Archive for the Guest Review Category


Yuri Manga: Kiss & White Lily for My Dearest Girl, Volume 6 (English) Guest Review by Christian Le Blanc

July 4th, 2018

Hello and Welcome to Guest Review Wednesday, where we welcome back returning Guest Reviewer Christian LeBlanc! It took me a little too long to ask him to do this, especially as he is undoubtedly this series greatest advocate in North America. So, please welcome him, thank him and let us know your thoughts on this manga in the comments. In the meantime, the floor is yours, Christian!

Before going too far into this review, let me first declare my subjectivity, so you can keep this in mind while reading: I am a huge fan of Kiss & White Lily for My Dearest Girl. I get commissions of Chiharu and Izumi when I attend conventions. I proudly wore the 2018 Yuriten K&WL t-shirt while tabling at a con, as well as when I went to my local comic shop the morning this volume was released. I often listen to the drama CDs, even though I only understand about 5 to 10% of what is said. I have a playlist in my head of songs that I think “work” for certain characters. I celebrated when I saw my favourite couple ‘aged up’ for the Yuriten 2018 main illustration, because this confirmed they were still together years later. I loved a single chapter of Volume 5 *so hard* that Erica asked me to write this guest review for Volume 6. So when I say “Everyone should run out and buy three copies of this book!”, you should probably temper that advice and just buy the one copy instead.

So! Kiss and White Lily for My Dearest Girl, Volume 6, introduces us to Amane Asakura and Nina Yuunagi, who are in an open relationship – except Nina doesn’t really want it to be, but is scared she’ll lose Amane if she says anything about it. This is complicated by the arrival of Ryou Hiruma, who develops a crush on Amane (Amane has been helping her out with notes and chores while Ryou’s hand heals…and the crush is mutual). This is complicated even *more* when Nina and Ryou develop feelings for each other – poor Nina gets so twisted up with guilt and insecurity that she has a bit of a breakdown at Ryou’s place, where the gang all ends up meeting and hashing things out.

To put it in even simpler terms: since Nina wants to be in a monogamous relationship with Amane, she feels jealous when Amane and Ryou start getting close, and ashamed when she, also, starts to develop feelings for Ryou.

I was hoping this review would help me ‘get’ their relationship and enjoy them more, but the opposite happened. As interested as I was in reading a story about polyamory, the more I re-read this section, the more I’m convinced that this is a very unhealthy depiction of one. Nina would be a sympathetic character, except she shoves Ryou into some wet garbage, has murderous thoughts towards her right after, and forces a kiss on her later when she starts to develop a (one-sided, at this point) crush on her. Amane would be sympathetic, except when Ryou tells her about the pain Nina is in, Amane takes it personally and gets mad at Nina for not being honest with her. And for her part, Ryou doesn’t tell Amane she wants to get closer until after Nina tells her to back off, allowing ‘spite’ to be a motivator in her relationship with Amane.

Our trio achieves perfect equilibrium by story’s end, and maybe they’ll all be happy together from here on out after they’ve had their touching heart-to-heart, but I can’t help thinking that as soon as Amane falls for someone outside their circle, their happiness will vanish into thin air faster than a fart in a hurricane.

In contrast, returning heavyweights Chiharu Kusakabe’s and Izumi Akizuki’s relationship is much stronger and healthier, and much more fun to read. Izumi wrestles with the concept of polyamory after receiving a flower from Amane (this happens early in the book, before Ryou even appears), but ends up charming the hell out of Chiharu when she gets caught returning the flower (in any other series, seeing your girlfriend handing a flower to someone else would result in chapters and chapters of drawn-out misunderstandings; Canno’s abundance of new characters forces her to abandon these clichés in order to keep things moving, which I find really fresh and appealing). For her part, Chiharu gets a surprise visit from her former crush Hoshino-senpai, forcing her to deal with the last of her lingering feelings towards her, which culminates in a beautiful scene between her and Izumi. We also get a mini-chapter with these two at the end, as well as a very quick check-in with the other couples from the series. There’s even a 4 koma that shows how Ryou hurt her hand, revealing herself to have been the reason Chiharu had to attend an emergency disciplinary committee meeting and be late for her date with Izumi (Canno puts a *lot* of thought into her linking elements).

