Author Archive


Female Intimacy and Slice of Life Anime Article on ANN

October 24th, 2023

You may  remember that this past spring I was extremely ill with Long COVID. During my recovery I turned towards slice-of-life anime in an attempt to feel engaged by something, anything. Struggling as I was with concentration and focus, these anime helped me relax and find myself again. And, in watching them, I discovered something else…powerful stories of intimacy between women.

This motivated me to write up an article and Anime News Network kindly gave me the space to discuss these anime. I hope you’ll enjoy The Joy Of The Everyday: Emotional Intimacy Between Women in Slice-of-Life Anime. If you do, please leave a comment on ANN!





She Loves To Cook, She Loves To Eat, Volume 3

October 23rd, 2023

Last winter I reviewed Yuzaki Sakaomi’s Volume 3 of Tsukuritai Onna to Tabetai Onna (作りたい女と食べたい女), expressing my delight over the entire volume – even squeeing throughout. Today I was able to revisit those moments of joy with the release of She Loves To Cook, She Loves To Eat, Volume 3 out now from Yen Press.

In Volume 1 we met Nomoto Yuki and her neighbor Kasuga, two women who bond over their use food as a form of escape from stress and entertainment. In Volume 2, Nomoto realizes that her feelings for Kasuga are more than friendship.  Here in Volume 3, Nomoto finds another friend and confidant with her online pal Yako, a woman who loves food, but doesn’t care about cooking.  And Kasuga befriends the neighbor who lives in between then, Nagumo, a young woman with a very fraught relationship with food. The four women build a family together, a space in which every one of them is accepted for who they are and their needs are accommodated. This volume is moving and funny and adorable in equal measure.

Yako gives Nomoto a primer in sexual diversity, freeing Nomoto up to stop comparing herself to other people and find her own story. Yako’s light-heartd acceptance and casual speech really blasts barriers away, so it’s an especial delight to have Caleb Cook’s outstanding translation here. In this volume we also get to see the core issue between Kasuga and her family, which is, simply, lack of respect. This is echoed by Nagumo, so they become close over the shared experiences of dealing with family that blames them for not being compliant. I don’t think I have to tell Okazu readers how powerful a message that is. When Kasuga comes to understand how she feels about Nomoto, there are layers and layers being addressed.

In this month, where we have I’m In Love With The Villainess in anime, with heartfelt discussion of queer experience, this manga is the perfect pairing for even more discussions of diversity within sexual and gender minorities. ILTV is a great ice-breaker for folks unused to these conversations in their entertainment, but She Loves To Cook, She Loves To Eat, Volume 3 is rooted in real experiences and reflects the kind of community that we as queer fans create for ourselves.

An outstanding volume of one of the best LGBTQ manga of the last few years.

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

I was also pleased that letterer Phil Christie get to retouch S/Fx, at least on some pages, where it wouldn’t affect the art. More of that, please!

There is one more volume available right now in Japanese, but since Chapter 40 of the manga, the series has been on hiatus due to the manga artist’s health. Were’ all wishing Sakaomi-sensei a safe recovery.





The Vexations Of A Shut-In Vampire Princess Anime

October 22nd, 2023

Well, we have one more for Reali…../screeching noise of needle being pulled over a record surface/

No, no. There is nothing real in today’s review. Quite possibly my opinion is an unreal as everything else here. ^_^  The Vexations Of A Shut-In Vampire Princess, streaming on HIDIVE is the last of this season’s Yuri offerings and as offerings go, it’s pretty pale and thin in comparison to some of our other choices.

A weak vampire is not much of a threat
Until her army is much in her debt
When she throws down the glove
Her maid who’s in love
Takes on enemies and friends and et. cetera.

Terakomari Gandesblood is not a great vampire. Small, weak, unable to stand blood, she’s been a shut-in for the last three years. But circumstances drive her to ascend to the generalship of an army, which she runs with the assistance of her pervy, obsessed maid, Villhaze. As a series from a Gangan magazine, I had little to no hope that it would be good, but that I might find something to talk about. In both cases, I was correct.  ^_^

The plot is a very violent one and that, at least, I approve of. Vampires that are not appalling violence machines bore me. (Well, all vampires bore me, honestly.) But the violence here is impermanent, wars are pointless and death is played for a gag most times.  And then in episode 3, a plot complication arrives that completely killed my interest in the story, but it might be to your taste. 

