Archive for the English Manga Category


If My Favorite Pop Idol Made It to the Budokan I Would Die, Volume 3

November 9th, 2023

Seven girls in red pop idol costumes pose on the cover of If My Favorite Pop Idol Made It to the Budokan, I Would Die, Volume 3 by Auri Hirao.Phew. Now that Christian took us over the hump of Volume 2, in which neither Maina nor Eri act in any way approaching the way normal humans might, We arrive at Volume 3 of If My Favorite Pop Idol Made It to the Budokan I Would Die, where they are marginally less not human. 

The first-ever ranking contest results are in and through an amazingly tortured and unreal set of circumstances, Eri comes too late to make a difference in the rankings. Main is, yet again, disappointed for the wrong reasons, until she learns that Eri bought her CDs anyway and runs after her Number 1 fan, but missing her because of an amazingly tortured and unreal set of circumstances. But the Christmas concert comes and although Reo is still center, the girls make their best efforts at giving their fans the kind of service they want – callouts, special gestures, handshakes – and, for the holiday a fraught gift a three shot! Why an idol group would sow dissension among their otaku by requiring them to pick a second fave is beyond me, but perhaps management forgot that otaku live and die by single-minded, creepily possessive obsession?

Importantly, Eri and Maina make each other very happy by saying something mostly-incoherent, but this time at least positive to one another! Yay! Maybe we past their inability to communicate? Hahahah, no, obviously not. This is a Hirao Auri manga and no one important will ever have a meaningful conversation.

The manga ends with the Cham Jam girls and their fans accidentally being at the local shrine at the same time for New Year’s…and the news that Cham Jam will be participating in this year’s Okayama Idol Fest…and so will with the girls who were in Reo’s old group. shock!

I said we’re “over the hump,” and in one sense we are. There will be less torturing of Eri from Volume 4 onward, but this volume is still firmly rooted in the idea that hurting Eri, and Eri and Maina not managing to talk is super hilarious, and not massively stressful. On the other hand, the members of Cham Jam are actually lovely when they are together. You can really see how much they like one another and really believe in themselves, which is incredibly charming. The shrine scene is a reminder that whoever they are up on stage, idols are people, too.  Cham Jam seems like a group you could really get behind.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story –  Still frustrating but I know there is a light at the end of the tunnel, even if I can’t see it yet.
Character – 8
Service – Pleasantly, 0
Yuri – 4 Hovering at “I think I feel something for you, but can’t put a finger on it,” to “I can’t look you in the eyes, but don’t know why” with potential

Overall – 8

Tokyopop does a very good job of making this series as fun as possible which, at least for a few more volumes, is not very much. But IF you love idol culture and love insights into both sides of the struggle – what idols and their fans go through – this is probably one of the most realistic manga out there. Idol culture is a niche of it’s own and has it’s own language and rituals. Thanks very much to Tokyopop for today’s review copy and for the excellent work by the entire team for bringing this title over.

 





Monthly In The Garden With My Landlord, Volume 1

November 8th, 2023

Two women laze around on the woman veranda of their home. One has medium dark hair and a green dress, the other has long blonde hair and wears blue denim shirt and shorts.Manga editor Suga Asako comes home to find herself broken up with. She decides to find herself a new place to live – one where she can be by herself as she puts her life back together. When she finds a sweet little house with a garden, she quickly signs the lease. After she moves in, she finds the lease said, “monthly rent, includes garden and landlord,” which means that the solitude she sought is not part of the bargain. Instead, she now has a live-in landlord.

The landlord also seems to be not entirely coping with life on her own. Kitano Miyako turn out to have an unusual backstory – she’s a former pop idol group leader who has recently left her group!  Together Asako and Miyako start to rebuild their lives, figure out how to co-exist and how to just exist in the first place.  Monthly In The Garden With My Landlord, Volume 1 is a sweet, awkward, story of people who are not themselves irredeemably broken, but are patching themselves up from broken situations. 

I wanna touch on the idea of “Yuri” in this manga. We do learn that Asako had a girlfriend, and that she’s got a weakness for pretty faces. For me this clearly sets this in a “Yuri” setting, rather than a “lesbian” setting. But also, it’s not like people who meet immediately tell other people everything about themselves. I also know what is to come, so I have a different expectation than people reading this for the first time. Based on this volume only – do you think you’d call this a Yuri manga?

I adore this story, honestly. It rides the lines between healing slice-of-life, realistic romance and wacky situation comedy with a very sophisticated style. Every volume has been better than the last. In fact, Volume 3 was an apex of adults having meaningful conversations. Yodokawa’s art is stylish and fun at the same time. There’s shockingly little tension in this story…even when the situation could have been used to make us worry, we’re given the punchline early, so we know it’s not much of a threat.  This makes for a very relaxed and easy read.

