Archive for the Events Category


‘My Margaret’ 50th Anniversary Manga Exhibition

October 26th, 2014

mm50Girl’s manga magazines Margaret and Bessatsu Margaret (Bestuma) magazines celebrated their 50th anniversary this year with the Watashi no Margaret: (My Margaret) exhibition at the Mori Tower in Roppongi Hills. Our intrepid team of Okazu reporters took in the exhibit on a fine Thursday afternoon in October.

Margaret has some strong ties to our community. It was – and is again – the home of Riyoko Ikeda’s works, including Oniisama E/Dear Brother and Berusaiyu no Bara/Rose of Versailles manga series. (It also was the home for the Maria-sama ga Miteru manga and early Yuri classic, Futtemo Harettemo.) In addition, fans of sports manga will remember that the first girl’s sport manga, Attack No. 1 and the popular tennis manga, Ace o Nerae!/Aim for the Ace! also ran in Margaret.

Ticket holders were herded into a waiting area, where we were able to get tantalizing glimpses of reproduction color art from the magazine. No photos were allowed, so of course, I snapped this quick picture while waiting.

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Before we were let free to wander the exhibit, there was a 4 minute video that was absolutely fantastic. Individual panels of various popular works from 50 years of the magazine, accompanied by dramatic music and fade-ins and outs of recognizable dialogue, was surprisingly moving. The finale was a collage of kiss scenes from dozens of the series and both my wife and I sniffled a bit. It was hard to not be overwhelmed by the shoujo-ness of it all. ^_^

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(These are the scenes from the video on the front and back cover of the exhibition catalog, which was lovely, but large. I did not get it, despite thinking about it very hard.)

The exhibit itself  was broken into not quite a dozen rooms, the first several focusing on a period of the magazines’ evolution from general “girl’s” magazine to manga magazines.

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These were followed by manga categories, like “Gag and Comedy”, “Horror” and “Sports” with original art from popular series of that kind. The “Sports” room had me riveted, with actual original pages from Attack. No. 1 and Ace o Nerae!, Swan and other famous series.

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Comedy and Gag manga were presented in a cheerily painted area with sound and vocal effects in large word balloons on the wall. Horror was, of course, black walls, splashes of blood-red  and scream effects. ^_^

The “Romance” room, was set up to look much like a reception area of a wedding hall, with banners of cloth hung in a canopy from the ceiling.

There was a focus spot on a series I was not at all familiar with – Hot Road – and we were allowed to take pictures of the motorcycles used in the live action movie of the series. Here is one of the watercolors. It’s an odd choice, since most of the art for this series is full of movement and large vistas, motorcycle noises and cityscapes. This was a cover of one of the manga volumes that manages to be none of that at all.

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This lead into a full room of original art from this series..and wow do I have a new appreciation for manga artists after this. Much of this, and the next rooms, which had original water colors for color pages were…amazing. You could just about point out the moment that screentones were introduced into manga art, and marvel at the early effects created by ink, cutting, splattering and the liberal use of whiteout. The water colors of the 70s and 80s were absolutely breathtaking in some cases. The painting and drafting skills of the artists were evident in these full-size original pages.

Towards the end, there are a few rooms focusing on other popular series, such as Hana Yori Dango and current favorite Ao Haru Ride/ Blue Spring Ride, which is getting a live action movie in the upcoming months.

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The end of the exhibit was focused on Riyoko Ikeda’s work. In a room patterned after, one supposes, wallpaper in Versailles, we are in suddenly in the presence of the original art from Berusaiyu no Bara/Rose of Versailles, the timeless tale of the female soldier and leader of soldiers during the French Revolution, Oscar Francois de Jarjeyes.

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It was wonderful. ^_^

You remember the painting of Oscar as a classical hero on a horse? That’s a real thing. In full color, beat to shit on paper that has been folded and mishandled for decades…there it was.  Along with (of course,) Takarazuka costumes from one of the first performances of the musical.

This lead into a wall of Ikeda’s art from Orpheus no Mado and a few original pieces of Oniisama E/Dear Brother. (Kaoru no Kimi with a guitar. Squee.)

Then we come around the corner for the ultimate photo op.

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This life-size sculpture comes with a wall of photos from every angle, and a couple of French flags you can hold and take a picture of yourselves in the same position. I declined to pose, but got a cute picture of a couple of girls doing so. ^_^

From there, you are herded into the gift shop, where naturally, you buy way too many things you neither need nor want, because they look so cool!

