Author Archive


I’m in Love with the Villainess Audiobook, Volume 4

March 3rd, 2024

We left Rae and Claire in the Nur empire at the end of Volume 3, and in I’m in Love with the Villainess Audiobook, Volume 4 we get into the weeds of so many plots that I’m still reeling from the tone shifts.

Rae and Claire may be “exchange students” but they have revolution on their minds and spend the beginning of the book thinking how they can train Princess Philene up to be the revolutionary leader they need.

But first, we have a cooking contest! And a formal ball. And a murder mystery, and a mysterious magical item, and a kidnapping. And helping out many different people in their various personal issues.

And, of course, that revolution.

There are so many plates being spun that the foreshadowing is barely noticeable, except when it’s a bat to the back of the head.

This is a story that, despite the light-hearted opening, becomes quite serious by the end. Nonetheless, there are many funny scenes* here, as well as a number of sincere discussions of queer existence. When all of that is set aside, the story digs in and becomes both politically and magically, dark.

Once again, narrator Courtney Shaw does a fantastic job at voices. Pronunciation is still an issue, however. Pronouncing Lene “Lean” is a matter of interpretation. But sakura? How is sakura being pronounced “sa-KOO-ra” in 2024? Please.  Oh well. I blame the director. This kind of thing is easy to check. I had some qualms about accents, but I’ll get over listening to a German cook with a Italian accent and a lisp. It was kind of funny after a while.

This 9 and half hour book is a lot of entertainment for the money and while it sets up the final volume of the series, doesn’t really prepare you for it when it arrives

Once again, I think this audiobook allows for a different appreciation of the story for those of use who have read or watched it, and offers accessibility to folks who use audiobooks as an assistive tool. I’m 100% for that and glad to see more Yuri available in this format with Yen’s The Executioner and Her Way of Life added to the roster this winter.

Ratings (for the adaptation only):

Overall – 10

*I even laughed out loud at a breast size scene, possibly for the first time ever.

Volume 5, the final volume, is available this month from Seven Seas Siren.





Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – March 2, 2024

March 2nd, 2024

 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. Art by Mari Kurisato for OkazuYuri Manga

We’ve added a bunch of stuff to the Yuricon Store!

Ratana Satis’ Pulse, Volume 3 , Volume 4, Volume 5, Volume 6 and Volume 7 to complete the series are now all out or available for pre-order.

Boyish², Vol.2 is the second volume of this successfully kickstarted “butch x butch anthology” and is now available for pre-order. The first volume was lovely. This second volume includes artists from in and outside Japan, that’s always exciting. This is available in both English and Japanese.

Futaribeya: A Room for Two, Volume 10 concludes this series that, had it been 20 years ago, I probably would have been all over, but in 2024…I require more conviction in my Yuri than /handwave/ “Isn’t it obvious?”

This May will see the final volume of Hara Yuriko’s school series Cocoon, Entwined, Volume 6 from Yen Press.  Her short story collection Out Of The Cocoon (アウト・オブ・ザ・コクーン) is available in Japan, which includes sequels following Hana and Youko post-series.

Yodokawa’s Monthly In The Garden With My Landlord, Volume 2 is headed our way this month. This romantic comedy is a lot of fun. I’ve reviewed the first three volumes of the series in Japanese here on Okazu.

Arai Sumiko’s Kininatteru Hito Ga Otoko Janakatta, Volume 2 (気になってる人が男じゃなかった) is out now to great acclaim.

Shikabane to Ai ga Omoi Seikishi no Toubatsu Gakuen Life, Volume 1  (しかばね少女と愛が重い聖騎士の討伐学園ライフ) is a school life fantasy of a holy knight and a zombie and a mystery that may be better off unsolved.

 

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Yuri Light Novel

The Executioner and Her Way of Life: Book 7 Lost light novel is hitting shelves here this month, once again from Yen Press. 6 months have passed and Menou is still looking for a way to restore Akari’s memories.

Don’t forget that this series is now available as an audiobook, with The Executioner and Her Way of Life, Book 1 Thus She Is Reborn available on multiple audio platforms!

