Archive for 2023


Tsukuritai Onna to Tabetai Onna, Volume 3 (作りたい女と食べたい女)

January 8th, 2023

On a white cover, two women look at one another as they shop for groceries. The taller of the two, a large woman with black hair in a ponytail, wearing a light grey sweatshirt and a black pillow jacket, pushes a shopping cart filled with food. The shorter woman, with reddish-brown medium-length hair, wear a black tutleneck seater and print pattern skirt, with a stylish grey coat. She holds a large package of meat. Green outlined letters read "Tsukuritai Onna to Tabetai Onna" in Japanese 作りたい女と食べたい女. A large white number 3 sits in the middle of the cover. In black letters across the top it shows the creator's name, Yuzaki Sakaomi, in Japanese ゆざき さかおみ.In Volume 1, we met Nomoto Yuki, a contractor in an office. She finds society’s expectations for women confining and stress-cooks to relax. We then met Kasuga-san, her neighbor two doors over, a large woman with a physically strenuous job who eats with gusto. They bond over the making and eating of food. In Volume 2, Nomoto comes to realize that she’s probably never been interested in boys, and is definitely interested in Kasuga. They enjoy each other’s company and the food they make and share.

Tsukuritai Onna to Tabetai Onna, Volume 3 (作りたい女と食べたい女) is everything I could have ever asked for. This is an excellent volume of this consistently excellent series.

To begin with, there are two Content Warnings in this volume, one for eating disorder-food phobia and one for parental verbal abuse.

Nomoto and Kasuga have an empty apartment between them. In this volume they meet and quickly adopt their new neighbor. Nagumo-san is young, very nervous and has a very fraught and uncomfortable history with food. Nomoto and Kasuga accept Nagumo immediately without demands that Nagumo conform to any behavior. When Nagumo offers up a given name, Sena, we learn that Kasuga’s given name is Totoko. Nagumo immediately refers to them as Yuki-chan and Totoko-chan, which turns them red. ^_^

Nomoto is also getting closer with an online friend, Yako. They watch a lesbian movie together online and have snacks, drinks and talk. Yako talks to Nomoto about the spectrum of sexuality – a great conversation, I thought. We learn about Nagumo’s problems with food. And then, we turn towards Kasuga when…her father calls. I don’t want to spoil this scene, not even to summarize, except to say it was magnificent. I’ll scream about it when it comes out in English. ^_^

Yako invites Nomoto, Kasuga, and Nagumo over for a meal, where they make and enjoy naan and a bunch of curies and sauces. Yako gets to see Kasuga’s eating powers for herself. Then they have a sleepover where, again, they discuss the kind of small family trauma that clogs up a childhood. We all have those stories in our hearts, where inequity forced us to accept things that denied us something truer to ourselves.

This volume came with a little extra comic about the work Nomoto puts in to her social media food posts, ^_^

Overall, this volume covers a LOT of territory and does it with skill and sensitivity. There is tremendous power in being seen. I cannot WAIT for you all to read this volume. Volume 1 is out now in English from Yen Press and Volume 2 is headed our way in March. Definitely read this series – it is an outstanding slice-of-life (and bread) story about found family, finding one’s self and sharing delicious food with friends.

Ratings:

Art – 9 Yako and Nagumo give Yuzaki-sensei a chance to ramp up expressions to 11
Story – 10
Characters – 9 (only to give them room to be even more wonderful)
Service – 0  Unless, like Nomoto, you consider watching Kasuga eat “service.”
LGBTQ+ – 10

Overall – 10

OH! And! Valentine’s Day is coming…and yes, Kasuga-san would love to make, give and get chocolates with Nomoto.  ^_^ We have that conversation.

