Archive for 2023


Comic Yuri Hime, September 2023 (コミック百合姫2023年9月号)

August 28th, 2023

We look up from below as young woman cries large tears, in front of a cloudy, dark sky.When I read last month’s issue, I had the feeling that the cover story this month would shift away from smiles and color and…bingo!, so it has. This is the teenager-est cover writing I have ever read, nice work mebachi-sensei.  The tears here are from the unbearble heaviness of being, rather than any specific circumstance; the awareness of the passing of time, the feelings of joy and loss.

And so we arrive at Comic Yuri Hime, September 2023 (コミック百合姫2023年9月号) and I am, for the briefest of moments, caught up. ^_^

The long-awaited climax to the Battle of the Bands in Takeshima Eku’s “Sasayakuyouni Koi Wo Utau” was pretty much the satisfying, wholesome and sweet ending we were all hoping for.

And it looks like Sumika has come to the same conclusion I have about Kanako in Miman’s “Watashi no Yuri ha Oshigoto Desu!”. She can care for her, and be affectionate, but there will have to be limits. The two schwestern continue their honest discussion and I think (I hope) this is the best possible outcome for them.

“Shikabane Shoujo to Ai ga Omoi Seikishi” brings our zombie protagonist and her holy knight onee-sama back to the school where they embark on their first task…to save a bunch of chickens. Which they do. And the chickens are very grateful.

“Watashi no Oshi ha Akuyaku Reijou.” has stepped back into Rae’s past life…the painful first time Oohashi Rei fell in love. We will one day feel sympathy for Misaki, but she is not a likable character. This is followed by Lene and Rae solving the problem of how to get Claire to eat and enjoy carrots in “Watashi no Oshi ha Akuyaku Reijou. Maid Kitchen”

“Kiraware Majoreijo to Dansou Ouji no Konyaku”  by Chimmi Chiruha has a fine set up and some strong characters, but will this story of a young woman affianced to the princess who dresses like a prince go anywhere? Based on this chapter…no. They’ve already defanged the antagonist.

I am angrier about “Kimi to Shiranai Natsu ni Naru” than I have been about just about anything in ages. What the actual fuck was that? Oh hey, everyone, just give up your dreams, suck it up and go back and be part of the rat race? What a waste of fantastic premise and art. I hope this was not what Keyyang wanted because it sure wasn’t what I needed.

If you have ever wanted to read a story about a high schooler and a really big alien woman, “Choujin Uchyuu Yori Ai Wo Komete” has you covered. Overtones of Rose from Steven Universe all over it.

We pick up a third party member (who is inherently untrustworthy) in “Garan no Hime.” Future betrayal is imminent!

And it seems that most of the 18+ content has fallen to the end section of the magazine.

 

Ratings:

Overall – 8

Other than the fact that “Kimi to Shiranai Natsu ni Naru”‘s ending was so awful and angry-making, this was a solid issue. But that was a really awful and angry-making ending and I cannot let it go. Why? Who was that for? UGH.

The October issue hit shelves this month already in Japan!





Otherside Picnic, Volume 8

August 27th, 2023

Otherside Picnic, Volume 8 was a mind-blowing, fabulous “wow.”

In this horror/scifi Yuri series by Iori Miyazawa, there have been two key mysteries; The true nature of the UBL, aka, the Otherside….and Sorawo. Because Sorawo is our narrator and protagonist the story has allowed her the time and space to be unaware that she even is a mystery, or to have any real insight to the mystery that is her.

Volume 8 begins with the mystery of Sorawo. She is, as they say in the biz, an unreliable narrator. Or…is she? We – and Toriko – have assumed as much because surely a person with her past cannot have made it to adulthood without some unaddressed trauma.  One of the deep leitmotifs of this series is communication – or the lack of it. Sorawo doesn’t understand people and isn’t great at understanding herself. This has and will come back again and again in the series. She is as much a mystery to herself as she is to anyone else. And having confronted the inescapable fact that she is – probably for the first time in her life – loved unconditionally – Sorawo wanders around her own small, but growing, group of confidants order to find the answer in herself…as she has always done for answers about the Otherside. This allows the narrative to revisit some old characters, meet some new ones, to clear up old puzzles and create new ones.