 

Yuri Live-Action

Here’s a sweet little “lesbian” movie in full on Youtube, about my two favorite things – cute women and food. ^_ ^ Check out Brandon Okamura’s Maneki.

Support Yuri journalism on Ko-fi!

Yuri Literature

Girls’ Love: The Development History of Lily Fan Culture in Taiwan’s ACG Industry 2023 Revised Edition (少女之愛:台灣ACG界百合迷文化發展史 2023增修版) is a Chinese-language look at Yuri history and fandom in Taiwan. The order period runs through this month, so don’t miss it.

Also not to be missed, James Welker’s amazing-looking book, Transfiguring Women in Late Twentieth-Century Japan: Feminists, Lesbians, and Girls‘ Comics Artists and Fans that will be coming out from the University of Hawai’i Press this summer.

 

Other News

Via YNN Correspondent Patricia B. wants you to know about Knapsack Magazine, Volume 1: Cassette, “A brand new anthology series of comics & illustrations encompassing our collective weird-kid nostalgia, by Lucky Pocket Press!”

 

If you’d like to support Yuri journalism and research, Patreon and Ko-Fi are where we currently accept subscriptions and tips.  Our goal now, into 2024, is to raise our guest writers’ wages to above industry standard, which are too low!

Your support goes straight to paying for Guest Reviews, folks helping with videos, site maintenance, managing the Yuricon Store and directly supporting other Yuri creators. Just $5/month makes a huge impact! Become part of the Okazu family!

Become a part of the Yuri Network, by being a YNN Correspondent: Contact Us with any Yuri-related news you want to share with us.

 





Tsukuritai Onna to Tabetai Onna, Live-Action Drama, Season 2

March 1st, 2024

Two woman stand outside, holding sandwiches. in front of a background of gingko trees.If you happen to catch me grinning today, it’s only because last night the second season of live-action drama of Tsukuritai Onna to Tabetai Onna wrapped up. Goodness, this is such a wholesome series. It makes me want to hug everybody in it.

As with Season 1, Higa Manami as Nomoto Yuki and Nishino Emi as Kasuga Totoko, are outstanding. They just play those parts so perfectly that it seems like they have always been those people. Nomoto wears her emotions openly, and Kasuga has little affect, which makes her occasional smile just that much more precious.

In this season we also get Sakurazaka 46 member Fujiyoshi Natsuzu as Nagumo Sena, the young woman who moves into the apartment between Kasuga and Nomoto. Her low-energy character ends up changing the older women’s lives, and they change hers. Also added to the cast is Tomosaka Rie, who is, I think, the very first actress whose name I became familiar with years ago, when she starred in Kimi ga Oshietekureta-koto, about a woman with autism. She plays Yakko, Nomoto’s net friend with whome she discusses topics of sexuality and queer life.

The live action drama remixes some of the manga, so that by the end of this series, we are all but caught up on the 5th volume of the manga (which I reviewed yesterday here on Okazu.) Nagumo begins to address her illness, Kasuga and Nomoto move forward a little with physical intimacy. The finale of this series even includes a kiss which was less bad than most other kisses in Japanese dramas. (Please, J-Drama people, hire someone to teach people to kiss on TV.) The usual slow painfulness of the kiss scene worked for this particular couple as they negotiate consent and intimacy.

There are a few departures from the manga worth noting, because they are very good. At work, Nomoto is offered a project that takes her out of the data entry pool into a team environment. It’s a subtle touch and isn’t presented as “zOMG,” just as, well, a professional development opportunity. I love how that becomes part of the story, and we can see that she and her colleague Sayama really grab on to it. Which leads me to Sayama. In the manga, Nomoto does talk honestly with Sayama, but we don’t see that much more of her. Here, she becomes a regular confidant and work friend to Nomoto. They share dating stories and, crucially, when Sayama goes on rant about how marriage shouldn’t have to be a life goal, she comes back to Nomoto to apologize for not thinking about how Nomoto can’t get married. I want to offer my undying appreciation to screenplay writer Yamada Yuri, who had Sayama say something like, “And why not? It’s ridiculous that gay people can’t get married in Japan.” in that moment. Bless you.