No one:

Me: …I am 100% confident that I am not the only person who actually looked through their shopping cart on the cover, because between the inside cover and back color pages, we get an intimate look at what they bought. ^_^





Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – January 7, 2023

January 7th, 2023

Welcome to a whole new year of Yuri. ^_^

Yuri Events

20 years ago, I ran a three-day event to celebrate Yuri fandom. Yuricon 2003 was a small, but world-changing event. Due to  – /arms gesturing wildly/ everything – we’re taking our Yuricon 2023 celebration online. We already have nearly a dozen interviews and panels we’re working on, which will be shared throughout the year as they are completed on Yuri Studio. If you would like to run a panel or make a presentation on a Yuri-related topic, for Yuricon 2023 please fill out our Panel/ Presentation Application Form! Treat this like any other event and apply when you want to take charge of your panel.

I have a number of podcasts and events lined up where I’ll be talking about Yuri. I’ll announce these shortly. Suffice to say, 2023 is going to be another busy year!

Watashi no Yuri ha Oshigoto Desu! has a themed cafe at Wonder Parlour Cafe in Ikebukuro in Tokyo from January 15 through February 14 in honor of the upcoming anime. Someone please go there and report back for me!

 

Yuri Anime

The Magical Revolution of the Reincarnated Princess and the Genius Young Lady has launched on Crunchyroll. During our annual Okazu Patron holiday party, I was requested to do some react videos on all the Yuri anime coming out this year.  I just reviewed volume 3 of the light novel series, so I’m in. ^_^

Via Yuri Anime News on Twitter, Hikikomari Kyukuestu-hime no Monmon (ひきこまり吸血姫の悶々) is getting an anime. I am informed that the Yuri content in this series is of the breast-groping variety, in case this is not to your taste. Watch the trailer on Youtube. YNN  Sr. Correspondent Sean G has reviewed Volume 1 of  the LN for this series on his website, so you may wish to check to see if this is your thing. Alex Mateo has anime details over at ANN.

Birdie Wing Season 2 is coming! And the trailer is 10 out of 10 Birdie Wings. ^_^Egan Loo has the details over on ANN.

Also on ANN, Alex Mateo reports that Mobile Suit Gundam: The Witch From Mercury‘s Season 1 final episode will be delayed on some streaming services.

 

 

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Yuri Manga

Volume 5 and Volume 6 of Mayu, Matou (繭、纏う) will be released simultaneously, with a continuous cover (and, it would seem, the correct ending! ^_^). These are both up on the Yuricon Store for print or digital editions. There is no date yet on the English-language edition of these. Volume 4 of Cocoon, Entwined was released last winter by Yen Press.

Via Yurimother, we have news that Ana C. Sánchez’ manga Alter Ego will be getting a sequel this year. Noel Y June will be published later this year in Spanish.

I don’t remember where I found this, but there is a poly Yuri anthology called Fukusuunin Kousai Yuri Anthology (複数人交際百合アンソロジー レモネード) out on Kindle in Japan. It is also available in Japanese on US Kindle. This anthology has 30 contributors including Ajiichi, Utatane Yuu,  Mikami Teren, Usio Shio and more!

The Citrus 10th anniversary pop-up shop is now open! There is a link for overseas buying, if the goods look like your thing. I think they did a really nice job on the acrylic standees, honestly.

Joanna Cayanan reports that Sal Jiang’s Ayaka-chan wa Hiroko Senpai ni Koishiteru will be ending with a third volume over at ANN I reviewed Volume 2 last month here on Okazu. It’s been a lot of fun.

Sexiled creator Kaeruda Ameko is writing a new manga. Koucha no Majo no Yuuganaru Kyuutei Seikatsu Chiito o Hita Kakusu Saijaku Madou-shi no Madogiwa Life (紅茶の魔女の優雅なる宮廷生活 チートをひた隠す最弱魔導師の窓際ライフ) appears to be about a maid whose skill at making tea may change the world? The Yuri looks milk (maid in love with her lady-type) but it looks cute. You can read a sample chapter on Comic Zenon. I think I’ll be giving this one a try. ^_^

 

Yuri Doujinshi

I kept meaning to share this and kept forgetting. Hayate x Blade creator Hayashiya Shizuru (whose ULTIMATE-MAMA) is on my to-read/review pile right now) had a new doujinshi for winter Comiket. Continuing her food  + yanki girls beating the heck out of each other Yuri series, Yankoi Shoukudo C Set is available at Melonbooks.

