Author Archive


The Softest, Fluffiest Yuri Contest EVER!

May 2nd, 2013

This past winter, Okazu Superhero Ana M braved the hordes of Winter Comiket, hunting and gathering for me like a champ. Among the many trophies she successfully acquired was this load of goods from one of our favorite Yuri mangaka, Fujieda Miyabi, creator of Iono-sama Fanatics and Ame-iro Kouchakan Kandan.

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Lilyca is Fujieda-sensei’s original doujinshi – as you can see, Sarasa and Seriho’s story is not over, just because Yuri Hime is not publishing any more Ame-iro Kouchakan Kandan. This year’s bag and the clear file include original bunny-eared characters from a series he calls 黒綾白和.  And, the fourth item is a soft, fluffy blanket with the same characters.

I have no energy to judge complex things for this contest, so just enter by putting your name, age and the country you live in in the comments and we’ll go from there. I have some doujinshi to give away, too, so there may be more than one winner, wink wink nudge nudge. ^_^

Contest will wrap up when I remember to wrap it up – let’s say May 20th or so. Get your name in early!

 





Novel: Kami no Moribito, Part 2 (神の守り人)

April 30th, 2013

About a year ago(!) I reported on the Balsa novel, Kami no Moribito, Part 1. It was far more complex than past stories – even more than the first novel in the series, with its ties to an alternate dimension.

In the first half of this story, Balsa finds herself helping two children from the Kingdom of Rota, whose parents had been killed and who were being sold to slavers. To save the younger of the two, Asura, Balsa had taken the girl and run, followed by her older brother Chikisa, Tanda and one of the King’s hunters, an old soldier and friend of Tanda’s, Sfaru.

As this book opens, Balsa and Asura are traveling with a troupe of actors. They’d both like to relax, but it isn’t an ideal situation. After the troupe is forced to hole up in a snowstorm, they are attacked by wolves – and for the first time, we see Asura draw down the god, Taru Hamaya.  Asura slaughters the wolves. And we now understand why Sfaru felt so strongly about killing the girl. Chikisa tells Tanda about the night their parents were killed, Asura had become Taru Hamaya and killed all of the Rota warriors.

But there’s more to this than the children know – their mother was the lover of one of the Princes of Rota and Asura’s power could be a fearsome weapon with which to take the country over.

Once Asura and Balsa separate from the actors, Sfaru’s daughter, Shihana, manipulates the situation until she has Asura in hand – and, she thinks, Balsa’s dead. Even going so far as to involve one of the god’s servants, a woman named Iannu, an old friend of Asura’s mother. About the time we had the discussion that Triisha, their mother, moved them away from town so that Asura did not, in fact, become a servant of the god, I thought, “What kid is ever going to read this book?” It was so complex! And full of religious and secular politics. It did have Balsa fighting off a troupe of assassins from the depths of an icy river and later, nearly getting her throat slit, but still…..

I’m going to jump to the end, where the one really exceptional scene happens. The god Taru Hamaya is being called down for a ceremony that will lead to a set-up for the one Rota prince to kill the other. Unbeknownst to most of his servants, Taru Hamaya is coming for blood. And Asura is his vessel. So, with a huge crowd gathered to worship him, he appears and calls to Asura. Asura is racing towards Taru Hamaya, and finds herself being taken over by the god as she runs.

The crowd is chattering away, not noticing Balsa running after Shihana who is running after Asura. Asura fords the god’s river which flows out of Nayuk (the alternate dimension from the first novel, where it was known as Nayug in the tongue of New Yogo). Although she is well out of earshot, Asura can still hear the crowd, who are talking about the fearful god, the horrible god, and she just loses it. “You keep calling him terrible and horrible, but you are the horrible ones,” she says out loud. And the crowd goes instantly silent. Just as Asura realizes that the crowd can hear her whispers, she becomes the god. And starts to slaughter the crowd.

Balsa almost get killed trying to stop Asura, but it’s the girl herself who saves the day – she explains to the god that she does not want to hurt anyone, so he retires, sated.

In the end, Prince Ihan, saved from death and amazed and awed by the children of his lover Triisha, swears to treasure and protect them forever.