 We meet one of Sorawo’s classmates – a representative of normality – and Sorawo finds some assistance in that quarter. Reality has never been Sorawo’s ally before and it opens up new possibilities.  She speaks to Natsume and they finally communicate past the huge gap in understanding between them. This is an amusing scene, but unlike my esteemed colleague Sean Gaffney who laughed at Natsume’s description of Sorawo as a “raging lesbian,” I found it far more amusing that Natsume’s response to Sorawo’s cluelessness (denial?) about Toriko was to flatly respond, “That pisses me off.” I mean… I feel ya Natsume. ^_^ Of course Sorawo darkens Kozakura’s doorstep once again and again, Kozakura spoke like the adult she is supposed to be. It feels like her character, having been abandoned a few volumes ago, is being reformed as the grown-up in the room. I like it.

Sorawo meets and has an experience with a new character, Tsuji, a woman who was clearly written for me, personally. ^_^ I look forward to whatever develops with this fascinating new character.

All of this peripatetic musing must come to an end and in this series, what precipitates that end is..terror. Sorawo at last comes face to that which she fears most – and finds the will to confront it. It’s time to talk to Toriko.

What we get, then, is one of the most extraordinary explorations of physical, emotional and psychic boundaries that I have ever read. Toriko and Sorawo do not find a satisfying physical relationship on our plane. It’s only when they accept that they are now of the Otherside and the Otherside is of them that they find one another.  This was an outstanding scene that was consistent with the characters as we know them, the series’ premise as it has been given to us, and the deeper themes of communication and the mystery of both the Otherside and Sorawo.

The arc that has been building since Volume 5 has come to an incredible climax (and yeah, put every possible spin on that word) but the journey is not over. What will this pair find in the Otherside or themselves next time? I have no idea, but I am absolutely tuning in and finding out, since the addition of a new character leads one to assume a next volume.  ^_^

Ratings:

Story – 10
Character – 10
Service – Amazingly, not very much. Let’s give it a 3. It’s less “service” and more “grown-up.”
Yuri – 10

Overall – 10

Another outstanding volume, building on the last outstanding volume. Miyazawa-sensei is on top of his form right now and I am perfectly willing to wait a little while to get volumes of this high quality writing.

 





Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – August 26, 2023

August 26th, 2023

In blue silhouette, two women face each other. One wears a fedora and male-styled attire, one is in a dress and heels. Their body language is obscure - they may be dancing, or laughing or fighting. Logo by Mari Kurisato (@wordglass) for Okazu.

Yuri Manga

This year’s Do-Not-Miss release is hitting shelves in just a few weeks! Absolutely grab yourself a copy of The Moon on A Rainy Night, Volume 1 by Kuzushiro, coming out the first week in September. This is an outstanding manga. I just finished Volume 5 last night in Japanese and it’s just getting better and better. I’m going to pound the drum for this series a lot. Please get it. ^_^

Titan Manga has licensed the Burst Angel manga. This is the first time this will be in print since 2008. Alex Mateo has details over at ANN. As I point out in my review of Volume 1 of the Tokyopop release, the manga is somewhat Yurier than the anime. If nothing else, this gives me a chance to revive discussion of Sei-who-is-not-named-Beth. ^_^ I’m hoping for a better reproduction this time around, as the Tokyopop reproduction, lettering and translation were not particularly good. Not that Titan has a great reputation.

Comic Natalie reports that Shimura Takako’s Otona ni Nattemo (up to Volume 9 is out in Japan,) published in English as Even Though We’re Adults, (up to Volume 6 is available in English) will be ending in the October issue of KISS magazine.  I have always been expecting a heart-wrenching ending and, uh, Comic Natalie says that’s what to expect. ^_^;

The Wings magazine official Twitter account announced a new chapter of Kase-san to Yamada this issue and an upcoming new volume. No date or details as of yet. Kase-san’s roommate is going to have to deal with her feelings about Kase-san.