 

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Other News

The Yuri Fandom Survey will close on January 11. If you haven’t yet had a chance to fill the survey out, I hope you’ll do that before it closes. Please feel free to share the survey around to any fan spaces you are on. There is no way this can be comprehensive or complete, but the more responses we get, the more well-rounded the results will be. Thank you very much for your time. ^_^

 

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The Legend of Korra: Patterns in Time

January 6th, 2023

Very many thanks to Okazu Superhero Eric P. for sponsoring today’s review! Eric has been a huge supporter of Okazu since the early days and I am very thankful to him. Today, because of his generosity, we are looking at the newest work in the Legend Of Korra-verse, The Legend of Korra: Patterns in Time, out now from Dark Horse Books.

This collection of short stories set in and around The Legend of Korra timeline, are very entertaining. These are mostly short, character-driven stories, which add depth to the characters of Korra, Asami, and Tenzin and his family. The back cover says that Bolin and Mako are included, but they don’t appear at all. Meelo and Jinora do feature in stories. We also get a few cameos from some of our favorite Beifongs. ^_^

This anthology features some terrific art; each story interprets the characters differently, but in doing so, each finds something specific to bring out for that character. Most stories are done by separate writers, artists, colorists and letterers, except one. Blue Delquanti (creator of O Human Star,) handles all roles for their own story.

My favorite story was the opening gambit, “Friends For Life,” written by Korra co-creator, Michael Dante Di Martino, with art by Heather Campbell, colored by Killian Ng and lettered by Michael Heisler. The second story, “Skyscrapers,” written by Rachel Silverstein, illustrated and colored by Sam Beck, lettered by Richard Starkings and Comiccraft’s Jimmy Betancourt, was a close second. These two featured a young Korra and, separately, a young Asami, and both gave us a moment in their formative years, with some happy times. Also notable is Blambot’s Nate Piekos’ lettering in the Meelo and Korra adventure “Lost Pets.”

Ratings:

Overall – 8

If you enjoyed The Legend Of Korra and you wanted a few more moments in the company of these characters, I’d recommend this collection. There’s no grand world- or plot-building here, just one-offs that give us time to enjoy the idea of Meelo and Bumi bonding or Jinora getting her mojo back or young Avatar Korra getting a night off her studies.





Comic Yuri Hime, January 2023 (コミック百合姫2023年1月号)

January 4th, 2023

We’re still banging on about beginnings here on Okazu. ^_^ And every January issue of Comic Yuri Hime is a new beginning!

For Comic Yuri Hime January 2023 (コミック百合姫2023年1月号)  we’re getting single-panel comic by Mebachi for the cover, with a small text paragraph in the upper-right-hand corner. It is a melancholy story, of loss and longing and concern that the speaker hadn’t been a good listener. The larger letters spell “Sazanami ga, jama wo shita.” My Japanese grammar is a bit not great, so I’m not sure if the ripples were disturbed, or they were disturbing. Hopefully one of you will weigh in that.  I don’t want to get ahead of myself on feel, because next month seems awfully like it’s going somewhere else, but it feels melancholy.

This issue begins with a fantasy tale by SikuSiku, “Sekai De Ichiban Sutekina Owarikata,” a title that offers some hope.  This is followed by a number of new stories, which I will wait on to see if anything develops.

“Sasayakuyouni Koi Wo Utau” has finally gotten to the punchline of Shiho’s drama…and she’s shocked at learning the obvious truth. Now we’ll get the battle of the bands. Phew!

In “Kimi to Tsuzuru Utakata” the inevitable end is approaching, but Kaori get a chance to talk about her dreams with her friend Ruri-chan. Yuama’s work has really gotten stronger, but I feel that it is time for this to wrap up…as we know it will.

“Utsotsuki Hime” is a short prose story that takes place in Europe in World War Two, about connections that can’t be.

I don’t want to be unkind, but “Natsu to Lemon To Overlay” has ended and it was, very sadly, forgettable. I loved the premise, but there was no conviction in it, and it became a story that, had it started there, I would have liked, but it had to throw away it’s whole premise to do what it did. Writing that sentence without spoiling anything was not easy, let me tell you. ^_^;

Taguchi Shouichi’s “Futari Escape,” too…what the…you don’t begin a chapter that way and expect us to laugh it off. FFS.

