. Let’s talk about “exotic places” as common fantasy theme for women.

This BD is a terrific reminder of a terrific night and for all the everythings Takarazuka can bring to the table, I highly recommend GOD of STARS

 

 

Yuri Manga: A Tropical Fish Yearns for Snow, Volume 1 (English)

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Konatsu’s father has been transfered overseas, so she is now living with a relative in a small seaside town in Ehime. Although she is from Tokyo, Konatsu is a little reserved, afraid to assume and careful about making friends. Even when the girl who sits next to her in class is outgoing and friendly, she’s worried about seeming too forward. But compared to the school star Koyuki, Konatsu is downright outgoing. A chance encounter bring the two girls together and almost immediately they feel something much more than mere friendship. In order to be near Koyuki, Konatsu joins the aquarium club. They help each other out in club, but also out of their social shells. When they both find themselves able to express anything, it seems to be more than they expected.

When I reviewed Nettaigyo ha Yuki ni Kogareru, Volume 1 (熱帯魚は雪に焦がれる ) I called this “a charming little love story about two girls and a cute salamander.”  A Tropical Fish Yearns for Snow, Volume 1 is still charming and the salamander is still cute.  Both Koyuki and Konatasu live very much in their own heads, are a little fearful of expressing intimacy. Unusually, this puts them in the position of falling for one another before actually being friends (or frenemies, even,) something we don’t see all that much right now in Yuri romance.

This Viz edition looks lovely. The cover is made to look very much like an aquarium, but more importantly, the binding is lovely. I have no idea why I am enamored of the binding, but I picked this book up and the first words out of my mouth were, “wow, what beautiful binding.” ^_^ All in all, it just looks great. Other than marine life jargon, the dialogue here is not complicated, nonetheless translator John Werry, Eve Grandt’s lettering and touch-up (a fantastically difficult job that does not get enough attention!), Yukiko Whitely’s design work and Pancha Diaz’ editorial touch made this a relaxing read. I was able to just settle in to the narrative and let both Konatsu and Koyuki do the worrying for me.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 7
Characters – 8
Service – 1 on principle only, there really isn’t any
Yuri – 7

Overall – 8

I know what’s coming and I’ll just warn you all to be patient. There will be no rushing this story, I assure you.

Volume 2 will be released in February.

Thanks very much to Viz Media for the review copy!

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

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Yuri Manga

It’s here! Volume 1 of The Rose of Versailles is getting a super-limited release in selected US Kinokuniya stores on December 17, and more general release on January 28, 2020. Volume 1, Volume 2 and Volume 3 are already available for pre-order. Want to see what it looks like? I posted a short video on Twitter. ^_^ It’s a real beauty. I’m so very proud of what we accomplished with this definitive release of a long-awaited book.

 

The Yuri Network News report is made possible by Okazu Patrons. Your support funds reviews, interviews, news and helps pay writers. As little as $5/month can make a huge difference!

Yuri Doujinshi

Lilyka, DMP’s licensed translated Yuri doujinshi store, has a free special offer! They are offering a free 2-story download, SHWD 1st Anniversary. The download comes in multiple formats, and are short side stories to this action tale of beefy women who hunt down anti-human weapons called Dynamis.  I admit, I quite like SHWD.

ANN’s Jennifer Sherman reports on Iridori launching non-erotic doujinshi line, one of which is Yuri. Sherman writes, “Witness the silly shenanigans of Sachiko as she finds all manner of ways to milk as much money out of her girlfriend, Miho, as possible!” in “Of Girls, Love and Money.”

The collaboration known as Yuricon has just released a new issue. Yuricon Tabemono to Joshiben (ユリコン 食べ物と女子編) with four of my fave Yuri artists out there: Kitao Taki, Seta Seta, Takemiya Jin and Riru. I must own this, but won’t be back to Japan until next summer. Yuri and food is the future I want.

 

Yuri Events

I’m pleased to announce that my panel was accepted to the next Mechademia conference in Kyoto, May 29-June 1, 2020! I’m pretty stoked (and nervous as heck) about this. I’ll be joined by James Welker and Verena Maser, as we talk about Yuri crossing borders. That will be the perfect endcap to any 100 Years of Yuri festivities and a whole new challenge for me, as I have never before presented at an academic conference.