If you didn’t like Chiharu and Izumi from Volume 2, I don’t know that this volume will turn you around on them. If, however, you’re on the right side of history and swoon over the cute interplay between Izumi’s boundless affection and Chiharu’s cool, sarcastic exterior that hides a painfully shy but deeply loving interior, then you’ll love this book. I think it’s fantastic whenever we get to see a couple being a couple – so many romance stories are about characters falling in love; we don’t get nearly enough stories like this about people just *being* in love.

There’s a really sweet moment where Chiharu tells Izumi the reasons why she’s late for their date – Izumi is stung, but she falls forward into Chiharu’s shoulder for comfort, instead of turning away in anger. That one small detail is incredibly touching to me, as is Izumi’s trust in Chiharu when she realizes, hey, she didn’t do anything wrong (it just took her by surprise).

There’s one even smaller detail which I think is even more important, and possibly more affecting. At one point, Izumi thinks to herself: “Like in a tv show, you have just this one special person…and they tell you you’re special too…maybe this thing with me and Senpai is the same old story. Someone somewhere decided on the ‘mold.'” To Izumi, her relationship with Chiharu is the most natural, normal thing in the world, because of course it is, and I love seeing anybody feel that way. I don’t know if Canno intended it to be such a powerful beat (Izumi’s only thinking it because she’s mulling over Amane’s proposal of polyamory, which Izumi had never thought of before), but it’s right up there as one of my favourite moments in comics, and I think it’s perfect that this was published in time for Pride Month.

Ratings:

Art – 10 (Very fittingly, the only rough spot is when Amane, Nina and Ryou have a group hug)
Story – 10 (I averaged 6/10 for Amane’s, Nina’s and Ryou’s section, and 14/10 for Chiharu’s and Izumi’s section. You know, to be fair and impartial.)
Characters – 10 (see above)
Service – 3 (There’s a topless scene, played with zero salaciousness, which I think is neat; no, I rate this a 3 just for the expressions on the faces of Chiharu and Izumi when they kiss)
Yuri – 10. “How on earth did they let you in high school?” Chiharu asks Izumi; because she tested so highly in Yuri, obviously, which is the most important pre-requisite for attendance at Seiran. Now that I think of it, even the cats outside the school are probably in a Yuri relationship: “You’re so cuddly. Cuuuuute! Maybe you’re sisters?” Oh, Nina. You’re so naive.
Overall – 11, and you should buy three copies.

Erica here: As it happens, I love this volume. In a series that for me is cut, rather than meaningful, this volume stands out as a really excellent and important volume. I liked it in Japanese and generally consider it to be my favorite volume to date.





Flip Flappers Anime (English) Guest Review by Eric P

June 6th, 2018

Welcome to Guest Review Wednesday where we’re dlighted to have a review from returning Guest Reviewer Eric P.! Please give him your attention..take it away, Eric!

Average middle-schooler Cocona—raised alone by her grandmother without having known her mother or father—is just living her life going to school every day, meeting with her friend, Yayaka, not quite sure what to do for her future. Then a mysterious, energetic girl named Papika drops into her life (upon a flying surfboard of all things) and whisks her away on adventures to an equally mysterious parallel universe called Pure Illusion. Each trip is a visit to different dreamlike worlds—one resembles a psychedelic Alice in Wonderland, another is styled like a dystopian-future desert battle, and yet another as a schoolgirl-horror setting—and Cocona and Papika navigate each one of them to find certain crystal shards under orders from an organization called Flip Flap. All that is known about Pure Illusion is that it reflects the dreams or even psychologies of people in the real world. The shards themselves supposedly grant wishes, but Flip Flap’s intent is to find them all before Asclepius, a rival organization, can use them to restructure the real world, and the girl leading the rival missions happens to be Yayaka.

