Yuri Shinjyu ~ Nekomedō Kokoro Tan (百合心中~猫目堂ココロ譚)

June 5th, 2020

Last month, as I dug through Bruce’s collection for books to pack into Lucky Boxes, I found a book that I remembered reading, but had never reviewed.

One of the early names among Yuri Hime contributors was Shinonome Mizuo. I’ve review a number of their titles here. Especially notable among them was the ongoing, media-hopping tale Hatsukoi Shimai, which finally wrapped up in one of the most satisfying Drama CDs I’d ever listened to. But shortly after, Shinonime-sensei left Yuri Hime (or was left ) and I haven’t heard the name in a while. In actual fact, Shinonome-sensei is still creating – their current work, Hakoniwa Salome (箱庭のサロメ) is being serialized on Amazon JP Kindle. Sadly it is not available on Global Bookwalker, so I haven’t read it. Nor is today’s manga available on Global Bookwalker, although Hatsukoi Shimai is. So why am I reviewing it? In part, because why not? ^_^

Yuri Shinjyu ~ Nekomedou Kokoro Tan (百合心中~猫目堂ココロ譚) is a collection of short stories that ran in Yuri Hime, Comic Yuri Hime‘s predecessor, each featuring a couple who has not managed to find happiness together for some reason. One of the couple follows a black cat to the Nekomedou Kokoro Tan, a building that houses a flamboyantly dressed girl and a black cat, Over tea, for no apparent reason, the girl will pour her heart out and having done so, will return to her lover and they will find happiness. Apparently we all need therapy with a stranger over tea.  Thinking about it, I guess that’s not that far off, sometimes. Having someone to listen to is pretty powerful.

When I read this book back in 2009, I was on the cusp of having utterly burnt out on moe art, characters of no age, no queer identity and no depth. This book flew under a line that has shifted multiple times in the 11 years since. And, upon re-read, I think I gave it a raw deal originally.

The characters here are a little facile, yes, but this is a collection of one-shots and at least a couple of pages of each have to be dedicated to following the black cat and learning that one has arrived at Nekomedou Kokoro Tan, which allows even fewer pages for the conflict to be explained and then resolved. The very first story in fact deals with bullying at school because the protagonist is perceived as gay, before she has a chance to come to grips with herself at all. Further stories address jealousy and  violence. Yes, every story has a happy ending, but for a 2000s Yuri collection, this one holds up pretty well.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Stories – 8
Characters – 8
Service – 5 There is a bit, some nipple-less nudity and implied violence, sometimes contemporaneously
Yuri – 8

Overall – 8

So, 11 years too late for print, but maybe Ichijinsha might make this book available digitally, if we ask nicely.

Leave a Reply