 

Yuri Visual Novel

Studio Élan is teasing a new story with this “news report.” So far I’ve really felt that their work is worth taking a look at. I wish I like VNs more than I do, because theirs are really well done. Keep your eyes peeled for a new Yuri VN from them in days to come.

 

Yuri Light Novels

A hashtag has appeared on JP Twitter – Make Yuri Light Novels Popular #ラノベの百合流行れ which I find really fantastic, because it really shows what we’re struggling with in regards to Yuri content. Many of the LNs suggested are, frankly, terrible, often with the most tenuous connection to Yuri. ^_^; But at least I learned about  Hito no Jidai ha Owatta Keredo, Soredemo Onaka ha Herimaasuka? (ヒトの時代は終わったけれど、それでもお腹は減りますか?) in which they eat tank meat and poisonous mushrooms. Is it Yuri? I doubt it, but I might read it anyway. ^_^ I’m reading an LN right now that is so utterly dreadful I doubt I’ll be able to fully describe how limited it supposes the imaginations of it readers are.  In any case the hashtag has a lot of leads if LNs are your boom. Thanks to Frog-kun for the heads up on this!

 

Other News

For a limited time only, 25% off the ‘100 Years of Yuri’ t-shirt design on the Yuricon Store. Classic tee comes in 16 color choices! Other styles available, too. Use the code: OUTFITS25

Via YNN Correspondent, Alice D, Thai Yuri artist Ratana Satis has opened an online store where all her books and goods are now available for purchase! I’ve reviewed several of her works here and think she is exceptionally talented.

Kim Morrison over at ANN had a very good review of Fragtime, which basically said the same thing I said – the anime ignores any of the potential interesting psychological drama for obsession with underwear.

Grab your DVR controls, because Steven Universe Future is premiering tonight at 8PM Eastern US time on Cartoon Network! (I still owe you a review of the Movie, too.) Check out this promo video on Youtube.

 

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! Write me with any questions you have, and I’ll do my best to answer them on my YNN podcast, when I revive it this winter!

The Rose of Versailles Manga, Volume 1 (English)

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We are experiencing technical difficulties right now on the site and are trying to figure out how to address them. We thank you you for your patience in the meantime.

The Rose of Versailles, Volume 1 is a definitive edition of Riyoko Ikeda’s magnum opus. I say this with absolute conviction in and knowledge of the amount of work – and love – that went into it’s making. 

Oscar François de Jarjeyes is a young noblewoman raised as a son by her father. As commander of Marie Antoinette’s palace guard, Oscar is brought face-to-face with the luxury of King Louis XVI’s court at Versailles. Joined by her servant André, Oscar is privy to the intrigue and deceit of France’s last great royal regime.

I am quoting the editorial slug for this book because I wrote it in the first place and I think it stands as a perfectly fine synopsis. ^_^

Volume 1 begins at the beginning, with the births of three of the main players in our drama, Hans Axel Von Fersen in Sweden,  Oscar François De Jarjayes in France and Royal Highness Marie Antoinette Josèphe Jeanne de Lorraine D’Autriche, in Austria, known to her family as Maria Antonia and to history as Marie Antoinette, Queen of France.

The story takes us through Oscar and Maria’s childhoods, through the moment their lives converge upon Maria’s arrival in France to marry Louis-Auguste Bourbon, the Dauphin of France all the way to Fersen’s confession to Oscar of his love for Marie and Oscar’s patronage of Rosalie Lamorliére, an orphaned Parisian girl. It’s 498 pages of high drama. And, for the first time ever, color pages have been restored to their original chapters, as they were seen in the original magazine run. (For those of you wondering why there was a such a long delay between the license and the printing, finding good quality versions of these images was among the many things the publisher needed to do. The original magazine files were no longer available through the Japanese publisher. And all of the placement had to be approved by the creator. )

The book itself is gorgeous. Hardcover, with raised red and gold lettering, and a truly brilliant cover design by Andy Tsang. The only touch it is missing is gilt-edging, but I guessed (and the publisher has confirmed) that that would have pushed the cost per book up significantly. Still… it would have looked sweet.

The biggest surprise to me, having never read the entirety of the story before editing it, was how much less decent a person General De Jarjayes is in the manga than the anime.

As I edited the book, I kept capturing Oscar’s face from various panels. The end result is a fantastic short version of her evolution as a character. ^_^ Here she is at the beginning and the end of Volume 1.