The [Boyish²] Butch×Butch Yuri Anthology[vol.2] Kickstarter has mere hours to go and is less than $2000 away from making the final 5 million yen stretch goal! I know we can do this. If you liked the first volume, you’re gonna love this one, Natsuo-sensei has an international lineup this time with creators from Japan, the USA and Canada.

Joanna Cayanan at ANN has the news that Days of Love at Seagull Villa and NTR creator Kodama Naoko as a new story starting up in Comic Yuri Hime. Kodama-sensei shared the promotional spread from the magazine on Twitter.

 

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Yuri Events

Yuriten is back! On Twitter, Yuriten announced that there will be a Yuriten 2023 exhibition. /flailing Kermit hands of excitement/ Creators are also announced on their thread, including Kuzushiro. I have terrible timing so, the chances of this being the one week I am in Japan is almost nil, but pray for me. ^_^ The main visual illustration this time is by Fly, whose art I love, and photo by Yōnikuruton.

The Yuriten main visual is in two parts. The top image is an illustration by artist Fly, of two young women in white dresses, embracing in front of a field of tall grasses. Below that is a photograph by Yōnikuruton of two women (presumably the same two from the illustration) in a garden, wearing day dresses, leaning in for a kiss.

They have a lovely little promotional video as well. “Tadaima,” it says., “We’re back.”(T_T)

 

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I’m doing a brand new talk on BL & Yuri – and how they have more in common than difference – for Citrus Con tomorrow, Sunday August 27, 2023 online at 2:30 EDT. Registration is free, so I hope you’ll join me.

I’ll also be in Tokyo for December Comitia and planning on scouting grand new Yuri doujinshi I can ask companies to license. ^_^

For those of you hitting Tokyo up in October, Girls Love Fest is taking place on October 29, 2023 back in Asakusa.

 

Yuri & Baihe Anime

Via YNN Correspondent Patricia B, we have a really exciting promotional video to share. This is a preview for the forthcoming Two Adamant Hearts baihe donghua project, based on the novel Clear & Muddy Loss of Love, (泾渭情殇) by Qǐng jūn mò xiào. The PV has English under the closed captioning option. A guardian whose family is killed by the royals, who vows revenge, but cares for the  princess who needs protection…yeah okay, I’m in . ^_^ Storyboards and drafts are on the JWWJ official Youtube channel.

Watashi no Oshi ha Akuyaku Reijou.  Questions and Answers for Rei and Claire ~ Asked in Another World~ ( 私の推しは悪役令嬢。】レイとクレアに一問一答 〜異世界で聞いてみた〜) is a cute animated Q&A about their likes and dislikes on Youtube. We’re getting close to the premiere! No subtitles as of yet, but I expect we’ll get them shortly.

 

By Your Side Birthday Special

There is a little over  a week left to get the By Your Side Birthday Special! As you may remember I was quite ill in s[ring and had to cancel all of my events this year except for those online. I also lost my job. So if you haven’t yet gotten a copy of By Your Side: The First 100 Years of Yuri Anime And Manga,  you have just over a week to order a copy for $20 plus a signed bookplate, with free shipping for those of you in the Lower 48 of the US. If you are outside that area, contact me and we will definitely work something out.

 

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How Do We Relationship Volume 9, Guest Review by Matt Marcus

August 23rd, 2023

A woman with short, dark hair looks on with distress as a woman with medium light brown hair put mayonnaise into the dish she's cooking.Matt Marcus is a cohost of various projects on the Pitch Drop Podcast Network, as well as the writer for the blog Oh My God, They Were Bandmates analyzing How Do We Relationship in greater depth.