The team at Yen Press has done a clean job of localization. I very much like Stephen Paul’s translation in all things, except the title. I assume they chose “Monthly In The Garden With My Landlord” because it reads smoothly, but…does it? No one says anything like that, ever and  it misses the joke. Yes, I know it is not at all productive to whine about translation. I’ve just been finding Yen’s titles a little reductive recently. I think they could do a bit better.  In this case, it kind of shifts the tone of the story to begin with, eliding the humor. That’s only problematic in the sense that this is a comedy, first, and everything else second. Elena Pizarro Lanzas’s lettering is as good as the Yen house style allows. I’ll always ask for letterers to be given time and money to retouch where feasible. Fine technical reproduction and editing as always. ^_^

A cute, slightly wacky, slight realistic and ultimately, healthy, story that I highly recommend.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 8
Characters – 8
Service – 0
Yuri – 0.5 but hang on tightly….

Overall – 8

The short extra chapter gives us our first hint that this story might include romance. But first, Volume 2 will delve into the mystery of Miyako’s history and…it will be great. ^_^ We’ll be getting that next spring – which isn’t as far away as it seems. ^_^

Thanks very much to Yen for offering me a review copy of this, I had picked it up anyway for myself, but I appreciate the kindness! Keep up the great work.





Superwomen In Love! Honey Trap and Rapid Rabbit, Volume 5 Guest Review By Maru Malandra

November 1st, 2023

Two smiling women holds hands and lay back on a bed of lilies, with their giant mecha hovering behind them.Welcome today to our newest guest reviewer here on Okazu. ^_^ Maru Malandra is a VTuber affiliated with GATTAI!! The Live. She loves Yuri, mecha, idols and Tokusatsu! Find her streaming Gunpla and all sorts on Twitch, JRPGs on YouTube, and yelling about how gay she is on what’s left of Twitter.

(Shorthand Note: “kaijin” refers to person-sized humanoid monsters, while “kaiju” refers to giant ones.)

After finally confessing their feelings for one another at the end of  Volume 4, our heroines are enjoying their blossoming romance and a brief respite from Antinoid attacks. Has X given up? Can peace finally reign? I think we know the answer.

The final volume of  Tokusatsu/Yuri adventure, Superwomen In Love! Honey Trap and Rapid Rabbit, Volume 5 is simply a joy. Sometime-sensei shares her passion for both genres, and it all just works. The Tokusatsu references come in hard and fast, but rather than distract from the storytelling, they elevate it. Antinoid boss X is confronted by one of her generals in a philosophical battle meant to draw out X’s real feelings. This is one of the emotional and artistic highlights of the book, an all-out fight where Sometime-sensei showcases her talent for action that feels kinetic, laden with raw emotion, and evoke the page-turning momentum of the biggest names in Shonen manga or live-action Tokusatsu.

Our heroines’ rest is short-lived thanks to X’s transformation into a giant Kaiju, a process that revives all the defeated monsters… because of course it does! It’s a Tokusatsu endgame, and as the stakes ramp up, old enemies and allies alike come together to fight for a hopeful tomorrow. Moe, the kaijin-human hybrid, finds herself drawn to help, as her loving mamas (and former evil generals) Kyoka and Melt support her. The Hina sisters return and also join the fray with new hero suits.

Melt Out provides an upgrade to our ragtag group to battle X’s titanic form. In a dual tribute to the transformation poses of the Ultraman series and the combining robots of Super Sentai, our heroines grow into giant vehicles! Together, they form White Lily Queen, a church wedding-themed robotic behemoth piloted from enormous lily-shaped cockpits. Battle ensues, and it is not long before catastrophic urban destruction gives way to the battlefield of the soul.

It is here that Hayate and Honey face X one final time. The villain brings out all of her anger, her jealousy towards Hayate, and her unrequited love for Honey as she battles our heroines. But X cannot win against the power of kindness, compassion, and the sheer sentient need to love. As understanding is finally given to X’s wounded heart, a gigantic lily is seen erupting on Earth from orbit… and that’s as much of the story as I want to spoil!

While this may sound facile, the story lands its final story beats with aplomb. Superwomen in Love!’s central theme is a Tokusatsu staple: what defines a person? Is it their species, or what is in their heart? In 1971, Shotaro Ishinomori gave us Kamen Rider, the tale of a man who struggled with the meaning of his humanity after being turned into a cyborg against his will. The recent, adult-oriented series Kamen Rider Black Sun showed us a world where kaijin are second-class citizens. And yet, despite a ruling class that attempts to divide them, humans and kaijin are just regular people existing in an oppressive world. And when it comes to romance, hero-monster love stories are quite common. A week before this review was written, the current season of Super Sentai King-Ohger, showed the engagement of a Ranger hero to a former kaijin villain, as they looked after children in the post-apocalypse.