All this makes Flip Flappers sound like an oddball series—and it is, but in an entertaining, charming way, yet one of the biggest criticisms it received was for its unevenness. The first half is focused on the adventures in Pure Illusion, where each new world is distinctly random and bizarre, and largely interpretative in their imagery and themes. Even if you never read the interviews with the staff, it is still evident they took a lot of inspiration and queues from surreal paintings. Yet this takes more of a backseat in the second half, in which by that time the story itself kicks into gear—Cocona discovers Papika’s connection with her, Cocona’s past comes to haunt and shatter her future as she discovers her life has been a cruel lie, and the climax can be considered a little Evangelion-esque. Upon first viewing it can be jarring for those that were hooked into the storyline by its more intriguing first half in comparison to the more conventional formula of the second. But when watched all at once upon second viewing, everything seen in the first half had been a set up for what was to come in the story’s second half, regardless of whether or not it still leaves as much an impression.

If there is one thing different between the two halves I do personally find at odds, it is the fan service. While the first half had some of it, it was far more minimal and subtle, whereas in the second half there were a small handful of more blatant shots, a couple of which of the girls’ undersides—just because. Not to mention that one of the new warrior girls that comes later in the story dons an especially questionable getup for someone her age.

My only major nitpick aside, as far as Yuri goes, there has been some debate on whether or not Cocona and Papika’s relationship was ever more than subtext. But based on what I read, it is indeed there. The Premium Edition release of this series comes with a hardcover booklet containing interviews with the staff, and the director is quoted saying, “I wanted to include elements like transformations, huge weapons, pretty female characters, as well as Yuri, all in a very cute package.” So based on that, unless Sentai’s translation is off, whatever depiction of Yuri one finds in the story is intentional. In Episode 7 alone, where Cocona finds herself in a world where she meets multiple variants of Papika, it is easy to interpret it as Cocona coming to realize her feelings for Papika are deeper than friendship. It is made indicative that Yayaka also has feelings for Cocona, which naturally complicates her own position in the rival organization. If one were to watch Flip Flappers with the English dub—which is very well done—all scenes of Cocona and Papika expressing their mutual affections to each other can certainly come across as far less subtext.

Having said all this, while the Yuri may be a focus, it is not necessarily the primary one. Flip Flappers as a whole is a mix of various genres, including action, magical girl, mecha, sci-fi, supernatural, as well as yuri. As said before, this series is an odd one, but that oddness is what helps distinguish it, becoming one of those types of series where viewers can get anything out of it. Almost everything seen is metaphorical of whatever the viewers make from it, including Cocona and Papika’s butterfly-styled transformations. Yet at its very core, it is a coming-of-age story with heart of a girl breaking out of her shell and flying off into the unknown where she learns to find and be her true self, while choosing to stay beside the one girl responsible for it all.

If one were interested in giving Flip Flappers a purchase, one should consider Sentai’s glossy Premium box set. While it may be pricier than the regular blu-ray, it does come with that mentioned booklet with both interviews and artwork (there is even a page detailing the work that went into the designs of the characters’ huge/adorable eyes), while also including some very nice artcards. So if one cares about any special features at all when Sentai normally makes their regular releases bare-bones, Premium is the way to go, and Flip Flappers is special enough for it.

Art – 9
Story – 8.
Characters – 7
Service – 4.5
Yuri – 6.5

Overall-8

Erica here: Thank you for this review! And a quick reminder for readers that Flip Flappers is also streaming legally and free (with regional restrictions) on Crunchyroll.