We learn that Terakomari became a recluse because of bullying at school. When her bully returns, she is clearly entirely, sadistically psychotic and gloating, as she kidnaps and tortures Villhaze to manipulate Terakomari into fighting her. This one sentence contains all four things I despise most in story-telling, so I am highly likely to nope out of this series shortly.

Episode 3 also gives us the clearest glimpse that Villhaze’s perverted obsession with Terakomari is actually rooted in genuine admiration and love, and so is another example of exactly the kind of problematic behavior Rae engages in in I’m In Love With The Villainess for the exact reason she states that she does it. Villhaze has no hope that her love will be returned and so over-acts her affection as a creep, in order to make it a joke. For many queer viewers that kind of “joke” is well more than tired and trite. And loads of people have commented that Rae’s behavior makes them uncomfortable. So to see that same exact thing presented here as the “comedy” in an otherwise fairly horrifically violent series is…well, it’s not fun for me, at any rate.

I do like the OP of Terakomari dreaming she’s a pop idol, though. ^_^

Ratings:

Art – Murgh
Story – Dumb Ways to Die
Characters – The animals are far more likeable than the humanoids
Service – Yes, absolutely, constantly staring at Komari’s legs from below and between is extremely weird and creepy
Yuri – You have to ignore everything else about Villhaze to think her love for Terakomari is sweet

Overall – 4

Thankfully there are a number of other wonderful Yuri anime for us to enjoy this season and Whisper Me A Love Song coming our way in the new year. My hatsumode wish will definitely be “May we never to have to suffer the indignities of “funny” same-sex harassment in anime ever again.”





Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – October 21, 2023

October 21st, 2023

In black block letters, YNN Yuri Network News. On the left, in black silhouette, a woman with a broad brim hat and dress stands, a woman in a tight outfit sits against the Y.Yuri Anime

As we’ve all been endlessly discussing I’m In Love With the Villainess here and on the Okazu Discord (where Patreon Patrons and Ko-fi Supporters now have their own unique roles!)   I thought it would be worth highlighting a few other folks’ perspectives, especially as I have read all of the novels several times over, now and know everything that is to come. What does this series look like for folks who are watching it cold? Read on!

This week on Okazu Lena Tama wrote about the series from a queer Indonesian perspective.

Nicholas Dupree has a pretty insightful review of the first three ILTV episodes so far on ANN.

Alex Henderson discusses Episode 1 on Anime Feminist.

Here is Frog-kun with Why I’m In Love With the Villainess Is Such a Cult LGBTQ+ Hit.
 

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Yuri Manga

Seven Seas has announced the license for Comic Yuri Hime manga Chasing Spica, which is described this way, “Nekozuka Serina is a serious third-year high school student who’s studying hard to qualify for a scholarship. Her cute and stylish looks, however, don’t exactly meet the school dress code—which Tachibana Reiko, a member of the disciplinary committee, is always on her case about. Plus, no matter how much Serina tries, Reiko always bests her in grades and athletics. One day, however, Serina spots Reiko meeting with an unknown woman after school…and going to a love hotel! What will happen between Serina and Reiko now that they share a secret?” Anita Tai has the details on ANN.

Out now in Japan, is Volume 1 of subculture gal Yuri manga, Yinkya Gal Demo Ikigaritai! (陰キャギャルでもイキがりたい!), also running in Comic Yuri Hime.

Volume 1 and 2 of the Japanese language edition of  Teren Mikami’s manga, Watashi ga Koibitio ni nareruwakenaijan, Murimuri!! (*Murijanakaya!?) (わたしが恋人になれるわけないじゃん、ムリムリ!(※ムリじゃなかった!?)) are free to read on Shueisha’s Akima platform through November 1. Volume 1  and Volume 2 of the There’s No Freaking Way I’ll be Your Lover! Unless… manga are out now in English from Seven Seas.

Volume 7 of Watashi no Oshi ha Akuyaku Reijou. manga (私の推しは悪役令嬢。) has been released in Japan. Melonbooks is selling a special tapestry for people who purchase the book with them. I included the link to the special edition on the Yuricon Store entry.

To commemorate the anime, the Ikebukuro main Animate store is giving away Wataoshi chocolates today. ^_^ It was a really good week for fans of Rae and Claire.

Volume 1 of  Watashi no Oshi ha Akuyaku Reijou., Maid Kitchen (私の推しは悪役令嬢。 メイドキッチン) thre cooking spin-off of Wataoshi, has also hit shelves this week. Get this from Melonbooks for a special acrylic key holder and illustration card!

