Archive for the Miscellaneous Category


The Most Ideal Day

August 21st, 2005

(This is the same post I sent to the Yuricon Mailing List because I’m exhausted – my apologies for no creativity)

Hi everyone! Sorry I’m not posting much – days are looooong at conventions.

The yuri panel had about 200 people, if you add in all the people who came in. We had a bitchin’ time, thanks to BJ, Katie, Sean and everyone who came and asked fun questions.

The Yuricon table (#408 in the Dealer’s Room!) has been so busy, its been surreal. I was interviewed three times this AM. lol And I want to thank each and every person who has come by to say hi – you guys have all been GREAT. It’s a blast to talk yuri with all of you.

So, in Maria-sama ga Miteru, in Novel 6, Youko, Rosa Chinesis, has the “most ideal” day of her life. Honestly, today may well be the most ideal day of mine. I’ve met so many yuri fans who are so cool, and loving the work we’re doing at ALC, that it has TOTALLY energized me to get the next book out asap. :-)

In the meantime, and pardon the use of my #[email protected] name, today was the most ideal of Rosa Foetida’s life. lol

More later – in greater detail and clarity. Promise.





Sorry!

August 3rd, 2005

Okay, really, its been crazy this week. I just don’t have any time to write. I promise a review tomorrow, but today’s a bust.

Just to keep you interested, let me tell you about the stuff I’ll be reviewing in the near future:

Eve’s Apple – Volumes 3,4,5

Maria-sama ga Miteru – Novels 6 and 7, Drama CDs 6 and 7

[ES]Eternal Sisters 2

Kannazuki no Miko – manga Volume 2

Hana no Asuka-gumi – new manga Vol. 2, 3

Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou – Vol. 13

Yuri Hime – in detail

Venus ni Transistor – Vols 4-7

and a bunch of other stuff that’s sitting on my cofee table, but I can’t remember off the top of my head.

In the meantime, drop by the Yuricon Mailing list for all your yuri review and chat needs, until I get my act together! See you there!





Sister Red, Volume 2

June 20th, 2005

I just reviewed Sister Red, Volume 1 last week, but since both volumes are available in English, I thought I might as well review the second volume, too.

We left off in Vol.1, with Mahito facing several crises – one, the burgeoning of strange, new, powerful, and not entirely pleasant powers as the “Heart of Scarlet” lives within her dead body; the fact that her fellow night creatures are a horrible and human-hating lot, and; the fact that her high school has suddenly developed a force of crusading anti-night creature schoolgirl warriors who think of her as an enemy, or, at best, a nuisance. (It’s fairly plain, by the way, that these girls were the “inspiration” for Hayashiya-sensei’s next manga, the hentai demon-fighting adventure Ultra Sword.)

Even as Mahito learns about the origin of the night creatures, and her own powers, she’s forced to face more and more powerful opponents, like the eyepatch and slinky dress-wearing Viola, who I (not surprisingly) adored until she died. lol

Worse for Mahito, Yuri – Alice’s psycho brother who is searching for Scarlet’s Heart – decides that the key to getting it is Erika, her beloved cousin. Now secrets are flying fast and thick, as we learn the truth about Erika’s past and I am *so* not going to spoil any of it for you, because it’s fun, even if a little predictable and rushed. Just get the books and read it yourself. :-)

The end is in no way happy or even complete. In fact, the lack of a third volume to wrap everything up is the series’ biggest weakness.

Again – not yuri, per se, but all about intense relationships between women, many of whom kick serious ass. I just wish it had ended. I want to know what happens after Volume 2 ends! Boo-hoo.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 7
Characters – 7
Yuri – 0

Overall – 7

Hayashiya-sensei, can you just draw the rest of the story for us fans? LOL





Hot new items at Yuricon

June 4th, 2005

We’ve been making some changes and additions on the Yuricon website, so if you haven’t visited in a while, drop by now and take a look!

Right off the bat, we have a brand new Contest:The 2005 Yuriko Fanfic Contest will be running until August 1. Yuriko, our beloved mascot has done many things as a pop idol – tell us about her best, worst of funniest job and win some great prizes! Please read the submission rules before sending anything.

As always, there are new names on our ever-exapnding “The List” of anime and manga lesbians, lesbian wannabes and oughta-bes.

We’ve added more anime and manga to the Yuricon Shop and we’ve also switched to the Paypal system to make it more convenient for you to make purchases of ALC yuri manga, doujinshi and novels! Don’t forget to get a few I Love Yuri” gifts and t-shirts while you’re there, too.

And there’s a new essay up on our Essays page. The members of the Yuricon Mailing List voted on their absolute top must-read and must-see yuri anime and manga. We’ve collected those titles into a Yuri 101 primer for folks who want to know where to begin.

Last, but not at all least, check out our exciting Calendar of Events to find out where you can join Yuricon staff and friends for fun yuri-related panels, events, and more.