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(That is a Wada Shinji series on the bottom. It’s from Gin-iro no Kami no Arisa, which ran in Betsuma.)

When we had consumed goods to our satisfaction, we went up on the Sky Deck to check out Tokyo. Considering I took this on a cellphone, with the sun glare making it impossible to see the screen, this picture of the Skytree and Tokyo Tower came out damn good.

 

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I’m really very glad we managed to get to this exhibit. It was exceptional in every way.





Geek Girl Con 2014 – Where Geekery is Queen

October 22nd, 2014

This book was in the lobby of my hotel. It means nothing, but explains a lot about the hotel.

I am returned from my whirlwind tour of locations west of my natural habitat, at last! First up, I want to tell you all about Geek Girl Con, which was held October 11 and 12 in Seattle, Washington.

The focus of GGC is very hands-on, what have you made/written/worn/sung today? And it is very young-person friendly. The event offers a maker space for kids and a DIY science area, both of which were pretty full the whole time. The attendee mix was delightful, people of all genders, ages, sexes, sexualities. The only thing I’d say was missing was racial diversity, but that may be more of a reflection of Seattle, which strikes me as a very white city as compared with my local area. I’ll get back to this point later. There were a lot of children, boys and girls, and what really stood out to everyone I spoke with is that GGC attracted a crowd that actually gets what equality looks and feels like. The guys as well as the women were all about female-focused fandom without the kind of “I’ll get me some girls for sure!” inanity or the kind of incoherent rage we see from some parts of the community at female-focused series being popular, or series that women like being inherently less good or, indeed, women being fans of anything. In short, it was a great crowd. So great that nearly everyone commented on it.

 

 

 

The con itself got off to a gentle start, with a gradual fill, rather than the frenetic rush of larger events.

I was accompanied in my study of Geek Girls by my intrepid lackey Bruce, who puts up with amazing shit and I’m incredibly grateful to him for many things. Bruce and I wandered the main selling floor, past the gaming stuff, until we found things we could buy. As soon as we found stuff we could throw money at, we knew we’d like this con. ^_^

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It started with some awesome pop culture/ancient art mashups by Dancing Heron.

Then we found a lovely print of the Senshi by KRMayer.

I managed to not be a total dork at the Doubleclicks table as I bought their album Lasers and Feelings from Aubrey (whose name I got right, score one uber nerd point for me for not fucking that up. Don’t worry though, I fucked up a major thing later at a different event and lost that point and many others.)

I also bought a lovely ring with the symbol for the planet Uranus on it that I liked. I know it’s upside down, I was wearing it so someone looking at it would see it right way up.

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I owned it less than a week. It fell off my finger in a cab in Mitaka, Japan. But that’s a different story. ^_^;

Bruce and I ran into some old friends, Sparkle and Gideon. I was given a sample copy of their daughter’s hand-drawn comic, Blue Bird. We also got to spend some time with an old friend Hillary, blogger L.B. Bryant and Yuri no Boke herself, Katherine H. and twitter friend Amy S. It was great catching up with everyone, seriously. Walking around an event is always more fun with someone to bounce ideas off of.

In the Artists Alley, I had an extended conversation with the folks at Kilted Comics, because I absolutely fell hard for their Paris in the 20th Century comic, that features adventuresses in an alt 1920’s Paris. SO my type of thing. In fact, about the time I bought that I was feeling very pleased with GGC. ^_^

We started to get in line for the concert, but an incipient cold I was fighting off became a fever and we packed it in for the night.

Sunday was spent with friends for the first half, as we wandered around the con once more, enjoying the atmosphere.  When I encountered this group of cosplayers I realized exactly what I liked best about GGC:

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Sailor fuku-wearing, gender switched Avengers and Darth Makenna for the win. THIS is everything I loved about GGC, the unapologetic mashups, the celebration of everything we love all at once, and loving it any way we damn well please. ^_^ The cosplay was fabulous.  (Later that day I saw a Sailor Mars with many tattoos and I suddenly thought that an all-inked up Senshi lineup would totally do it for me. If I could draw, I would be working on that like gangbusters.)

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Riding on this high of “woot, fandom, we’re all crazy, in a sparkly way,” I made my way over to the Northwest Press booth, which comes complete with disco ball and pink fake fur-covered sofa, along with some of the most *amazing* queer comics and prose in print. (I haven’t reviewed it here, as it’s utterly not lesbian, but Al-Qaeda’s Secret Weapon is one of the funniest, most outrageous and brilliant comics I have ever read.) There, at last, I got to fangirl at Leia Weathington, creator of The Legend of Bold Riley. As I expected, she was delightful and was not at all flipped out by me being a massive creepy fangirl at her. Leia was really excited about the upcoming Bold Riley pamphlets, and we talked about how the success of her Kickstarter gave her the chance to give all the artists a raise.