And now we come to the story I really want to talk about. “Watashi no Yuri ha Ohigoto Desu!” goes …I don’t even know. Dark? Like I totally trust Miman at this point and I don’t think anything bad is likely to happen, but the dark, foreboding music in the background and the two-page center color of a boudoir image of Youko has left me with shivers. You hurt Kanako (who, yes, is not okay and needs help) and I’ll murderize ya! I don’t even know how to describe this chapter beyond “ominous.”

“Usui Shio’s “Onna Tomodachi to Kekko Shitemita.” gives us a lovely, relaxing chapter in which everyone, for one moment, is quite happy. I needed that. ^_^

Last of the things I want to note, Muromaki does a comic essay in the back about German Yuri & BL and the German Yuri fandom, that I found interesting.

Again, there were a lot of other stories that I either read or didn’t, and enjoyed or didn’t. As 2023 opens, I think anyone picking this magazine up will find a reasonable balance of adult and school stories,  and relationships that run the spectrum from hand-holding to fully realized adult relationships. We’re poised to lose several stories next issue and welcome some new ones.

Ratings:

Overall – 7

The February 2023 issue is already out and has a center-color spread from “Watashi no Oshi ha Akuyaku Reijou.” by Aonoshimo!





Hello, Melancholic!, Volume 3

January 3rd, 2023

Beginnings are easy. You have an idea. There’s this character and stuff happens and it affects them and they react. Why are they there, what happens, how it affects them, can all be built up over time. But beginnings, they’re easy. The hard part is what happens after you’ve explained why they are there, and why that thing that happened affected them that way. Then, you have to buckle down and show what happened after that.

In Volume 1, we met Minato, an introverted and unusually tall first-year in high school whose love of music had been ruined, when she was traumatized by bandmates in her previous school. She is recruited by Hibiki, a second-year, to join an impromptu band club. It was a beginning that hit me hard. Re-learning to enjoy music, struggling to fit in, typical school stuff. We’ve all been some part of “there.”

In Volume 2, Minato and the rest of the band gel, and they give an amazing live performance. Minato takes her first steps out of her shell and in a moment of having had too much fun, admits she likes Hibiki.

Now we are at Volume 3 of Hello, Melancholic! by Ohsawa Yayoi and all the beginning stuff has been laid out. What can possibly happen? Well..a lot.

Hibiki will be graduating. Minato’s basically in denial about that. She concerned that Hibiki (and the rest of the band) will reject her. And in the middle of this, Hibiki, ignoring everything that is laying between them, pushes Minato to take the chance of a lifetime. It doesn’t go well when they try and talk it out the first time. Minato is concerned that every joy she has is too fragile to survive the moment.

I loved this series when I reviewed it in Japanese and my fondness for it carries over into the final volume of the English language edition. Girls finding love in band…well, I’ve been there, so yeah. ^_^ Ohsawa Yayoi’s art continues to improve, her characters’ expressions of shock and pain and joy are just fantastic.

The translation by Margaret Ngo and adaptation by MaryKate Jasper was terrific. You could *hear* their voices as Hibiki and Minato have it all out. Extra props to Seven Seas for bumping up almost all the lettering to full retouch. It looks fantastic. I know it’s harder and takes longer, but thank you Mo Harrison for the effort.  Once again a top effort from the team at Seven Seas and an outstanding reading experience. Now can we get 2DK, GPen Meshamashitokei, I wonder?

Beginnings are easy, but picking the first manga I review of the year is hard.  Hello, Melancholic! wraps up something that feels like it began a long time ago, and now we’re all ready to move on into what’s ahead. ^_^

Ratings:

Art – 9
Story – 9 More conflict in this volume is a good thing, as Minato becomes less passive
Characters – 9
Service – 1
Yuri – 9

Overall – 9

 

I’d give this adorable 3-volume series to anyone who wanted a feel-good schoolgirl Yuri story.