Archive for March, 2018


Maria-sama ga Miteru 4th Season Fandisk (マリア様がみてる 4thシーズン ファンディスク )

March 5th, 2018

I am currently in the middle of doing quite possibly the most dreadful thing any human has to do – going through a dead person’s stuff. You may remember that our dear friend Bruce P. passed away quite suddenly last autumn just before we were supposed to go to Japan with him. As a result, this last trip was bittersweet. We came back home and cannibalized his collection for anime-related items to find new homes for. Which is exactly why I’m working on another set of Lucky Boxes for the end of this month. We have tons of anime and manga, artbooks, Drama CDs, videos and paper goods of all kinds from Bruce, a metric ton of books and doujinshi (I spent three hours weeding my collection down to *only* 8 cartons) from mine AND I’ll be picking new things up in Japan again in a few weeks at the various Yuribu in Tokyo and at the Yuriten Yuri Fair for you. So expect more Lucky Boxes crammed full of massive amounts of stuff and expect a bunch of fun items from Japan in them. 

In the meantime, I’m finding things in Bruce’s collection that I did not ever have a chance to see.  In honor of my friend, I am reading and watching all these things, so I have a memory of him through the item. In today’s case it was the Maria-sama ga Miteru 4th Season Fandisk (マリア様がみてる 4thシーズン ファンディスク ), which he picked up, undoubtedly, in remembrance of his visit to the Maria-sama ga Miteru New Year’s Eve Event in 2009.

The fandisk consists of two disks, one a CD of “Kumori no Glass no Mukou,” the 4th season end theme, written by Oyuki Konno and performed by Kaori Hikita.  The second disk includes a track or two of Kana Ueda and Kugamiya Rie,, the voice actresses for Yumi and Touko, respectively, talking to us from an uncomfortable-looking sofa. This is followed by an extended video clip/anime music video of “Kumori no Glass no Mukou,” with all of Yumi and Touko’s soeur arc covered from the beginning of the season to the end. 

The final track is a series of extended previews of every single episode of the 4th season, many of which – to my horror – I did not remember. I remember individual episodes, and I remember having read the books, but there are whole episodes I cannot recall. 

Ratings:

Overall – 8 I still love this series so much.

I’m appalled at my miso-brain and have instantly declared that I will rewatch the 4th season starting tonight.

Keep your eyes out for a whole new chance to get a ridiculous amount of stuff in Lucky Boxes! It all needs a good home.





Winter Reading: A Whisper of Bones, a Jane Lawless Mystery

March 4th, 2018

Ellen Hart recently was named a Grandmaster of the Mystery Writer’s Association, a very great honor awarded to her by her peers. She’s written 33 novels, 25 of which are the Jane Lawless mysteries. Jane was one of the first out lesbian detective series that shepherded me through my 30s.  Hers was not a a story of  struggling with being closeted, as was Katherine A Forrest’s Kate Delafield, but she was, like Kate, an accomplished adult woman, with a life and friends (and she just happened to be good at solving mysteries.)

I have a soft spot for lesbian mysteries. It was the first genre of lesbian fiction that I could stand to read. Although a remarkable number of the detectives had shitty relationships and drank too much, in the time honored way of detectives everywhere, these were the first lesbians I had ever seen in popular fiction who existed in my world as lesbians. So I was willing to overlook a bunch of tired tropes. Including shitty relationships and alcoholism. ^_^

The last few Jane Lawless books have been a little uneven. I liked The Grave Soul, which I reviewed here in 2015. The beginning was very strong, but it thinned out a bit as the plot wore on. I didn’t review Fever in the Dark because it was a fine beach read, but nothing to hold on to.  But here I am again, this time reviewing her newest Jane Lawless book, A Whisper of Bones, because it did some very good things and some really not-good things.

To begin with, Minneapolis is now firmly lodged in my mind as a hotbed of creepy family mysteries and murder.  Maybe it’s time to take Jane on the road or it might begin to  affect tourism. ^_^

One of the not-good things is that it is now almost wholly implausible that Jane can run a restaurant and be absent so often and for so long. In this novel she literally walks out during a wine tasting at her restaurant at which the vitner is the guest of honor. I find it hard to believe that this could continue more than a short while before it began to take a toll on the well-being of the restaurant.

Another weak point was Jane’s implied incipient alcoholism in the last two books has just disappeared. And, of course she has a shitty relationship. As horrible as it sounds, I was looking forward to the impending death of her shitty girlfriend, but no luck so far.

The final weak point is one of the characters that fans love best, Jane’s friend Cordelia. In 1990, Cordelia, a kind of femle Oscar Wilde, was a delight. In 2018, she’s a tad wearing. Luckily for this book, she’s also given a lighter, more human touch, which made her less a piece of ornate scenery and more of an actual character.