The art is very of its time, the story more compelling for the characters we meet and begin to care about. Translation was done with painstaking research, and I sure as heck did my best with the editing!

If ever you have thought that you want to buy the kind of book that will be with us 40 years later and still be as timely and meaningful…this is that book.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 9
Characters – 9
Service – Uhhhh, Oscar in a uniform is service, so 6
Yuri – 1 for the court scenes, 2 for Rosalie

Overall – 9

The Rose of Versailles is a remarkably accurate telling of a true story from the perspective of a wholly fictitious character. It is also disturbingly timely as we move inexorably towards a similar climax here in the USA and, based on other protests we’re seeing globally, we can be pretty sure which way the cannons will point.


Yuri Manga: Yuri Bear Storm, Volume 2 (English)

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We met Kureha, a human surrounded by bears, and Gingko, the bear princess with whom she falls in love in Volume 1.

In Volume 2 of Yuri Bear Storm, what is already a confusing story, takes on extra layers of obfuscation as Lulu, another bear in love with Gingko, shows up. The three of them end up living together, and we begin to learn that Gingko and Kureha are linked by a long list of connections, not the least of which is that their mothers, and Yurika, the school principal, were apparently lovers in the past.

While every piece of the plot is presented as a “Once upon a time” fairytale, none of those pieces seem to fit together, quite, although they clearly belong to the same puzzle. By the end of volume 2, we can see that Gingko and Kureha are bound by fate, but how, exactly and what that fate is, are seen from two sides of a one-way mirror. Each girl knows the other is there, but they can’t quite see….

And added to the equation is the appearance of Bear Witch Sumika, (Kureha’s lover from the anime.) She appears to know something about Kureha that the girl doesn’t know about herself. What that is, we might learn, but equally, we might not, in this Ikuhara Kunihiko story, stamped all over with the seal of a lily, but frequently without plot threads that connect.

I really love this manga for Morishima Akiko’s art, and the cognitive dissonance between her cherubic characters and the significant psychological (and, occasionally, physical) violence of the story. These are the cutest bears disemboweling humans you’ll ever see.

Translator Katie McLendon does heroic work making this story make as sense as it possibly can, while the entire Tokyopop team does a fine job of giving this book the feel and finish it deserves.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 7
Characters – 8 We get more Yurika!
Yuri – 8
Service – 5

Overall – 8

For an adorable fairytale about multiple three-person relationships, death, destruction loss and love, Yuri Bear Storm is a pretty amazing (if not “good”) story.

Yuri Anime: Bloom Into You Premium Box Set, Disk 1 (English)

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Welp, I’m convinced. For once in my entire life, I feel completely justified in buying a premium box set Blu-Ray edition of anything. Sentai Filmworks’ Bloom Into You Premium Box Set was totally worth the money I paid for it.

Bloom Into You is based on the manga of the same name by Nakatani Nio, which is available in English from Seven Seas. The story follows first-year highschooler Koito Yuu as she becomes involved in Student Council activities and involved in an intense and sometimes confusing relationship with the Student Council President, Nanami Touko.

Yuu becomes interested in Touko initially over a perceived shared inability/unwillingness/lack of desire in regards to romance, but almost immediately Touko confesses that she has fallen in love with Yuu. How Yuu feels about Touko is the main part of the story, but by no means is it the only thing going on.  Council Vice President Sayaka has her own feelings about Touko to deal with.

You may remember I spoke to the fine folks at Sentai Filmworks at AnimeNYC 2019. We had a terrific conversation and while I was there, I bought this for myself as a present. When Bloom Into You anime streamed on HIDIVE last winter, I subscribed just to be able to watch it. And generally, I found it to be worth it, with a few small exceptions. Those exceptions became relevant once again…as they have, very unusually, been addressed.

It was inexplicable to me that the animation for the scene in which Touko confesses to Yuu be so seriously lacking. This moment, which comes early on, is one of two key scenes of the entire first disk. For it to have been so flat and lifeless was intolerable. Imagine my surprise then, when that scene was done beautifully for this disk. I was beginning to think I had imagined it, but an episode or two later, when Yuu reminisces about the moment, the flashback was not corrected and it was, as I had remembered, cheaply done. It was gratifying to see both the scene fixed and that my memory in this regard was not wrong. ^_^

The higher definition visuals also mean the backgrounds look breathtakingly detailed and if the character animation had not been improved it would have made them look just that much worse. There are still scenes that distinctly look like the B-Team did the art, sometimes, merely an angle or a part of a scene, and it can be a little bit disconcerting. But overall the art is much improved. So that all gets a big thumbs up from me.