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I also had a lovely talk with publisher at NWP, Zan Christensen.  He kindly gave me the short story anthology The Lavender Menace: Tales of Queer Villainy! to read.  Expect some very exciting news coming from this quarter in the near future. ^_^

I managed one panel on Sunday, on LGBTQ writers, characters and content in Sci-Fi. The panel was quite excellent. Panelists talked about the resistance of traditional publishers, the sea change in representation that is becoming a swell as more readers and authors demand better and more diversity. They talked about their own histories, gave suggestions of authors to read. They even noted that while it was great having an female scifi writer panel on the topic, there was still some work to do. All the panelists were white, they noted. Where where the Women of Color authors? The Trans and Queer authors? I was really glad that they commented on this and it made me hopeful that GGC would work to increase diversity even more for next year.

After hanging with friends a bit more, Bruce and I headed down to the water to visit the Seattle Art Museum. We had less than an hour there before it closed, but it was stellar. Well worth a visit on its own. It should come as no surprise at all that I made a beeline for the Pop Departures exhibit and was gratified to see a James Rosenquist in the mix and then beside myself with glee to see Barbara Kruger included, as well. ^_^

Sunday night, Bruce and I walked across the city (through a crowd of unhappy Seahawks fans) to what turned out to be a fantastic, restorative dinner at The Tamarind Tree.  And our con ended officially Monday morning after tea and crumpets with Katherine and Amy at The Crumpet Shop. Thank you ladies for a delightful time!

I would highly recommend Geek Girl Con for anyone who likes to be part of the narrative, not just part of the audience. It’s intimate and small right now, just the kind of con that you can feel comfortable coming as the TARDIS, a steampunk gender switched Harry Potter or Satsuki and Nonon from Kill La Kill and fit right in.

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Upcoming LGBTQ Comic/Yuri Manga Events

September 21st, 2014

DSCN5321For folks on the East and West Coasts of the USA or in and around Tokyo, Japan, there are a number of events of interest coming up and I *hate* reports that start “Oh, hey, I did the coolest thing this year and forgot to mention it was happening in time for you to plan to be there!” So, in order for some of you to make plans to be at these events, here are several upcoming events that I think you might want to make an effort to attend!

 

GLFes 

October 19, 2014, Yokohama, Japan, Yokohama Minato Mirai, Hall Marineria (横浜みなとみらい・横浜産貿ホールマリネリア)

This is the 12th Girls Love Festival event and it looks fantastic this year.  I think this is their first time in Yokohama, and next year it appears to be back in the Tokyo area. I actually changed my plans this year to attend, because under the GLFes umbrella, one of the events is “Onaji Hoshi ni Umareta Futari” an all-Yuri Sailor Moon doujinshi event. Amano Shuninta-sensei (Watashi no Sekai o Kousei Suru Chiri no You na) did the cover art and I felt almost obliged to be there for the first-ever all-Yuri Sailor Moon event, y’know?  ^_^

The way GLFes works is that there are a bunch of thematically-organized sections. There will be a KanColle “event”, the above-mentioned Sailor Moon section, Sakura Trick, Yuru Yuri, PreCure and whatever other series are popular will get their own sections. Tucked in between are original works which, as you may be aware, is what I like best. ^_^

There are no panels, but I will be with a few folks with coherent Japanese and hope that I can speak to a few of the folks there interviewy-like. Fingers crossed.

 

Geek Girl Con

October 11-12, 2014, Seattle WA, Washington Convention Center

The reason I will not be at NYCC this year is because I am going to Geek Girl Con. This year is the 4th GGC and I wanted to at least experience it once.  Pretty much the entire Panel Schedule is of interest to and focused on Women in fandom, gaming, media, comics, etc. What I’m not seeing a whole lot of is LGBTQ-themed stuff, which sort of surprises me.

Queerbaiting in Genre Television: Representation or Exploitation?

Gaylaxy Quest: Exploring Queer Fantasy and Science Fiction

are the only things I see on the schedule. There is a BL-focused panel. No Yuri, but I wasn’t applying to run one, and there are, as I always say, way more straight girls than gay ones.  There are some “Female Gaze” panels, but from experience I know that those tend to be very straight (and usually pretty objectifying men-focused) and not my cup of tea.