Miss Koizumi Loves Ramen Noodles Anime (English) Guest Review by Christian LeBlanc

April 25th, 2018

Welcome to another Guest Review Wednesday on Okazu! Today we have the pleasure of you another new Guest Reviewer, frequent Okazu commenter, and talented 3D comics conversionist, Christian LeBlanc I expect you will all give Christian a warm Okazu welcome! 

“I want ramen…ramen…ramen…I want ramen.”

These are the first words that open slice-of-life gourmet comedy Ms. Koizumi Loves Ramen Noodles  and quickly sum up the main character’s raison d’être. Koizumi-san (we never learn her full name) is a new transfer student at Yuu Ohsawa’s high school, and is henceforth the object of Yuu’s affections, despite never returning those feelings. In fact, Koizumi never expresses any emotion outside of eating ramen, where she is shown displaying extremes of determination and pleasure.

“My only family is ramen.”

Based on the manga Ramen Daisuki Koizumi-san (ラーメン大好き小泉さん) by Naru Narumi, each episode is made of several shorts, and the show focuses on two obsessions: Koizumi’s obsession with ramen, and Yuu’s obsession with Koizumi. Koizumi’s obsession with ramen results in her talking matter-of-factly at great lengths about different aspects of ramen, flavors, methods of preparation, restaurants etc. with whoever she’s with at the time. Even though Koizumi prefers to enjoy ramen alone, she often ends up eating with Yuu, or with one of Yuu’s best friends: Jun Takahashi (the anxious brainy one) or Misa Nakamura (the fashionable one). These interactions allow the viewer to hear the Wikipedia-like info-dumps of ramen knowledge that Koizumi shares.

“Koizumi’s only lover is ramen.”

Yuu’s obsession with Koizumi, however, is another matter, and one that will divide viewers. The tone of the show is light and comedic, so Yuu’s constant badgering and stalking of Koizumi is played for laughs. Based on a lot of reviews I’ve read and comment sections I’ve lurked in, many people are annoyed by Yuu, and not amused. As someone privileged to have not been on the receiving end of unwanted attention very often, I found the series amusing watching it one episode a week: drawing pictures of Koizumi in her notebook, laughing goofily at the thoughts of their spending time together, blushing while gazing at her, making up cute little songs about her while she’s getting groceries, all this endeared me towards Yuu.

Watching it again all at once for this review, Yuu’s behaviour is harder for me to laugh off. Yuu calls Koizumi cold for rejecting her, “stingy” for not wanting to go on a beach outing and let Yuu see her in a bathing suit, and is constantly shown lurking behind bushes and signs as she follows Koizumi around after being told she wants to be alone. She’s jealous that her friends have gotten Koizumi’s contact info before she has, and her eyes will sometimes go blank as the background warps and her voice distorts as she chants obsessively to herself about Koizumi. (It’s worth noting that my wife sympathized with Koizumi right from the start.)

“Why did you want to climb that mountain?” “Because there’s ramen there.”

Overlooking problematic behavior to enjoy media is rarely a choice for me – I either buy in and gloss over the negative, or, something is ruined because of what I’m not able to look past. For viewers able to stomach Yuu’s behaviour, there’s a fair bit of comedy on offer (Yuu’s voice actor, Ayane Sakura, impressively delivers plaintive shrieks, shattered ranting, and aggressive bellows of relief). There’s also lots of knowledge about ramen, beautiful background scenery, and a travelogue-like presentation of restaurants (most, if not all, of the restaurants visited in the show are based on real-life ramen restaurants). The background music is unobtrusive, but unmemorable (in contrast, the opening and closing theme songs are very catchy and upbeat). You will learn about ramen with extra fat added (with a bizarre visual metaphor of sakura leaves falling onto the water), pineapple ramen, international variations of ramen, euglena (a bug-like type of algae) in ramen, cold ramen, a ramen with a blue broth that turns pink with the addition of vinegar, cocoa ramen, and more.