Asura, who fell into into a coma, as the final pages of the book close, almost 6 months after becoming the god, opens her eyes.

And I thought, “No really, what kid would read this book?”

It was so full of politics and adult maneuvering and serious violence, it would be a really rough read for a tween. Unlike the other books which would be an easy 12-13 year age range, I’d say keep this one out of the hands of anyone sensitive or too young. Also, the political bits were so *boring*. Yes, we needed them, but.

With this adventure, the Balsa series ends officially. The remaining books in the series follow Crown Prince Chagum. There may be cameos, and if there are I’ll let you know. But unless they are excellent cameos, we close the book on our favorite female bodyguard here.

We can guarantee one thing, however, with her and Tanda, it’s unlikely that they’ll live happily ever after in the conventional sense. I prefer to think of Tanda always being there to patch her up and welcome her home after her adventures. ^_^

Ratings:

Overall – 7

The good scenes were excellent. ^_^





Yuri Manga: Hoshikawa Ginza 4-chome, Volume 3 (星川銀座四丁目)

April 29th, 2013

In Volume 1 we were introduced to Minato, a teacher, and her student Otome, whom she removes forcefully from a household where – on good days – she was being neglected. In  Volume 2, Otome and Minato wrestle with feelings for one another as they live together. Here we are, at the final volume of  Hoshikawa Ginza 4-chome (星川銀座四丁目).

Otome and Minato move into a new apartment. Slightly larger, but less money, it’s a loft apartment over an old used book store. In the early chapters, the girl who works at the bookstore develops a creepy obsession with Otome, and when she discovers Otome’s feelings for Minato, blackmails her into posing nude for her. Ultimately, Otome gives in, apparently out of pity. Hina doesn’t hang around much longer after that. The bookstore closes, leaving Minato and Otome alone in their loft.

But they aren’t meant to be at peace. In response to her request to adopt Otome, Minato receives a communication from Otome’s mother, which prompts her to suddenly and ridiculously ask a former classmate to marry her; in hopes that, if she was part of a legitimate family unit, Otome’s mother might be more favorably inclined to letting her go. When the truth comes out, Otome learns her parents have divorced – neither of them thought to tell her – and that her mother has remarried. She wants her daughter to live with her again. Otome lays the law down…she is still a minor, she will return home, until she is accepted into college. When she is, she’ll come back. And so she does, returning once again, at last, as an adult.

The final chapter of the story proper shows Otome returning home once more after an absence to a very wifely Minato. Clearly we no longer need to worry about them…they are both adults and together, officially.

As I read this volume I was overcome by some emotion, but I was until the very end unable to identify it. This story makes me sad. I couldn’t tell you why, but it makes me inexpressibly sad. Perhaps because of all the nasty service-y bits with which Kurgane Kenn laces the narrative, I feel it is almost impossible to be plain old happy for the two of them. And I should be able to be. They are in love, they are together, the end. So why do I want to cry?

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 8
Characters – 8 See below
Yuri – 10
Service – 10

Overall – 8

Ultimately the big fail here was that Otome deserved to be treated better than Kenn was willing to treat her. His gaze throughout this series disgusted me, right to the final volume and the repulsive chapters with Hina. How I wish someone who wasn’t a creepy lolicon had drawn this story. Oh well.





Heart of Thomas Manga (English)

April 28th, 2013

Back when BL manga was first gaining traction in the US – as a genre and as a distinct fandom – there were two titles that were referred to with a kind of reverence as progenitors of the genre. Takemiya Keiko’s Kaze to Ki no Uta (Song of the Wind and the Trees) and Moto Hagio’s Touma no Shinzou (Heart of Thomas).  Just as Sakura no Namiki is to Yuri, these titles are not BL as we know it now, but the stories that laid the path upon which BL was built.  Now, thanks to Fantagraphics and Matt Thorn, we have an official licensed version of Heart of Thomas in English.

I was interested in Heart of Thomas a classic manga, as a historical relic and as a period on a sentence I started reading backwards with the movie Summer Vacation 1999. (I’ll come back to this in a bit.)

Heart of Thomas takes place in a German boarding school after trains but in an otherwise non-specific time. Pretty young Erich arrives at the school just after the death of Thomas, whom Erich greatly resembles, throwing the whole school into a tizzy, especially Juli – to whom Thomas had confessed before he died…and after, in a final note.