I know The Legend of Bold Riley‘s creator Leia Weathington is supposed to be there and I hope to hang with her and a couple of Friends of Yuri. If you’re gonna be there, do let me know and we’ll make time to catch up and say hi!

 

New York Comic Con 

October 9-12, 2014, Javits Convention Center, New York City, NY

New York Comic Con has gone back and forth on Queer presence and equity of representation, but this year they seem to be making a special effort to have a number of panels on Women in Comics and Geek Media. Here are few you probably don’t want to miss:

Prism Comics Presents: Women in Queer Comics

Women of Color in Comics: Race, Gender and the Comic Book Medium

The Mary Sue Presents – Strong Female Characters: The Women Shining in Geek Media

Because I will be on the other side of the country for the weekend, if you do attend NYCC, (especially any of these panels) and would like to do a write-up of your impressions, please let me know and I’ll give you a quick tutorial on how to write something up! Industry panels are written up by every blogger in the universe, but far fewer people cover the meaty topic-oriented ones. I’d love to have eyes and ears at NYCC. You’ll get a colorful YNN Correspondent badge to display on your webpage or social profile in thanks. ^_^

 

International Manga Festival

November 23, 2014,Ariake, Tokyo, Japan, Tokyo Big Sight

The International Manga Festival, aka the Kaigai Fes, is held as a part of Comitia, the biannual all-original doujinshi event. Begun just a few years ago, the Kaigai event is getting larger and more exciting every year. A bit like the opposite side of the TCAF card, the Kaigai Fes has comic artists from outside Japan, and it’s a lot of fun, seeing folks who are bridging the oceans to communicate about comics and comicking.

Comitia itself is a very cool event. Because it focuses on all-original doujinshi, I’ve found some good LGBTQ narratives and some straight-up Yuri as well. Next year I plan on revisiting the Kaigai and Comitia and seeing how far they’ve come. ^_^ If you can’t make it, rest assured, a number of manga bloggers will be covering this event. Keep your eyes especially on Deb Aoki’s Manga Comics Manga site for news and reporting.

 

Winter Comiket

December 28,29,30, Ariake, Tokyo, Japan, Tokyo Big Sight

World’s biggest small press and self-published comic show. Makes SDCC look like a baby event. It’s huge, intimidating and electrifying. Everyone who loves comics should do this once. ^_^ There are Yuri parody and original circles, but you have to work at it a bit to find them all.

 

And while this is 6 months out, I want to give you all a heads up for these 2015 events:

Queers & Comics – LGBT Cartoonists’ Conference

May 7-8, 2015, New York, NYC, Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies (CLAGS)
The Graduate Center, CUNY – 365 Fifth Avenue, NYC

The Keynote speakers will be Howard Cruse and Alison Bechdel.  More information can be found on their website or their Facebook page. I’m hoping to be there, although it means I will probably miss TCAF, because the world is like that, but I don’t want to miss it!

 

Toronto Comic Arts Festival

TBA, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

I can’t rave enough about TCAF. It’s got a strong manga presence, a strong LGBTQ presence and it’s generally the most fun I have at a North American event. The 2015 dates and location(s) have not yet been announced, but if you can make it, do!

 

So there’s a few vacation ideas for you coming up in the next half year or so. If you’re going to be at Geek Girl Con or GLFes, let me know so I can say hi!

 

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Events: “Secret” History of Yaoi and Yuri Panel at AnimeNEXT 2014

June 1st, 2014

Join me for The “Secret” History of Yaoi and Yuri panel at AnimeNEXT on Saturday, June 7, 2014 at 5:30!

We’ll be looking at Heian literature and art to find the earliest mentions of what we would now call Yaoi or Yuri. We’ll trace these elements from magazines for girls of the early 20th century to the shoujo manga revolution of the 1970s to explain all the most popular tropes of BL and Yuri manga and anime.

As usual, there will be prizes for good questions, so I hope you’ll drop in and say hi!





Events: Toronto Comic Arts Festival 2014 Report

May 18th, 2014
"Chika" from Golondrina by est em at TCAF

“Chika” from Golondrina by est em at TCAF

This year Toronto Comic Arts Festival (TCAF) was held on May 10 and 11 at the Toronto Reference Library and surrounding locations. As with last year, I bought good books, met amazing people and generally had a blast.