I recommend a couple of episodes to give this series a try, starting with episode 3 “Third Bowl: Saimin / Flavor Concentration Booth / Instant Noodles” (Yuu is actually appreciated this episode by Koizumi, who she finds passed out on the street after she forgets that the restaurant she wanted to go to was closed that day). Episode 6 “Sixth Bowl: Morning Ramen / Hiyashi / The Museum” allows Koizumi some time alone in a nice quiet episode, that also has the funniest line in the series. The browns and yellows in the background scenery of an evening festival are also beautiful to look at. After these two, you’ll know if you’re up to watching episode 10 “Tenth Bowl: An Unfamiliar Dish / Spinning Ramen / Rise to the Challenge!!” which is undoubtedly the funniest episode (but also features Yuu at her most unhinged…there are observation journals, a disturbing bulletin board full of photos torn and pasted together, etc).

“What do I have to do to become ramen?”

As for Yuri, it’s undeniable, but still never stated in as many words. Every bit of Yuri in the show comes from Yuu’s one-sided crush on Koizumi: she’s portrayed with hearts in her eyes during the opening theme song, her friends tell her “You’ve always loved cute girls, Yuu” after noticing her crush, and she fantasizes about the two of them in wedding dresses cutting a cake together. This last fantasy comes from asking Koizumi to help her cut apart a giant gyoza, which she sees as their “first cooperative activity.” The visuals, as well as Yuu’s behavior in general, make it obvious that she’s interested in having a romantic relationship with Koizumi, but the language itself is in denial, just as when Yuu basically confesses her feelings to Koizumi in the 12th and final episode: “I’m just obsessed with Koizumi-san, the girl who’s obsessed with ramen! I-I’ve never felt anything like that before. Which is why I was hoping we could maybe become better friends.” It’s obvious that what’s unspoken is “And maybe something more,” but it IS still unspoken, and I wouldn’t blame anyone who feels disappointed by this.

The ending theme “Love Men Holic,” sung by Shiena Nishizawa, reflects this discrepancy. At first glance, the title suggests someone addicted to loving men; on closer inspection, the ‘men’ is actually the same ‘men’ as in ‘ramen,’ while the word ‘love’ resembles the ‘ra’ in ‘ramen’ in an awkward portmanteau.

Ratings:

Art – 8 The background scenery is gorgeous, and the restaurants make you feel like you’re there. The characters themselves are drawn quite well (although Koizumi’s red eyes make me worry about all the sodium she’s consuming in her ramen-only diet).
Story – 4 The story is just a frame on which to hang lots of knowledge about ramen, and one girl crushing on another.
Characters – 3 (see Story, with a point taken away for bad behavior)
Yuri – 3 (It’s one-sided, and it’s not healthy, and it takes a back seat to the ramen. I believe it’s meant to be the ‘heart’ of the show, but I don’t feel that it succeeds well in that role)
Ramen – 11
Service – 3 or 10. There’s an occasional male-gazey pan over one of the girls in their bathing suit, and Jun does tongue an egg for a split second. I have to offer a 10 even though I don’t understand it or feel it: as Koizumi and friends chow down on noodles, male observers are sometimes shown with shocked expressions, gulping nervously, and even blushing sometimes, which indicates they’re getting something out of this that I’m not. Comments I’ve read online take for granted that the dining scenes are obviously service-y, but again, I’m stymied. Euphoric sighs at the end of a bowl are the closest I get to understanding it.

Overall – 7

BONUS RECIPE!

Episode 2 features a visit to a restaurant based on Pa-Pa-Pa-Pa-Pine in Tokyo, where every item on the menu contains pineapple. After watching the episode I was insanely curious to try it, so I watched a few YouTube videos with the owner and parsed together my own home-made, easy-to-follow attempt at it. Please enjoy a bowl of this while you give the show a try. (My wife insists I make this for us once a week, and a few people I’ve shared this with online told me they really liked it)

Serves: 1 (just double the ingredients and use two packs of instant ramen noodles when cooking for two)

Note: this recipe is vegan, however, one person I shared it with reported success using kippers instead of tofu. You may also want to boil an egg to have with yours, as my wife does.