Equally, Kasuga gets an outside character to interact with, Fujita, a middle-aged woman who works at one of the stores Kasuga delivers to. Fujita is divorcing her husband and it gives Kasuga pause to think about how relationships end sometimes. Given her own relationship with her family, it’s an excellent release valve for her to see that it doesn’t have to be the way it was for her mother. And again, the screenplay absolute NAILS the moment when Fujita says she’s read to start her second, no, third life.” I though that a fantastic line. 

In the manga, these interactions are less important, but here, they give Nomoto and Kasuga a richer depth to their “society,” the circle of people with whom one has regular contact and conversation. I’ve talked at length about how important this is for the ideation of female leads, when so many are relegated to speaking only with the romantic partner of the story. These women, like the characters of Amayo no Tsuki, have society. This is the final criterium that sets an amazing story apart from a very good one. And when it is missing, I feel it keenly. This series takes such pains to make sure we understand that the characters’ lives are full and real.

Ultimately, this evening drama has probably put real LGBTQ+ issues in front of more Japanese people than any efforts in activism, or literature. And it’s done so with sensitivity, kindness and a genuine love of food that not only makes me hungry, has actually inspired my wife and I to make several Japanese meals recently. ^_^ The first episode opens with oyakodon, a chicken and egg over rice dish that we had the same night we watched that first episode. Nomoto and Kasuga made cream stew look so appealing that we ran out a few weeks later to get some rue blocks for a cream stew of our own. With carrots, onion, broccoli and chicken it ended up much like the filling for a pot pie.  Very warm and tasty. ^_^ Oh, and let’s not forget anko butter toast. That was really fun, as well.

As live-action adaptations of manga go, Tsukuritai Onna to Tabetai Onna is one of the best I’ve ever seen. It does not change or shy away from uncomfortable issues. When it takes a slightly reductive tack on things like systemic homophobia, or Nagumo’s eating disorder, the series is not dismissive, it’s focusing on the power of having allies, and support.  After all, this is a feel-good evening drama, not an exposé. And, let me tell, you, feel-good is something this series does well. People acknowledge each other’s trials without victim blaming, they support each other and they make gigantic cream crab croquettes. It’s quite wonderful.

I’m very thankful to everyone who has worked on this series, staff and actors and to the advisor to the series on LGBTQ+ issues. And to NHK for making it available both on their main channel and on NHK Plus, which is still the most annoying system, but I get to watch it, so yay! And to whichever genius thought to add the recipes for each episode to the website. Kudos to you, my friend.

Ratings:

Overall – 10

What a terrific series. I sincerely hope someone will license this for an EN release, because the world needs a series about women loving themselves, loving each other and loving food.

 





Tsukuritai Onna to Tabetai Onna, Volume 5 (作りたい女と食べたい女)

February 29th, 2024

Four women, walk and eat ice cream, or drink, as they chat. With more than two decades of reading, I am still absolutely amazed at the high quality of Yuri manga we have gotten in the last few years – even more blown away that so much of it has been licensed in English and other languaues.  Of the series I am currently obsessing over, Yuzaki Saakomi’s series about women, food, and queer life in modern Japan is definitely among my top picks for “new  manga volumes I await with baited breath.”

Tsukuritai Onna to Tabetai Onna, Volume 5 (作りたい女と食べたい女) begins as Nomoto-san and Kasuga-san continue to navigate the frustrating – and alienating – process of looking for a home to share. It’s hard enough for any couple, but along with the usual annoyances, they are finding that many landlords simply will not accept two unmarried or unrelated people. Thankfully, Yakko recommends a LGBTQIA- friendly agency and they are successful!

They move in and celebrate with their friends. And then, again, Nomoto comes up against the wall of discomfort talking to her peers about her situation. Both Nomoto and Kasuga have only been aware of their sexuality as such for a very short time, so it is unsurprising that there is internal discomfort to address long before they manage to be comfortable telling people they know, but do not know if they can trust. This is handled here a little more harshly than in the live-action series, which I hope to discuss shortly.