I arrived Friday and hooked up with my roommates for the weekend, Brigid Alverson of Mangablog and Robot 6 and Johanna Draper-Carlson from Good Comics Worth Reading. The weekend activities started for me with a reception at the Japan Foundation, where Japanese manga guests  Moyocco Anno, creator of Sakuran and Happy Mania!, who was premiering her book Insufficient Direction, about her life with her husband, Neon Genesis Evangelion director Anno Hideaki; BL artist est em, creator of Golondrina, and the manga team who go by the name Himekawa Akira who are working on the My Little Pony ~ Friendship is Magic manga and are best known here for their Legend of Zelda manga adaptations, all introduced themselves to the audience, then we mixed and chatted. It was a pleasure to meet est em-sensei and also see Himekawa Akira-sensei again. ^_^

This was followed by a dinner of epic proportions, with Brigid, Johanna and myself joining fellow comics/manga journalists and reviewers, Deb Aoki of MangaComicsManga, Heidi MacDonald of The Beat, Robin Brenner from No Flying, No Tights and School Library Journal writer Eva Violin.

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On Saturday, I moderated a relatively earlyish panel Art Theft! with Rachel Dukes and Katie Shanahan on how their art went from viral to stolen, what they did about it and what they might do differently knowing what they know now. It was well-attended for the venue and the panelists were great. At the end, we all agreed that we had learned something.

I hit the floor briefly between various panels and did dinner with friends, including manga blogger Sean Gaffney and a few other panels. The “Queering Comics” panel this year was *way* more balanced than last year, including at least one trans artist. I was a very little bit disappointed by the whiteness of the “Writing Comics for Women” panel, but that was remedied at the very excellent and nicely diverse “Women in Genre Comics” panel on Sunday. In fact, this last had me bolting for the floor again and buying up a bunch of the books I’ll mention in a sec.

I finished TCAF proper by moderating est em‘s Guest Panel, with translator Jocelyne Allen, followed by dinner with Sean, Johanna and Brigid, which was a terrific way to end the event!

The people are great, the panels are great, the venues are great, the food is great, Toronto is great, but the star of the show are the comics, and I thought you might want to know what I picked up while I was there. ^_^

standard-sized-single-page-templateThe first thing I snatched up were the first two issues of Sanya Anwar‘s zOMG gorgeous, throat-grabbingly compelling 1001. This is a re-thinking of the famous A Thousand and One Arabian Nights, with a more active Scheherazade. Issues 1 and 2 are up online and Sanya has said Volume 3 will be up in about a month. Her art is stunning, the story really grips you hard and shakes you up a bit and I cannot wait to read the next chapter!

Sanya also participated in  the “Women in Genre Comics” panel. One of the questions specifically asked about re-telling old myths and stories to create them in our own image. I’m excited to see what Sanya has planned for Scheherezade.

 

Lumberjanes by Stevenson Ellis Walters AllenI’ve *finally* had a chance to read The Lumberjanes, Issue 1, courtesy of Brigid, and I have every intention of nabbing up Issue 2 in which a relationship begins to happen in between following bearwomen into the woods and fighting wolves.  And other things. This is an action-packed, gosh-I wish-it-were-longer type story that I gift to my inner 11 year old.

Issue 1 starts right in the middle of an adventure and the tension doesn’t really let up, so readers are left chasing the story right from the get-go, which I completely approve of. No slow build to a thing happening here.

 

stonewall 1 - Venus by sasha steinberg

Magical Bitches by April MaligSasha Steinberg and April Malig were next to each other, so while I was chatting with them, I picked up the first of Sasha’s Stonewall series, and the first issue of April’s Magical Bitches series. This is a sarcastic send-up of the magical girl genre and the first issue is a prelude to what I hope will be a great story.

I asked Sasha about Stonewall and he said he’s working on a multi-part series detailing the weekend when the Stonewall bar became the turning point for American sexual and gender minorities. Each issue will follow a different character. Issue one starts off with Miss Venus, a teenage drag queen. The art for this issue is very mid-century American romance comics…the color choices, in particular, are stellar. Sasha discusses his influences in the back of the comic, from content to art and even has footnotes on the historical facts. Totally swoon-making. ^_^ His first two arcs, Miss Venus and Mark are available for purchase on his shop.

Sorceresses Next Door by Chad Sells and Jay Fuller

The Sorceresses Next Door by Chad Sells and Jay Fuller got me all choked up.  Read it here and see why.

