Comic Yuri Hime, September 2020 (コミック百合姫2020年9月号)

August 27th, 2020

This cover wins. It is, in a lifetime of reading comics and decades of reading Yuri manga, my favorite cover of any Yuri manga ever. The foldout cover, with art by Rolua, is the wholly goth image of an angel with a drippy gold halo and black feathered wings, holding a woman to her chest, the credits and title of the magazine visualized as tattoos across her arms and back. Two thumbs up from me. Animate apparently included a postcard of the full picture with purchase of this issue.

Comic Yuri Hime September 2020 (コミック百合姫2020年9月号) is a very good issue for me. Individual stories were good, and overall it’s a pretty solid volume. But I really wanted to review it this week, because Seven Seas re-announced the Light Novel for I’m in Love with the Villainess and since the manga is running in this magazine, I felt extra motivated. ^_^

This volume starts off with the once-again popular “lesbian sex worker helps a woman get over her nervousness about sex, “with the addition of secondary plot about Asumi’s first love clearly being a sex worker as well. Gosh, I wonder how that will work out?

Takeshima Eku’s “Sasayakouyouni Koi wo Utau” was adorable for what it didn’t do as much as what it did. Yori looks up what to do on a date and, for once, we are not obliged to presume that what she found was nothing but porn. Phew! Her choices of behaviors, the ratings for them, and her honesty with her new girlfriend, was fun and refreshing,

“Watashi no Oshi ha Akujaku Reijou,” which is headed our way, as per the Seven Seas announcement above, remains goofy with the second “high class manners” contest I have now encountered in a GL Bunko. ^_^ Protagonist Oohashi Rei, having woken up in the world of her favorite otome game, finds herself challenged by her love interest, the game villainess, Claire-sama. But. Rei is familiar with the world from having played the game so long and is able to best her challenger in a series of contests that included schoolwork, magical skill and a test of refined manners at the table.

I don’t know where “Kudan Folklore” is likely to take me, but so far, I’m kind of into this apparently dark, but so far mostly unformed urban folklore kind of gothy ghost thing with a reasonably smart and confident lead. More importantly, it was the first time I’ve seen the phrase “mochi ha mochiya” and had just read a great thread on it on translator Jocelyne Allen’s Twitter (which was mostly around how Google will not take the place of a real translator any time soon.) It means, something like if you want mochi, you go to a mochi shop…in other words, go to the right place/people for the right thing.

I will now formally admit that I adore Osawa Yayoi’s  “Hello, Melancholic!” and while Minato faces her own fears, I’m all for her and Hibiki figuring out what they mean to each other.

“Watashi no Yuri ha Oshigoto desu!” is clearly winding down. The staff of Liebe cafe ask Hime and Mitsuki to sit down and have it out between them, but the conclusion isn’t conclusive.

It was lovely that Saki’s sister was all for Saki and Asuka being happy together, rather than a tired jealous-little-sister stereotype in “Hayama-sensei to Terano-sensei ha Tsuskiatteiru.” This made the third or fourth story where a tedious stereotype was just left behind and it strongly affected my overall feeling about this issue.

mintaro’s “Pochi Climb” limps to an end and I feel nothing. It never really seemed to know who it was for. It wasn’t a sport manga, it wasn’t a romance, it was just an idea that never gelled.

I know it’ll end eventually, but I’d be thrilled if “Kaketa Tsuki to Donuts” by Usui Shio just went on forever. It doesn’t even have to have conflicts, just let’s sit back and watch people figure out stuff in a gentle Jousei manga style.

Inui Ayu’s autobiographical work just slides along one cute interaction at a time. Along with Usui’s story, these are the best way for me to end this issue. ^_^

As always there are other stories I did read and others I did not in this issue and hopefully, you’ll find something to enjoy yourself. You can buy this in print from Amazon JP, or digitally on JP Kindle and Global Bookwalker.

Ratings:

Overall – 9

What pushed this volume up in rating was a refreshing lack of tiresome, old-fashioned tropes just not being used. It’s super past time we have non-bratty little sisters and protagonists who are smart and athletic actually being confident, instead of emotionally tortured wrecks, and supportive friends and lovers, instead of pointless miscommunication. What a relief!

4 Responses

  1. Super says:

    “This volume starts off with the once-again popular “lesbian sex worker helps a woman get over her nervousness about sex, “with the addition of secondary plot about Asumi’s first love clearly being a sex worker as well. Gosh, I wonder how that will work out?”

    I don’t know how common it is, but this is the third or fourth time I’ve heard of this. Not to mention a few bisexual stories where the female lead began have sex with/dating another woman due to her inexperience and fears in straight relationships. Does it have to do with something in real life?

  2. Super says:

    P.S The cover is really amazing this time, I totally agree with you. Could you tell me who is illustrating the magazine this time?

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