Not everything is hard in this volume, however. Nomoto and Kasuga start creating a work rota, and discuss the importance of consent in their relationship. Nagumo decides to see if she can get help for her condition – and the outlook is good. Nomoto and Kasuga go to a large home center and spend the day “playing house,” as my wife and I call it. ^_^ They allow themselves to build more intimacy between them, which is very sweet to see. I love the balance between real-world tension and the joy of found family. The fact that real issues are discussed means it feels firmly rooted in reality, but the story centers growth and love and kindness, as well as a little well-deserved righteous ranting against an unfair society. 

You may remember as you read this volume that last year the manga went on hiatus, due to the creator’s illness. Early chapters here seem to have borne the main brunt in the form of some off-style art. but it was merely a reminder that the mangaka is human and as frail as the rest of us.  Clearly some clean-up has occurred in post and it’s perfectly fine. A few chapters in, one can feel the renewed energy from the art. I am sure we all hope that Sakaomi-sensei remains healthy. Not just because this is a terrific story, but that, too.

Ratings:

Art – Due to the creator’s illness, I don’t think rating it is appropriate
Story – 10
Characters – 10
Service – 3, them snuggling in bed, is definitely “service”
LGBTQ+ – 10

Overall – 10

TsukuTabe is an outstanding story about found family, friendship and a deep, abiding love of food. She Loves To Cook, She Loves to Eat. Volume 1, Volume 2 and Volume 3 is available now in English from Yen Press, and Volume 4 is on the way in May!





Pulse, Volumes 3 & 4

February 28th, 2024

Two women with long, flowing hair, one dark purple, one blonde, embrace surrounded by flower, as sunlight shines down upon them.by Eleanor Walker, Staff Writer

Today I’ll be talking about Pulse, Volume 3 and Volume 4, by Ratana Satis. I reviewed volumes 1-2 a while ago, so let’s see how the story has progressed. 

Content warning: Volume 3 contains scenes of violence and homophobic slurs. 

Lynn has now moved herself into Mel’s apartment, and domestic bliss/lots of sex ensues. Mel’s feelings for Lynn both in a physical and a romantic way are growing, but the dark cloud of Lynn’s heart condition continues to loom over the relationship. The porn to plot ratio is more skewed towards the porn side than it was in the first two volumes and most of the story in these volumes actually takes place away from the hospital, with Mel getting tangled up in an old police officer friend’s investigation of a violent thug who targets women.

Two women, one with long brown hair in a brown jacket and gloves, and a blonde in a tawny coat and gloves, share a red scarf and smile at each other as they embraceThis arc didn’t really last long and I felt it was all a bit conveniently wrapped up, but a fresh Big Bad in the form of a new hospital director does appear at the end of volume 4. From what happens when she appears and the flashbacks in the chapters when she’s introduced, things are going to get very interesting for Mel indeed. I’m looking forward to the story getting back to the hospital and seeing what will actually happen to Lynn because of her condition. 

Ratings:

Art: 8. It’s still attractive and some of the chibi facial expressions are a delight. The erotic scenes are also very well crafted.

Story: 6. Despite this review covering 2 volumes, I don’t feel like a lot actually happened in the story. As with the last review, don’t think too hard about how implausible the situation is. Why is practically every female staff member at this hospital a lesbian? 

Characters: 8.5. Still by far and away the best part of the series. Mel and Lynn are incredibly cute together and the side characters are well written too. 

Service (level of salaciousness): 10. This series is rated ‘Mature’ and shrink wrapped for a reason. The erotic scenes are even more plentiful in these volumes and there is very little left to the imagination. 

Yuri: 9. It’s lovely to watch them growing closer and the walls around Mel’s heart gradually coming down. 

Overall: 7.5

 

Still an enjoyable series, just the story felt a bit weaker in these two volumes than the first two.

Volume 5 is already out, Volume 6 has just come out in English, with Volume 7 the final volume, due to hit this summer. 

Eleanor can be found lurking around the internet @st_owly.