The second change of note was the eyes. We spend a *lot* of time in hyper close-up in anime these days, which is really just a waste, since eyes are rarely animated that well. In this anime in particular I remember bitching about the eyes being so oddly drawn. That too has been corrected for the Blu-ray. We still spend way too much time staring at eyeballs, but at least they look better.

Disk 1 contains episodes 1-9 of this 13 episode series, in dub and sub. I have not yet watched the dub, but plan on doing so for Disk 2. Disk 1 contains the episode where Miyako tags Sayaka, she confides in the older woman and we get insighte into the VP of the Student Council. I wanted to watch that in original, before I gave the American VA a chance. ^_^

But what really makes this set stand out are the physical extras.

To begin with, the box the set comes in is nice enough, although I have always felt that on their own collector’s boxes are not worth a jacked up price. What sets this set apart is that it has a pleasant assortment of physical extras. The physical extras include a booklet of storyboards for the OP and ED, an attractive booklet of key animation scenes, character references, interviews with staff and cast. It’s a book I actually want to read. Extras include some double-sided art cards, the script for the Student Council Play and Yuu’s older sister’s cheesecake recipe, which I will be making this year for my wife’s family Christmas get-together, in the interest of a complete review. I’ll let you know how it goes. ^_^ Both the recipe and the DVD come in an inner box with series art.

Ratings:

Art – 9 Visibly better when its better!
Story – 8
Characters – 9
Service – 3 especially towards the end as Touko is more aggressive physically
Yuri – 9

Overall – 9

A really nice variety of physical extras, sub and dub of an anime series that improves upon the manga in a number of ways and a better visual experience over the streaming version, all of which justify putting this set on your wish list!

Yuri Comic: ROADQUEEN: Eternal Roadtrip to Love, Guest Review by Mercedez C

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It is my very great pleasure today to welcome back guest reviewer Mercedez C, with a look at a book that I think a lot of you will really like! Guest reviews like this are made possible by our Okazu Patrons! Thank you for your support of Yuri reviews, news and interviews!

Mira Ong Chua’s Roadqueens first debuted as a one-shot comic in 2016. Two years later in late 2018, it became a full-fledged story and was released in a physical edition thanks to a successful Kickstarter that won the hearts of thousands of eager fans. Unfortunately, at the time, I was unable to back Mira’s campaign, and was left desperately wanting to indulge in what seemed like a really stellar story. Thankfully, Seven Seas Entertainment picked up the rights for graphic novel, re-releasing ROADQUEEN: Eternal Roadtrip to Love on October 8, 2019 in a definitive, quite lovely Complete edition. 

I’m reviewing this re-released edition, which includes a full-color, glossy version of the originally one shot “ROADQUEEN: Girlfriend of the World” and the saucy short story “Passion Marathon” which fills in what happened between the climax of the story and the epilogue.

Roadqueens follows Leo, the hottest heartbreaker at Princess Andromeda Academy with hordes of adoring fangirls focused on one single goal: beating Leo in a road race to their school so they can ask her out on a date. Little do they know, Leo only loves her motorcycle, Bethany, and doesn’t want to ruin her Cool Girl/Lone Wolf persona. She also absolutely doesn’t care about the hearts of her fans at all. In comes mysterious cool girl Vega, who steals Bethany away and challenges Leo to step up her game and prove that she can be a half-way decent lesbian-slash-girlfriend at least once in her life in order to win Bethany back. Fail, and Bethany will be gone forever.

So I’ll admit up front, the plot is pretty straightforward, leaning on tried and true tropes of Yuri: we’ve got a very butch Bifauxnen, fake dating, a Ferris wheel date, and biker babes to name a few. One of my favorite tropes -”childhood friends”-appears as a crucial plot element, though I’ll admit that this kind of caught me off guard because it felt like it was dropped into the story without any prior foreshadowing.

Mira’s art also makes the plot shine: their retro style harkens back to 1990s manga, and is clearly a love letter to dozens of series that Yuri fans worldwide hold near and dear to their hearts. Naturally, this extends to our two main characters, Leo and Vega, who had really nice designs that I quite liked, and that definitely made me dozens of sapphic couples with similar dynamics. I particularly liked Mira’s use of light and shadow throughout the volume: both were quite well done, lending a lot of atmosphere when the plot slowed down for a transitions or pivotal moments.