The good things all revolve around the mystery itself. Hart’s got a great talent at creating creepy, moody set pieces that work out completely differently than  a reader could possibly imagine. And it’s that talent makes this book enjoyable. The right people end up happily, the right people don’t and there’s a bonus “you could not possibly have known” thing that feels a bit like the cherry on top. 

Ratings:

Overall – 8

As a fun bit of winter reading without making me (or allowing me) to work too hard at it, A Whisper of Bones is  a good choice to enjoy some light reading about a lesbian private detective surrounded by death, disease and lies.

Thanks very much to the publishing company, St. Martin’ Press, for the review copy!





Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – March 3, 2018

March 3rd, 2018

Yuri Anime

Yesterday on Twitter, the official Asagao to Kase-san anime account announced new cast members and a (squee!) Drama CD with the next manga volume, which will be released in Japan on May 20, Sakura to Kase-san (さくらと加瀬さん。).  Check out ANN’s report for cast details. 

 

Yuri Manga

Seven Seas’ English language edition of My Lesbian Experience With Loneliness won the Best Manga Category at Crunchyroll’s Anime Awards last week. 

Via Comic Natalie, the very exciting news that Kowo Kazuma’s new Yuri comic for Rakuen La Paradis 26 (楽園 Le Paradis) will be a new story continuing from her Yuri Hime comic, Junsui Adolescence!

Galette creator Hamano Ringo’s works from 2012-2017 have been collected into a single volume for the first time as Cotton Candy.

From Ichijinsha we have Miyata Waltz’s Onna no ko Ichiban Yawarakaitokoro (女の子のいちばんやわらかいところ。) and Fusion Product has put out a second Yuri anthology,  Yuri + Kanojo Suki ni Nattemoii? (百合+カノジョ 好きになってもいい?)

MURCIÉLAGO, Volume 5 is out in English and Volume 10 is out in Japanese. Get your psychotic lesbian serial killer on!

Other News

ANN has the scoop on the very important adult items all professionals need – Sailor Moon business card holders. 

Don’t miss your chance to see the final Sailor Moon Musical in US theaters this month! I’ll be at one, you can be sure, even though I am squeezing it in between two trips. ^_^ Check out the theater listings and watch this teaser video to get yourself psyched up. 

 

Become a YNN Correspondent by reporting any Yuri-related news to anilesbocon01 at hotmail dot com with your name and an email I can reply to!

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





Yuri Manga: Galette No. 5 (ガレット No. 5)

March 1st, 2018

Happy 1st Anniversary Galette (ガレット)! With Volume 5, this magazine has hit an important benchmark – one full year of publication. To celebrate their birthday, the folks of Galette are participating in a special multi-creator signing event at the Shosen Book Tower. And, the week after, the magazine is participating in the Yuriten Yuri Fair with a booth. It’s all very exciting. 

Also to celebrate, this fifth issue of Galette has added a long-awaited addition to the roster, Morishima Akiko-sensei with a continuation of her hit series Hanjuku Joshi!

The print volume of this issue includes a Petit Galette insert with Anniversary wishes, and short manga entries.

This was also a damn good volume of Yuri manga.

Takemiya Jin-sensei has a new series.”Anata ha Watashi no Unmei no Hito” with a near-future in which people are expected to find lovers (of either sex) based on whether they are Betas (average) or Alphas (exceptional). But there are also Omegas, one of which our protagonist find herself labeled as. As she hunts around the school for the fabled Alpha she finds, falls for and is roundly dismissed by the Student Council VP. I couldn’t but help remember Zaou Taishi and Eiki Eiki’s manga Renai Idenshi XX (恋愛遺伝子). But I’m gonna trust Takemiya-sensei to handle this better than they did.

The blow away story was Momono Moto and Izumi Kitta’s “Liberty” in which DRAMA happens and for once it piqued my interest. ^_^

I quite liked Nakano Miyahana’s “Junai Entropy” about a girl who is inseparable from twins, but always knows which one is the one she loves.

Lots of color photography, and color art pages, and a color lead page for Takemiya-sensei’s new series. They’ve added some non-black-and white manga pages. AND (yes, i’m gushing a bit here,) there is a credit for the cover design. The art by Pen has been excellent, but now I can thank Blankie at chipco design for the exceptional design work, at last. Excellent work, Blankie-san.

Every issue of this magazine is stronger than the last. I have a wish list of two other creators to be added at least as guests and a short list of “things I’d like to see.” #1 on this list is: Sports Yuri.

Ratings:

Overall – 9

Come on, Galette folks! Gimme a sports Yuri manga series! Please. ^_^