Last volume, Miwa finally got a new girlfriend, the surly but earnest Tamaki. Meanwhile, Saeko and Yuria are getting along well, their struggles with sex notwithstanding. Now our two leads begin the delicate dance of finding the right distance between them to be respectful to their girlfriends. Oh, and they agree to not let their partners know that they are each other’s ex. Or even that their best friend is also gay.

Really, How Do We Relationship Volume 9 is a Saeko-centric volume, and she really goes through it. She runs into a middle school classmate who cajoles her to go to her Coming of Age Ceremony, which is already a major point of friction between her and her mother. What’s worse is she witnesses Tamaki’s supposedly supportive friends engage in some Light Homophobia. Yuria does what she can to soothe her but she can’t be around all the time, so Saeko is left on her own, wallowing in her rising anger.

I have to continue to hand it to Tamifull that there is some really deft storytelling happening here. All three incidents that Saeko runs into here involve people who are generally good, well-meaning people, but there is just a strain of shittiness to them that is too stark to ignore. Her old classmate sympathizes with her choice to not attend the ceremony because of how hard her experience must have been…but still he takes one look over to Yuria and can’t help but comment “I guess you still swing that way, huh?” Tamaki’s friends are all vocally supportive to her face, but when The Gays aren’t around they say condescending things like, “they could have relationships with men if they want” and “oh, actually it’s noble of them to choose love over society’s acceptance”. Saeko’s mother, as we learned, doesn’t care who she dates so long as she acts a bit more feminine for her sometimes. It sucks. These aren’t people who are so wholly terrible that it would be an easy choice for Saeko to cut them out of her life, but their low-level hostility towards her identity understandably puts her on a hair trigger.

If this were earlier in the series, things would continue to devolve. Instead, a small miracle happens: Saeko runs into Miwa who invites her over for lunch. Miwa admits that its too hard for her to try to keep away from someone she truly cares for, and this gives Saeko the push to finally, finally tell Miwa about middle school. Afterwards, they have a cute snowball fight that is also a “I’m going to caringly tell you why you suck” back-and-forth. Saeko realizes that her fixation on staying away was the wrong idea, that Miwa is a special person to her, just not in the same way that Yuria is.

You know, I tend to shortchange Yuria in these reviews but she really is the MVP of the series so far. Every time Saeko has been struggling with something, she’s always had the right answer. She’s almost too self-actualized. Saeko awkwardly tries to rise to her level of Good Partnering, and there’s something really endearing about that, but none of it would feel right if Yuria wasn’t there. I also realized after the last review that she does share traits with Miwa (mostly romantic inexperience and naivete) in a similar way that I called out between Tamaki and Saeko. So, both girls ended up dating people who echo their ex’s personality, but not to the point of being overt duplications. It’s fantastic, subtle character work.

…That said, I have to give one demerit. Saeko and Yuria have a bit of a breakthrough in their sex life, and while the moment is meant to be a moment of vulnerability finally achieved, the way it articulates does feel a little hinky on consent. Having seen similar moments in other series, I want to chalk this up to cultural differences in the way women are “expected” to express themselves during sex in Japan, but I am frankly not the person to make that judgment. You could make a character argument for the way it is on the page but I feel like the same point would have been made stronger if the dialogue was tweaked to be more clear on consent. I may be making a mountain out of a molehill on this, but my honest reaction was to be a bit disappointed that in a series that generally avoids tropes, this one made it in and slightly soured an otherwise sweet scene.

Meanwhile, Miwa and Tamaki are getting along fine, though–stop me if you heard this before–they are not gelling sexually (“and so…they were both bassists”). It isn’t an intractable problem, but Miwa’s needs are going to be challenged, both because she needs to actually ask for them and also because Tamaki passed the entrance exam for her first choice college and is going to transfer. Aside from the two-faced nature of how Tamaki’s friends talk to her and about her relationship, this volume doesn’t focus on these two all that much.