Make sure you write down October 8-10, 2005 on your calendar and don’t miss out on Onna! the yuriest con of 2005! Co-sponsored by Yuricon, Onna! will have plenty of yuri content, video programming, panels, guests and more, so Pre-register today and save! The price of admission goes up on June 19th, so get that registration is and make Onna! part of your 2005 events calendar!

And there’s more – new issues of Shoujoai ni Bouken: The Adventures of Yuriko (now available as an illustrated novel on the Shop), and of course, a great group of people to chat about yuri with on the Yuricon Mailing List – so visit the site, buy your goodies, then come to the list and let us know what your favorite yuri couples and series are!





Mahou Sensei Negima Manga, Volumes 1-5

May 11th, 2005

Today’s entry is a guest review! Written by Sean Gaffney, none of the opinions in this review are mine *at all*. I have asked Sean to review Mahou Sensei Negima for you, because I utterly loathe all of Ken Akamatsu’s work with a firey passion. Love Hina so enraged me that I am incapable of even attempting to read or watch anything else by this man. Why? Because the characters were VILE. The lead character, Keitaro, is SO utterly, horrendously, stupid and useless that the idea of anyone, ever, falling in love with such a complete yutz makes me physically ill. And the endlessly unfunny gag of seeing girls half-naked over and over and over and over, and zOMG, this is so funny the way he accidentally catches girls half-dressed or falls on them, ripping part of their clothes off and they beat him up, let’s see it again! still makes me see red.

So, many thanks to Sean for writing this review. :-)

***

This review only covers the Negima manga released in the US to date:

Negima’s from the creator of Love Hina, Ken Akamatsu. The basic premise has been called “Harem Potter”, and that’s not far off. A 10-year-old prodigy wizard is sent by his Hogwarts-esque school in Britain to Japan, there to teach English to14-year-old Japanese schoolgirls at an all-girl’s school. There are 31 girls in the class (well, one’s a ghost and one’s a robot, but you know what I mean), and Negi has his work cut out for him – not only does he have to bring their grades up, but he can’t let them know he’s a wizard!

Being from the creator of Love Hina, yuri fans weren’t expecting much from this series. But there’s a lot to find here once you get past a few basic problems.

The first, and most obvious, is that a lot of these girls have crushes on a 10-year-old boy. There’s a lot of slapstick grabbing of his crotch, etc, and as with Love Hina there’s just scores of bath scenes. There’s a basic ‘ick’ factor in the main romance that’s difficult to get past, though it helps that Negi has no sexual desire for any of them, whatsoever.

Once past that, it’s a basic adventure story, with Negi getting to know a new classmate every 3-4 chapters and going through some sort of bonding. By the end of Volume 8, a good 13 of the 31 girls are aware he’s a wizard, so the secret thing? Not so much. But Negi is likeable in a genuinely likeable way, as opposed to Love Hina‘s Keitaro, who seemed merely hapless. And Akamatsu is genuinely trying (and succeeding a good 75% of the time) to make each girl distinct and separate from each other girl.

Anyhow, on to the yuri factor. Nonexistent for the first 3 volumes, it kicks into gear in the 4th Volume, where we meet our Repressed Swordswoman, Setsuna Sakurazaki. On the Kyoto trip, she is paired with Negi and several other girls, including Konoka Konoe, who seems delighted to be going with her. Setsuna, however, is reluctant and aloof, and avoids Konoka as much as possible.

In the 5th Volume, we discover part of the reason for this: Konoka is the heir to a huge magical school, and Setsuna was introduced as her friend/bodyguard when the two were small. However, one day Konoka was almost drowned in a river, and little Setsuna couldn’t save her. Setsuna vowed to make herself stronger, and also to become more detached, so she wouldn’t let friendship interfere with her mission to protect.

The problem is, as the two have grown up, Setsuna’s friendship has turned into a full-blown crush. Which is a big problem, as not only is Setsuna trying to remain detached and failing miserably, but she’s also been brought up to believe that feeling such things for another girl is wrong. It doesn’t help that, once their initial ‘I’m avoiding you’ difficulties are settled, Konoka is nice and sweet and glompy and basically doing her best to be lovable, if completely oblivious.

There’s more I could add, but I’ll wait till Volume 6 comes out in June to reveal the other big reason why Setsuna wants to keep herself separate from Konoka. It’s a doozy.

Overall, I wouldn’t recommend Negima to the shoujo yuri fan. It’s filled with gratuitous nudity and slight shouta overtones. However, there is a good plot underlying this, and the Setsuna/Konoka pairing, while one-sided, is quite well done for both comedy and angst/drama, so for those who like shonen yuri, it’s a good one to pick up.

Ratings:

Art: 8 (Akamatsu’s a very good artist, and his fight scenes are actually easy to follow)
Characters: 7 (lots of girls, and with a few exceptions they’re each their own person)
Story: 6 (This may go up as more of the huge brimming backstory is revealed)
Yuri: 5 (Setsuna’s pretty much it so far, but her yuri arc is well handled).

Overall: 6.5. Not as bad as you might think, especially once past Volume 3.

–Sean Gaffney