Boil 1 ½ cups of water.

While the water’s heating up, add:
¼ tsp pepper (but use 3/8 tsp if cooking for two)
1/8 tsp Sriracha sauce (use less or more depending on your preferences for heat)
1 Tbsp soy sauce
½ packet of beef flavouring from instant ramen
11 or 12 cubes of tofu

Shred about half a carrot while you’re waiting, too.

Once boiling, add a ½ cup of the pineapple juice from a can of crushed pineapple, as well as the ramen noodles. Let boil for about 2 minutes (or according to package directions), remove from heat, and throw in some spinach. (If you prefer bok choy over spinach, add that to the broth 1st thing, as it takes longer to cook)

Pour into a bowl with some nori (dried seaweed) strips, 2/3 cup crushed pineapple, sliced green onion, top with shredded carrot, and enjoy!

(Note: the real recipe uses Korean chili threads, but I haven’t been able to find this in my area)

 

Erica here: Seriously, euglena?!? Holy crap. Bruce loved ramen and and travelogue stories and Yuri and euglena, which was his “favorite single-cel organism” . Stupid Bruce going and dying, he would have loved this series.  Grr…..

Anyway, fabulous review and I take what I said on Twitter back back, this recipe actually sounds pretty good. Thanks so much for sharing!





Japanese Classic Novel: The Changelings by Rosette Willig, Guest Review by Jason L.

April 18th, 2018

Welcome to Guest Review Wednesday!  Today we have another exciting review and another new Okazu Guest Reviewer, Jason L. As you may remember, I have been reading and reviewing the Torikaebaya manga series by Saitou Chiho. Tomorrow I will be reviewing the final volume and today we have a discussion of the source material, how wonderful is that? 
Before I had the mic to Jason, I want to mention that this book, while available in print, is absurdly expensive generally, so if you want to read it, I recommend you go to your local library and ask for an Interlibrary Loan of it from another library that has it. If you have never done ILL before, no worries, the Reader’s Services desk will help you, just nab the ISBNs, author, year, publisher from this link and they’ll have all the info they need to find you a copy to read. 

So please give your attention to Jason – and buckle in, it’s going to be a bumpy couple of days!

Upon my first viewing of Maria-sama ga Miteru season 4, I was intrigued by the play, Torikaebaya Monogatari, put on between the joint student councils at the school festival. So I did what I always do, and went in search of a copy of it in English. I discovered that it had only been translated once, originally in 1978 as Rosette Willig’s dissertation, and then released with some modifications in 1983 under the title of The Changelings: A Japanese Court Tale by Stanford University Press.  It took several years to find an affordable copy but I finally laid my hands on one in January and it has felt like I brought, if ever so small, a piece of Yumi’s world into my own life, something quite precious to me.

The Changelings tells the story of two half-siblings, the born-as-a-girl Chunagon who chooses to lead his childhood and young adult life as a man and the born-as-a-boy Naishi no Kami who leads her life as a woman. Other than their parents, no one is aware of their biological genders. Both are thought to be extraordinary in beauty and talent. Chunagon becomes an ever more prominent member at the Emperor’s court. Their father however, refuses the Emperor’s entreaties for Naishi no Kami to be introduced at court. He knows that the Emperor will insist on taking her as his wife thereby uncovering her biological sex. As their story unfolds, what has been a melancholy treatise on gender nonconformity to this point, goes somewhat off the rails and into quite upsetting territory. I was not expecting this given the comedic version done on Marimite.