The story explores the layers of emotion and guilt the characters carry with them, peeling the layers away slowly until we can see the formative moments that created the character as we experience them in the beginning. The chronological story moves forward, but the emotional stories are told moving backward.

I’m still not entirely sure what to make of the story itself. It’s intensely, almost absurdly emotional, one of the hallmarks of BL well into the 2000s. Juli is meant to be seen as a tragic figure and Erich sort of the key that releases him, while staving off his own tragedy. By the end of the book I still didn’t much “like” Juli, but I came to admire Erich for the strength he showed. Oskar was the best character throughout and I wish, honestly that we had spent more time with him.

Having now read Heart of Thomas, I am able to better understand and appreciate Summer Vacation 1999, a live-action movie loosely based on the manga.  In fact, I very much like how it was adapted. By placing it in a time during the school year when all the other boys are gone, leaving only the principles, it plays out with more intensity, everything was more tightly wound. Erich, in the movie, arrives bearing secrets and so becomes an active catalyst for what follows, in stark contrast to Erich in the book, who has no agenda at all and merely wishes to be left alone.

I can also see the direct transformation of emotional conflict in this and Kaze to Ki no Uta to stories like Bronze: Zetsuai since 1989, (which was the most popular BL story the year I started getting into manga,) in which the emotional conflict for this dynamic – a staple of both Athenian and Edo elite- gelled into tortured seme and apparently aloof uke. It still doesn’t interest me per se, but I like to see how it evolved. ^_^

Technically, Heart of Thomas looks gorgeous, as Fantagraphics books always do. There are some few glaring quality control issues, which is unusual for Fantagraphics. Matt has addressed one error on his blog. The others I hope will remain unnoticed except by those of us who cannot not edit as we read. ^_^

In the same way I believe we should be familiar with the roots of Yuri, and understand how Yaneura no Nishojo begot Sakura no Namiki, which begot Shiroi Heya no Futari and thus leads us to the apparently-similar-but-not-at-all-the-same paths of Strawberry Panic and Maria-sama ga Miteru, or how Princess Knight leads to Rose of Versailles and thence to Utena and beyond, I recommend reading Heart of Thomas to understand where tropes that are now fixed and understood as given in BL came from.

Ratings:

Art – 9
Story – 8
Characters – 8
Service – 4

Overall – 8
I was moved by it, and impressed by it and annoyed by it.  Did I like Heart of Thomas? I don’t know yet. I’m still thinking about that. ^_^





Yuri Network News (百合ネットワークニュース) – April 27, 2013

April 27th, 2013

YNN_MariK

Event

I’ll be speaking today at Montclair State University, for their annual Chibi Con. My talk is called Warp, Weft and Fringe: Expression and Interpretation in LGBTQ Manga and Comics, we’ll be exploring how we rewrite the narrative laid out by the artist as we read. I hope you can join us!

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Yuri Anime

Sort of no surprise, really, ANN Reports that the new Sailor Moon anime has been delayed.

Aniplex USA has launched a new streaming anime channel via Hulu, with many popular anime series including, for our purposes, R.O.D. the TV, Fate/Zero, Vividred Operation and Madoka Magica. Presume regional restrictions, because duh.

Sentai Filmworks has licensed the Yuyushiki anime, which I have yet to watch. Anyone a fan and want to write a review?

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Other News

This week, my career as a woman with an opinion on the Internet hit new weirdness with the publishing of my response to “Why Is Having a Rational Opinion Against Gay Marriage Considered “Homophobia”? on Slate.

And this has nothing to do with anything but my personal fetish for girl gangs…check out this photo essay of 1950’s British girls wearing Edwardian clothing known as the Teddy Girls. ^_^

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That’s a wrap for this week! Become a Yuri Network Correspondent by sending me any Yuri-related news you find. Emails go to anilesbocon01 at hotmail dot com. Not to the comments here, please, or they might be forgotten or missed. There’s a reason for this madness. This way I know you are a real human, not Anonymous (which I do not encourage – stand by your words with your name!) and I can send you a YNN correspondent’s badge. Thanks to all of you – you make this a great Yuri Network!