We do get a chapter from the perspective of Saeko’s mom, and as a recent parent myself (of a little girl, no less), I found it really moving. Being a parent is hard. Things won’t play out like you always imagined they would, and it takes some fortitude to roll with those punches. As I said above, Mrs. Sawatari has got her heart in the right place and is doing her best, despite the friction she causes about Saeko’s lack of femininity. You feel for her, which is a hell of a thing to pull off with a character whose full name we still don’t know.

From a macro-plot perspective, we can still see tendrils of attachment that still entangle our leads: Saeko still has some lingering romantic feelings while Miwa just cannot forget how good the sex was. Now, if we are to believe the end-of-volume “commentary tracks” [SIGH], these would be the avenues that will lead the girls to get back together in the future. I don’t like the idea, frankly. I prefer them as close intimate friends, but the seeds are clearly there for them to get back together down the road.

Regardless, the thrust of this volume is how the girls managed to bridge the awkward distance between them and it’s super satisfying. The scene that’s depicted on the cover of the girls improvising their way through cooking fried rice together and ending up with a fantastic dish that they couldn’t replicate if they tried is a perfect metaphor for their current relationship: it’s some great fucking food.

Art – 9 The art is in its groove, though I’m starting to notice a habit of flipping which sides two characters are on back and forth in some scenes.
Story – 9 The one demerit aside, the story continues to be compelling and satisfying
Characters – 10 The nuance of the characters, even in the secondary cast, continues to impress
Service – 5 The sex is more sensual and plot driving than “servicey” per se, but I’m keeping the score up
Yuri – 10 / LGBTQ – 10 Bumping this up for the non-romantic yuri and the crushingly realistic depiction of bad allyship

Overall – 9 A delicious dish, best served with your closest friend

If you didn’t know already, the series is now being localized and released alongside the biweekly Japanese serialization on the new(ish) VIZ app. Unfortunately, there is an 11 chapter gap in English between the end of this volume and when the simulpub chapters began, and if RightStuf is to be believed, volume 10 won’t come out until late January. Just imagine me sweating profusely every time I see a new chapter up.





Odoriba ni Skirt ga Naru, Volume 3 (踊り場にスカートが鳴る)

August 21st, 2023

Two girls in white Japanese school uniforms with blue sailor collars dance together. One smiles, while the other looks surprised.Like many Yuri fans right now, I long for an action-packed, kick ass sword lesbian thriller. Odoriba ni Skirt ga Naru, Volume 3 (踊り場にスカートが鳴る) by Utatane Yu is none of those things. ^_^ But this slow, yet intensely, burning ballroom dance drama grips me in ways I could never have expected.

Kiki and Michiru have found renewed determination to make the Quadrille. Kiki and Michiru’s positions in the dance no longer strike their peers or team as odd and they have found their way to be the pair they’d like. Of course, Kiki is always going to be made to feel awkward about her height…tall people are. However, this volume, it is Michiru who opens up about her own discomfort when anyone calls her “cute.” An early experience with a creep has left her with a feeling of violation when people use that word. And her desire is to not be small, or “cute,” but in control.

The pressure mounts as the trials arrive. The teacher at summer camp asks everyone this crucial question, “What message are you trying to send to the people watching you dance?” These young women don’t have passions to translate into a tango other than the passion for dancing – so, how do they find their place as a pair? Michiru and Kiki decide to pretend to be lovers, in order to discover the message they want to send.

And the first trial is upon them…but they do not win. As vexing as that is, it brings them closer.  And as they pretend, to be lovers, Michiru realizes that her feeling for Kiki are definitely headed in that direction.

This is the manga I most want to be licensed right now. It’s not flashy like other popular social media-based manga, but I love it and would love for you to be able to read it. The art is lovely, the emotions are relatable and not cloying. And yeah, I want to see Michiru and Kiki kill it in the Quadrille!

Ratings:

Art – 9
Story – 8
Characters – 9
Yuri – 4
Service –  0 Still no and it’s so refreshing and lovely

Overall – 9

I’m so in on this manga. Kiki is her beautiful dress, Michiru in tux and the Quadrille. I cannot wait.