SF Magazine, February 2019, Featuring Yuri (SFマガジン2019年2月号 百合特集)

February 3rd, 2019

Last December the Yuri world thrilled at the announcement that for the first time SF Magazine was going to be publishing an issue featuring Yuri stories. SF Magazine, Featuring Yuri (SFマガジン2019年2月号 百合特集) sold out pretty quickly and had to be reprinted, which is very gratifying.

Before I get into the review, I have to tell you something about myself. When I was very young, I read a lot of science fiction. I mean, massive, metric tons, because I read whatever my Dad read and he was a member of the Science Fiction Book Club (remember that?). So my reading was 98% stuff I absolutely positively should not be reading at that age. ^_^

When I was like 9 or 10 my father told me a version of the story Knock by Frederic Brown. I have a standing bet with myself that all scifi collections I read will begin with some iteration of this story. I have never lost that bet. ^_^

When I hit 13 or 14, I remember my enthusiasm for scifi being ground down by, specifically, short story collections. The Best Science Fiction of /year/ collections were full of so much UGH, that after a couple of years of clones killing their originals and lots of rape and dystopia, all by men and mostly white men, I just got bored. I remember vividly the two stories that were the last straws for me. Of them, the one I blame most was an excruciating story by Stanislaw Lem, the punchline of which was “What do you take me for, a Phool?” at which point I walked away from science fiction for approximately a decade, until I found cyberpunk. Last time I read a scifi short story collection, it was likewise full of ugh, although this time by women. ^_^; My experiences with science fiction short stories have not be overwhelmingly positive. ( SF Novels, otoh, have been better than ever in the last few years!)

I am telling you this so you understand some of my ambivalence about this issue of SF Magazine. The rest of my ambivalence is because imagining stories by science fiction fans that were specifically written to be Yuri, caused me to imagine all sorts of new ugh to be experienced. As you may imagine. 

Well, I won the standing bet, but otherwise, the Yuri in this issue of SF Magazine has been interesting and not ugh at all. Your mileage may, of course, vary, but I found the stories mostly to be sweet and a little sad, rather than creepy or gross.

Following  the first few stories and a manga, is an interview with Comic Yuri Hime Editors in Chief Nakamura and Umezawa. I’m very pleased at their discussion of the heterogeneity of the Yuri genre and was delighted that Umezawa also begins the history of Yuri with Yoshiya Nobuko.

This interview is followed by an interview with Tsukimura Ryoue, with whose work I am wholly unfamiliar, so I look forward to learning something about him when I read the interview. (Edit: It turns out he is the screenplay writer for the anime Noir, among others, so it turns out that I am familiar with some of his work, just not his novels.) I was kind of surprised they didn’t do an interview with Fukami Makoto, since his science fiction often includes lesbians. ^_^

Following this is a series of suggested titles for fans of science fiction and Yuri and, whether we consider a series in this list “Yuri” or not fills many of the posts here on Okazu. 

The magazine continues from there with what seems to be more general non-Yuri science fiction. What I have read so far has been quite decent.

Ratings:

Overall – 8

Overall a surprisingly pleasant experience with little that I would call exploitative,. and a lot that I would consider explorative. The February issue of SF magazine has been a fine experience with science fiction short stories featuring Yuri.  ^_^

14 Responses

  1. Andrew says:

    I’ve always felt tempted by those best of SF short story collections on the library shelves. Reading this post it seems like maybe I dodged a bullet never having time for one.

    • Your mileage may vary, of course! Remember I was pretty young, and have always found dystopian renderings distasteful. I’m of the generation who grew up on Star Trek’s more hopeful look at the future and was looking forward to more of that, less clones killing their originals.

      • Super says:

        Well, in my generation, SF was basically a stylish high-tech with a combination of Hollywood action films like Starship Troopers or Robocop and Marvel comics like X Men. I wonder if there is something similar in the collection.

  2. Super says:

    “It turns out he is the screenplay writer for the anime Noir”

    Well, that explains why the Bee Train dedicated separately booklet’s part to interpreting the show as the yuri, lol. However, against the background of the other two shows, this title looks rather restrained.

    • They were being asked about it a lot at the time, too, I remember.

      • Super says:

        Too? Strangely, if Noir could still pass as ambiguous and the authors openly said that it depends on the desire of the viewer, then it always seemed to me that Madlax and El-Hazard were almost openly positioned as at least a very yuri-ish show. To the extent that the recent near-yuri Izetta even openly made references to the latter.

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