 

Yuri Light Novel

 If you buy the Limited Edition of Yuusha ni Naritai Shoujo To, Yuusha Narubeki Kanojo (勇者になりたい少女と、勇者になるべき彼女) Volume 1 of from Melonbooks, it comes with an acrylic standee of the two protagonists! So if you throw your money at Melonbooks you’ll get a ton of inori.-sensei goods!

 

 

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Yuri Event

The Yuriten event wraps up today in Tokyo, then moves on to Osaka. You can get goods through the Yuriten online store with a shipping service.

 

Yuri Games and VNs
 

Via YNN Correspondent Patricia B, Queer creator Nekobungi Sumire has released English-language editions of her game Neko Can Dream, which is described as “A Dream-Collecting Adventure In An 8-Bit World.”

Studio Élan has released the demo of Twofold on Steam.

 

Other News

J-Novel Club is expanding into German and French releases! Congrats to them for their success.

As suspected, there are no forwarding links from Right Stuff to Crunchyroll, whee. So please be very patient as the Yuricon Store slooooowly transitions. ^_^

 

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.





Stardust Telepath Anime

October 20th, 2023

So today we’re finishing up ‘Reality in Anime’ week with a decidedly unreal anime. ^_^

Umika is a high school student with severe social anxiety -so severe that she feels completely alienated from her fellow humans. She’s unable to respond even when a classmate is kind to her and bids her a good morning. Umika avoids most of her classmates, and their banal concerns, spending her time wishing she could meet an alien, for surely she would be able to talk to one!

When classmate Akeuchi Yuu declares herself an alien – and announces that she can read Umika’s mind when their foreheads touch – Umika’s life begins to change. Last spring I found time to read the first volume of Hoshikuzu Telepath manga ahead of this season’s anime…and I found some things that surprised me.

So now that the anime has premiered, what do I think of Stardust Telepath, streaming on Crunchyroll?

Well, to begin with I should note that, as Sean Gaffney so cogently put it, I don’t Kirara as well as I used to. I have a harder time with extremely high-pitched voices, and while I have found value in watching cute girls doing things cutely, series centered around people with severe social anxiety make me very anxious. But I also knew that the story wasn’t going to stay centered on Umika’s anxiety. So I cleared my slate and began to watch. As I predicted, Episode 1 was a little rough going, but by the end of Episode 2, as the story shifted away from how crippled by social anxiety Umika was, to the ways people around were making her feel included… my own anxiety about her anxiety lessened.

Additionally, in conversation on the Okazu Discord, at least one person felt that Umika’s character read autism-coded to them, especially in her interactions with the teacher, who treats her like she’s lazy or unmotivated when that’s not the issue at all. I also resonated with Umika’s desire to find a solution to her loneliness outside human society, although my particular forms of escapism in adolescence never included me wanting to be in those worlds, they were nonetheless critical to my surviving my teens. ^_^

So, at first we are presented with Umika, who is having a very hard functioning in the society of school. When Yuu arrives and is everything that Umika is not, it could have been a devastating blow to Umika, but instead Yuu reaches past Umika’s inability to communicate and makes it easy for her to get her ideas across. This theme is an important one, as new personalities are introduced in future chapters. Whe class president Takagi Haruno uses friendship with Yuu to be able to create a friendship with Umika, we can see the power of making a place for people to be themselves. None of the three girls have to be something they are not, but all of them can still be friends.

It very much seems that the direction the anime is taking is “amateur rocketry is fun!” which is a terrific focus for this series. Since I have not yet read the rest of the manga, one hopes that her interest in rockets will actually one catapult Umika to the stars in the form of JAXA, the Japanese space agency. But even without that focus, this story is off to a good start, despite a very difficult premise for a launchpad.

The animation is utterly not to my taste, although the OP is quite lovely. Still I have hope that we’ll get some shots of rockets reaching new heights.

Ratings:

Art – 6
Story – Begins at a 5, hits 7 by Ep. 2 and has potential for more
Characters – I’m not even sure what I think of them yet, let’s say 7
Service –  3 Not as such, but skirt/legs/beutt shots and pan-ups do get on my nerves
Yuri – 1 as of now. This series is always on Yuri lists, so I’ll trust

Overall – 7 seems like a good place to start

I have hope that this story will be about making friends with neurodivergent classmates and building hope along with rockets.