Speaking of our main characters, Leo is very… unlikable. I genuinely don’t think I started to like her until a good way into the first third of the story, and even then, I still found myself preferring Vega over Leo. I left the story ultimately liking Leo, but did feel a bit of whiplash: she starts off incredibly callous and quite rude, and at times, is quite frankly just mean. If I’m honest, Vega isn’t much better at the beginning either: she barges in to Leo’s life, quite cruelly -and without explanation- takes her bike and is quite brusque, though I think that by the end of the story, Vega’s actions are much easier to justify than Leo’s are. 

Truthfully, I think that anyone well versed in Yuri will see the climax as pretty obvious: Leo and Vega will fall for each other, and Bethany the Motorcycle will become their motorcycle. Roadqueen isn’t doing a lot of new things, but honestly, it’s like having cake: enjoyable and satisfying. While not the revolutionary work that I saw a lot of fans praising it as, it’s by no means a bad work: in fact, I’ll probably reread Roadqueen this week.

With snappy writing and hilarious, laugh-out-loud comedy beats and a plot that feels like treading familiar ground, it’s easy enough to overlook the fact that you know how Roadqueen will end and just enjoy the wild ride. I can’t wait to see what Mira Ong Chua creates next!

Ratings: 

Art – 8 especially for the color pages, which look really good and make you wish the entire comic was in color
Story – 7
Characters – 6 
Service – 6
Yuri – 10 This is a series all about girls loving girls and girls love girls who also love motorcycles and is very clearly queer and sapphic
Motorcycles – 10

Overall – 8

I think that Roadqueens offers something for everyone, though veterans of the Yuri genre -notably, fans of Revolutionary Girl Utena, Sailor Moon or even Kill la Kill– might find this fast paced road race leaving them wanting. Still, give it a read and see what you think: this one-volume story might surprise you. 

You can find more of Mira Ong Chua’s content on her website miraongchua.com.

Erica here: Thank you so much Mercedez! I know that there’s a lot to like in this book for fans of classic Yuri manga and anime series. Hopefully we’ll see new original work from Mira Ong Chua in the future.

Yuri Manga: Yagate Kimi ni Naru, Volume 8 (やがて君になる)

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Since I cracked open the fantastic Bloom Into You Premium Box Set earlier this week, and plan on finishing it up tomorrow (except for the cheesecake, which will have to wait a few weeks) I figured I had better just bite the bullet and wrap it all up in one go. So here we are with Yagate Kimi ni Naru, Volume 8 (やがて君になる) in our hands, ready to say farewell to this series in Japanese.

Volume 7 (which will be available in English in April 2020) left us on the cusp of a major change for Yuu and Touko. A major change that had been telegraphed for many volumes, so surely no one will be surprised. After this massive change in their relationship, the narrative shifts entirely from a story about young people struggling with who they might be to one about learning to be comfortable with who they are. To do this, some of you will have to let go of who you thought they were. This bring us to the creation of a relationship in which both Yuu and Touko had to figure out what they wanted for themselves.

Time marches on and the story skips two years into the future to end in what is an extended final chapter. Yuu visits her school once again, this time to watch her successors in the Student Council perform their play. And to catch up with everyone for a brief moment. Sayaka, Yuu and Touko have one last moment together in which the punchline of the yet-to-be-released third Sayaka novel is spoiled…and I’m perfectly okay with it. ^_^ It’s not like that was any less obvious than the end of this series. In a Yuri story, it doesn’t matter how many obstacles exist, we kind of have to realize that we’re headed to an inevitable conclusion.

The conclusion to this story may have been inevitable and, if we’re honest, a bit predictable, but it is nonetheless a nice ending and one that gives fans of the series plenty of room into which they can write their own desires. What conversations did Yuu and Touko have about identity and gender and sexuality and sex in those two years? We’ll never know, so feel free to tell the story you need to tell to make it work for you.

Ratings:

Art – 9
Story – 9
Characters  – 10
Service – There is a sex scene. Whether you consider that service or not is entirely up to you.
Yuri – 10

Overall – 9

In the end, I am once again staring at the title, wondering if we’ve all been played for fools. Maybe  every single character had someone they thought they had to become in order for things to work. Or, maybe Yuu was never the protagonist and we’ve been watching her in a supporting role all along to Touko’s journey to become, then surpass, then let go of her, sister. Or maybe the title had no specific connection at all and we were left, like the characters themselves, to struggle to find meaning.