At the end of the day, Superwomen in Love! follows in the footsteps of its Tokusatsu forebears. It is our capacity for both hatred and kindness that defines our personhood. This very kindness lets former enemies become lovers—lets them embrace their former enemy and confront her messed-up feelings.

This manga exceeded all of my expectations. It’s an exciting Yuri romance as well as an entire Kamen Rider season’s worth of stories, all in a tight 5-volume narrative. Despite its frequent references, I feel this is a perfect starting point for Yuri fans wanting to dip their toes into Tokusatsu, and vice versa!

Ratings:

Art – 9
Story – 9
Characters – 10
Service – 0 Salaciousness, 10 in terms of Tokusatsu fan service!
Yuri – 10 (There’s giant lilies everywhere while the volume studies what love actually is)
Suit and Monster Design – 10 (I want figures of every hero and monster! Especially with all those cool transformation diagrams from Sometime-sensei!!)

Overall – 9 (Give me an anime!)

If you enjoyed this journey and would like to check out some Tokusatsu, I strongly recommend Kamen Rider W (“Double”) for live-action streaming on Youtube, or SSSS.Gridman, streaming on Crunchyroll for anime.

Thank you for reading! This is Maru signing off, and as always…

Fight Forever, Heroes of Hope!





Kiss the Scars of the Girls, Volume 1 Guest Review by Christian LeBlanc

October 25th, 2023

Two girls in dark old-fashioned Japanese school uniforms, look at us. One, with long, dark hair embraces a younger student with light brown hair. This image is an Amazon affiliate link.Vampires crossed with Class S!
And set in the future, no less.
With a setup so fun
You would think volume 1
Should be more fun than paint drying, not less.

For a story that’s set “in the far, distant future,” Aya Haruhana’s Kiss the Scars of the Girls  from Yen Press languishes in Yuri tropes of old. Emille Florence is our bright, cheerful, young and blonde protagonist, who falls for her assigned cool and distant big sister Eve Winter (whose first name rhymes with “Leave,” the very first thing she says to Emille upon meeting her). Maybe it’s the tea parties with cookies and cake, maybe it’s the secret rose garden (“vampires love the scent of roses”) or maybe it’s the school uniforms that the cast of Maria Watches Over Us would think were too old-fashioned, but I’m just not feeling this ‘future’ vibe. (Or this ‘vampire’ vibe, but we’ll get to that.)

Set at an all-girls’ school where students are assigned a “big sister” on their 14th birthday, Emille spends a great deal of time trying to win over Eve, who, as luck would have it, appears to have hidden, secret reasons for not wanting to get close to anyone. Emille’s friend Yucca Lotus seems to have an unspoken crush on Emille, while Violetta Emme (whose name I keep reading as Violent Femmes) also likes Emille, but not as much as she likes bullying her classmates and obligatory big sister.

Since this is a manga where everyone at the school is a vampire, you’d be forgiven for thinking that this was going to be a book that portrays vampiric content without vampiric identity. Unseen vampire hunters do factor into things, however, attacking the students with swords and shotguns whenever they visit the local town to hypnotize the local ladies enough to feed on them. Vampires are persecuted for their appetites (with no gore, but much blood), but never in a fun, ultra-violent way (which is a missed opportunity in my opinion).

 The vampires in Scars work a little differently than the vampires you’re probably used to, in fact: when a vampire turns 14, they start requiring human blood to live, losing interest in the food they used to love eating. The implication here is that vampires are living (as opposed to undead) creatures, seemingly born this way. These vampires also have no trouble with sunlight, fall easily to any type of weapon, and lack the immortality (and mystique, if we’re being honest) of your stereotypical bloodsucker.

 Overall, Kiss the Scars of the Girls feels like a missed opportunity. The vampire angle doesn’t do anything to make this Class S story stand apart from other Class S stories, except to give a narrative excuse to have the occasional student die violently. If you’re Ride or Die for Class S stories, then by all means give this book a try, but if you like your Yuri vampires to be comedic, or violent, or even inappropriate, you’ll probably feel like you have no stake in this.

Ratings:

Characters – 4 (Shiki Amakuni, we barely knew ye)
Story – 4 (does very little with either Class S or Vampires)
Service – 1 (scale this a little higher if you’re into shoulders)
Yuri – 5

Overall – 6

Erica here: Thank you Christian for this look at what I found to be a surprising license.

I am reminded by Amazon that I have to tell you that the book is linked to an affiliate link, in case you may have forgotten.





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.