One of Chunagon’s friends/rivals, Saisho, forces his way into both siblings’ lives with disastrous consequences. Chunagon has married Yon no Kimi with whom he shares a bond but no intimacy. Saisho enters their home and rapes Yon no Kimi ultimately resulting in a pregnancy that nearly destroys her marriage to Chunagon. Following this, Saisho rapes Chunagon, having discovered his secret. Chunagon becomes pregnant and Saisho forces Chunagon to hide in his rapist’s country home, to deliver their child in secret. With the beloved Chunagon now missing at court, his sister, Naishi no Kami, leaves in search of him. Upon being reunited, the two siblings decide to switch places so that their biological sex will match their social roles. This is kept hidden from Saisho, who is now ostracized  by society for his relationship with Yon no Kimi and by the new Chunagon (the former Naishi no Kami). Unfortunately the author spends what feels like endless scenes on what can only be described as whining by Saisho, for whom I struggled to have any empathy. And still the sexual violence does not end, but is furthered by other characters now that the leads’ roles have been switched.

So, clearly this is not the comedy that Marimite presents, but they were not alone in this interpretation of the Torikaebaya monogatari. The sexual violence by powerful males that drives the plot forward has often been played as erotic comedy in many productions of this work. There is, in fact, a routine parallel made to many of Shakespeare’s gender swapping comedies, as Willig notes in her commentary. But nothing could be further from the truth. Mistaking The Changelings for comedy says more about the people encountering, performing, and reviewing the work over the years than it says about the story itself or the pain the characters experience.

And yet as a tragedy, there could have been value in telling such harrowing experiences if done with a grander purpose in mind. However, the author chooses to reconcile these tragedies by marrying off all the characters who are now newly in gender conforming roles. This is done as if none of the violence really had any lasting consequences. Even the new Chunagon marries Saisho off to the younger sister of his second wife. Any historical validity to such an ending is insignificant to me as a modern reader wishing that there was some greater moral purpose for the story.

Making my disappointment in this ending worse, the first third of the story was delicate and empathetic in its handling of the characters’ gender identities. Initially, the author seemed sensitive to the emotional toll and the social stakes of the gender switch. Both Chunagon and Naishi no Kami frequently worried about being discovered and wished to either live in seclusion or leave the world completely, reminding me that the high rates of depression and suicide within the LGBTQI+ community is not new to our society, a powerful message from a 900 year old text. Complementing my initial impressions was Willig’s decision to use the characters’ preferred pronouns throughout, with the female-born trans-male Chunagon being referred to with masculine pronouns and the reverse for Naishi no Kami. In the original language, gendered pronouns are not used as they are in English and so it was Willig, in her translation, that honored the characters’ self-identities with her pronoun choices, a brave decision in the 1980s translation community.

So then I am left with complex feelings.  The book is an important tangible connection for me with Maria-sama ga Miteru, and yet, that too treated it as a comedy, which it most certainly is not. The prose itself is mediocre at best, the translation readable but not artistic, sort of like a middling YA novel. But all my initial confusion over whether it was a comedy or a tragedy, and the weak writing, would not have mattered if the story rose to the potential it displayed early on. Unfortunately, without any comeuppance to the three men who commit rape, or some unambiguous moral judgment rendered by the author, I simply cannot recommend this book. I am left uncertain as to its value for others. However, when I see it on my shelf, I still feel as though I have somehow materialized a piece of my favorite anime into existence in the real world. For me, that might be enough.

Ratings:

Writing: 4 (serviceable and mostly clear if uninspiring)
Story: 5 (beautiful poetry exchanged between characters, deeply moving emotional exploration of trans lives in the beginning, but unacceptable resolution and no final moral judgment)
Characters: 8 (We care about the main characters and hurt alongside them)
Service: 2 (there is little to no textual description of the sexual acts themselves, beware that most sexual encounters in the story are overt rapes)

Overall: 5 (if the conclusion had been morally stronger I would have gladly overlooked the poor prose quality)

Erica here: Wow. What a fantastic review, Jason. When I end up saying about 80% of the same things all over again tomorrow, I’ll make sure people know you said it first. ^_^ Thank you so very much for this review!