We already know there will be a few “curtain call” projects for this series. Artbook, stage play reprise, the third Sayaka novel, and a series of LINE stamps have been planned. The first novel, Bloom Into You: Regarding Saeki Sayaka is available for pre-order from Seven Seas, so we’ll be  talking about this series still for some time to come. But, in the meantime, we’ll tip our hat in thanks to Nakatani-sensei and wait to see if there’s something next.

Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – December 14, 2019

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Yuri Manga

We have some new items on the Yuricon Store! (One of my stretch goals for Okazu in the future is to hire someone to help me keep up on this. There is *so* much Yuri coming out now, I can barely manage it. ^_^)

Tsurezure Biyori, Volume 3 (徒然日和), the final volume of this pleasant series of 4 girls living their lives.

Mizuno to Chayama, Volume 1 ( 水野と茶山)  by Nishio Yuhta, creator of After Hours, which is a small-town Yuri Romeo and Juliet of a sort.

In Tsukiatte Agetemo Iikana, Volume 3,  (付き合ってあげてもいいかな), Miwa and Saeko continue to work on building a relationship with opposing personalities.

Just yesterday Seven Seas announced the license of Hayama-sensei to Terano-sensei ha Tsukiatteiru as The Gym Teacher and the School Nurse Are Dating! which is slated for a September 2020 release.

In honor of the second volume of Mikanuji’s Fuzoroi no Renri manga ( here’s my review of Volume 1) being released, Fuchigami Mai and Aiba Aina have recorded a voiced promotional video. Check out Comic Natalie to see it. It’s quite nice.

Creator of Sasamekikoto/Whispered Words, Ikeda Takashi will be starting a new Yuri manga on Comic Boost online in January. Yuri Navi has the report on Futari ha Daitai Konna Kanji (ふたりはだいたいこんなかんじ).

Mai Okafuji announced the launch of her new Yuri series on Shodensha’s online Manga Jam, Forget Me Not (フォーゲット・ミー・ノット).

Comic Walker has launched SQ Kimi no Namae kara Hajimaru (SQ 君の名前から始まる). What makes this very interesting is that it is a Japanese digital release of a Chinese Yuri comic that ran on Weibo from creator 壇九 (TANJIU). I think this is very interesting.
 

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Yuri Doujinshi

Lilyka has the official English release of Yuunagi Marbled, a doujinshi put out by Momono Moto, which I reviewed in 2017. This was one of the very first Galette Works publications, which gives me hope that we’ll see more in the future. Lilyka is Digital Manga Publishing’s Yuri doujinshi imprint. When you purchase with them, you are given multiple formats to choose from for your download of the file.

 

Yuri Anime

Via Senior YNN Correspondent Eric P, Sentai Filmworks has picked up the Maria Watches Over Us Complete Collection  on Blu-ray which includes all 4 seasons of the anime and all the shorts. The set is up for pre-order! If you missed getting this series from RightStuf, this is a great chance to have it all in one streamlined set.

 

Yuri Game

Via translator Meru on Twitter, SukeraSomero, the English-language arm of SukeraSparo announced a new Yuri Game – OshiRabu: Waifus Over Husbandos. As you might expect, I will not be playing this, so if you do and would like to do a review for Okazu, please feel free to contact us!

 

Other News

@animaltextures on Twitter posted a really interesting thread about Rune Naitō, one of the pioneers of “kawaii” art and animal mascots in Japan who was also an artist for the gay magazine Barazoku.

Mary Borsellino took on the topic of happy endingd in queer lit and why they are so important for Writers Victoria. In Defence of Happy Endings is 60% introspection and 40% extrapolation and worth a gander.

On Anime Feminist, Kris Avila writes about something I have attempted to address here multiple times. Predictably, the comments about my comment make the wrong point. The author prefaces this very excellent article with a supposition that is – only the face of it – incorrect. They then ignore that supposition. When I pointed it out, people tell me that that is not relevant, which is absolutely true, only, I’m not the one who said it. Avila did. Sheesh.  ^_^ Anyway, aside from that one phrase,“Queering” Heteronormativity: Biological essentialism in genderbending manga is a very good read.

 

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