Witchlight by Jessi ZabarskyReading Jessi Zabarsky’s Witchlight, I remembered why pamphlet comics drive me bat shit crazy. JUST as the story gets good, it ends and you have to wait for the next chapter!!

A teaser for Liz Prince’s Tomboy made me wish it was September already. Anyone who grew up as a tomboy will remember these situations. It’s not all bad…but it wasn’t all good, either.

 

Toccata by Shilin HuangI bought an artbook so beautiful I literally said to the artist, “Take my money. Immediately.” Breathtaking work by Shilin Huang based on her original comic Carciphona. There were some Yuri images, but really, it would not matter, the work hit my sweet spot for art. Check out the first page of Carciphona and see what I mean.

Time Travel Magic by Caitlin Major and Matthew HoddyMatthew Hoddy and Caitlin Major, who work as team Space Pyrates, had a fun little two-story collection called Time Travel Magic. Both protagonists were terrific female characters and one story has a little Yuri.

The next purchase I made comes with a somewhat strange story:

Some years ago, I was at the MoCCA event in New York City and an acquaintance mentioned that her friends had put together a collection I might like. The book was called Jardin des Lunettes. I wrote about the anthology in 2009, because I did indeed like it.

Love Lens Anthology by Love Love Hill5 years later, I am standing in another country in front of the same circle and we all have a “Really!?!” moment as I realize I am holding the sequel to that anthology, by the circle now known as Love Love Hill.

The new anthology is called Love Lens and again, Kim Hoang has created a lovely Yuri story for the collection. Do get this if you have any interest in original Yuri and want to support  Western comics creators! The Yuri story really is awfully sweet. ^_^

Fujo Sports Anthology by Love Love HillThe same circle were also selling a BL sports anthology called Fujo Sports. I read it last night and it was cute,; all the stories except one were kind of the same story…but it still was an entertaining read. ^_^

There was one Yuri story in  the collection, as well. And, honestly, the cover was worth the price. ^_^

Before You Go by Denise SchroederThe last pamphlet comic I want to mention comes from the pages of Sparkler Monthly, the English language Shoujo/Josei  manga magazine put out by ex-Tokyopop folks and great ladies Lillian Diaz-Przybyl and Lianne Sentar. They are doing *amazing* work, getting original English-language and translated short stories, manga-inspired comics, manga and voice dramas. One of their short series is recently published Yuri story Before You Go (which you can preview here and you can buy on the Sparkler shop – thanks  wandering dreamer for the heads up!) I picked up an extra copy to give away in a future contest, as well. ^_^

This story is a pretty straightforward “Story A” girl meets girls story, but it’s always lovely to have a sweet Yuri story in among all the angsty BL. ^_^

The last two books I have to mention,  I have not finished yet, but they are both oh so good.

Galaxion 1Tara Tallan‘s Galaxion, which is a story that got its start in 1983 when Tara was in 7th grade and is now on it’s 4th iteration or so as a fully drawn and written space epic graphic novel series that passes the Bechdel Test and the Friedman addendum with flying colors.

Women are leaders and fully formed and people have conversations with other people the way they do and then a plot happens! And there’s space ships and people relationships and politics and a plot. I’m really enjoying the book so far.

 

My last purchase of the show I have not yet had a chance to read, but I was so impressed by one of the creators at the “Women in Genre Comics” panel, I wanted to get it. Namesake by Isabelle Melançon and Megan Lavey-Heaton. I’m at the end of a long post, so I’ll steal the synopsis from the comic’s website:  “Namesake is the story of Emma Crewe, a woman who discovers she can visit other worlds. She finds out that these are places she already knows – fantasy and fairy lands made famous through the spoken word, literature and cinema. Her power as a Namesake forces her to act as a protagonist in these familiar stories as she figures out how to get home.” Another strong female protagonist, another compelling story.

So, here’s my takeaway…again…from TCAF. When you are looking for amazing female characters, warriors, adventurers, time-travelers, sorcerers, scouts, captains and leaders, look at the amazing work of the women and men who are making comics not necessarily carried at your local comic shop or bookstore. Check out the YA sections, look for good comics for kids, get to local comic shows (not comic collecting or collectables; the small local comics shows that are popping up everywhere, MECAF, MoCCA, Stumptown, and more. Don’t know where to start? Heidi MacDonald does “coming up this weekend” round ups on The Comics Beat and so does Tom Spurgeon at Comics Reporter.)

And…if you can manage it, make it to TCAF, where the world comes to sell terrific comics to people who want to read them.