Yuri Event: Yuriten Osaka Report, Guest Review by Zoey B

April 8th, 2018

Today we have a Yuri Event Guest Review by a brand new Guest Reviewer, Zoey B! Zoey commented that she was in Osaka in time to catch the first round of the Yuriten Exhibition, which was open from March 30-April 8 (so it closed a few hours ago in Japan) and offered to tell us all about it. So let’s let her get on with it. Take it away, Zoey!

The event took place in the event space of the Namba Parks shopping mall – given the size of the shopping mall, the actual event area was smaller than expected. We got there soon after it started at 11, and were surprised to find that there were only a few people lined up outside to get in. 

Photo copyright Zoey B. 2018

The staff were controlling how many people were in the space, so you were able to enjoy looking at the exhibits at your own pace without feeling crowded. When you enter, you can see to the left the shop and check-out area, but you first head to the right through the exhibits.

Photo copyright Zoey B. 2018

The exhibits were laid out on the walls, with each author’s work grouped together by series, or photographers work grouped together. There were a few illustrations and signed author messages that were made specifically for the event, which was nice to see – and you were able to freely take pictures (as we did). It reminded my wife of going through an art museum; with little plaques about each authors’ work, it was a good way to introduce people to new series they may not have tried yet.  

 

Photo copyright Zoey B. 2018

Once you had gone through the exhibit – which had a good amount of different artists and series, covering major series over the last decade from what we could tell – you were naturally led into the shop area. The merchandise was all separated by series – each would have copies of the books, as well as clear files, posters, or other specific merch made for the event. The merch seemed to be designed to fit the content of the series – eg 2DK, G-Pen was focused on office supplies, whereas Kase-san had a make-up mirror and tote bag that you could see the characters using. Galette and other magazines were also there, and there were some Yuriten-themed items as well – we got a double-sided clear file, with the illustration on one side and the photograph version on the other!From the shop area, you could either get into line for the check-out or go out directly – though it did feel like you were strongly encouraged to buy something. The whole time we were there, I don’t think that the line to check-out was less than 15-20 people at any point, so we hope it was doing well! Most of the items did seem to be marked-up for the event, however – clear files for Y500 – and not great quality for the specific items. The choice of merch per series was quite limited – only two or three items – but there was a lot of stock of the books and magazines actually being shown. 

 

Photo copyright Zoey B. 2018

The ratio of people attending was interesting (assuming genders for the purpose of this). There were a lot of male attendees, but there seemed to be more female attendees – including ourselves – which was nice. A lot of people were buying books rather than the other goods, and some people had entire baskets full of seemingly all the books you could get there! Impressive.

The feel of the event itself was not quite what we had been expecting – my wife said that she had expected it to be more of a celebration of Yuri, whereas it came across more as a pop-up shop with an art exhibit. It was definitely good! – how it was set up allowed you to really take your time, appreciate the displayed artwork and series, and leave you wanting to read each work. It definitely seemed to succeed as a way of generating interest in Yuri as a genre – just not as we’d imagined it. With the chance to take our time, it made the event more enjoyable.

As we were there for the opening day and time, we were expecting some presence of the actual authors or publishers, but there were only the Village Vanguard staff (the hosts for the Osaka Event). It does make sense, though, as the last two days of the scheduled event are planned to be the signing portion – for Osaka, the 7th and 8th April. You were allowed one book per person – having to have purchased vouchers from Village Vanguard for your chosen series in advance – each author scheduled for some time in the two days. We did not get to see this, but maybe next year! 

Photo copyright Zoey B. 2018

Overall, it was a very organized event, which my wife and I enjoyed going to very much. The displays were very nicely done, and we’re hoping that it grows bigger and better next year. Thank you for bringing it to our attention! 

Erica here: Thank you Zoey for the report and the photos. I’m even more excited about it now, because it seems so…pleasant. ^_^ I’m especially interested in seeing it displayed at Studio Lightbox in Aoyama.