Archive for the Yuri Manga Category


Itoshi Koishi, Volume 3 (いとしこいし)

March 10th, 2020

Hina is a high school senior with a secret -she’s dating an older woman. She wants very much to share that secret with her friends, she just needs the right time to do it. In this final volume of Takemiya Jin’s delightful Yuri manga, Itoshi Koishi, Volume 3 (いとしこいし), Hina finds that time.

Hina has been dating Yayoi for a few years now. Yayoi has been a terrific girlfriend, always there when Hina needs support. In return, Hina gets to test out new recipes and indulge her desire to feed Yayoi. Ever since they ran into Hina’s friends at the local shrine at New Year’s, Hina has really wanted to tell everyone, but she’s decided to wait until after they finish exams. It’s a good thing too, because Kururmi and Micchan get into a tiff in the middle of pre-exam tension.

At last, the friends all know their immediate future is assured and they plan a celebratory visit to an amusement park. Before they all get distracted, Hina sits them all down and tells them what she’s been hiding from (most of) them for years. There is a little confusion, but they accept her and reiterate their love for her. And that’s that.

The final chapter of the manga in Comic Yuri Hime, had Yayoi once again unable to make the summer festival, but together they find they can see the fireworks from Yayoi’s aprtment. Hina suggests that she’d like to be able to watch the fireworks together forever. “That sounds like a marriage proposal,” Yayoi says. “That was how it was meant.” Hina replies. Yayoi sets up a wedding dressing photo shoot for them and we squee as they imagine their happy every days together.

The final extra chapter of this volume, finds Yayoi planning a special birthday date for Hina. They go to the aquarium and and dinner and have sex for the first time. It’s a fitting end to this series that refused to rush that part of the their relationship until Hina was an adult.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 9
Characters – 10
Yuri – 10
Service – 5 There is explicit nudity and sex in this volume

Overall – 10

A lovely manga by one of my favorite artists. Characters who knew who they were, worked towards what they wanted and were in step from the beginning. I wouldn’t complain if we got a 10 years later volume of Hina and Yayoi, they were very pleasant to spend time with. My fingers are crossed for this series to one day make it into translation.





Yuri Bear Storm, Volume 3

March 9th, 2020

In Volume 1, we met Kureha, a girl who hates bears and Ginko, a girl who is positive she is a bear. In Volume 2, we met Lulu who is is love with Ginko because of a childhood promise. We learned that Ginko and Kureha are in love, but that there is a secret that lay between them that is killing Ginko. Today we’re looking at Volume 3 of Yuri Bear Storm, the  English language edition of Yuri manga adaptation of Yurikuma Arashi, by Ikuhara Kunihiko, with art by Morishima Akiko,

In other Ikuhara stories, we’ve seen reality fractured into small pieces to be put back together, different realities layered on top of one another and here we have the entire narrative completely disassociated from its own reality.

There are no bears and everyone is a bear. Leia is dead or missing, but she’s alive and can be found. Lulu’s brother is dead, but he’s alive and standing right there, Sumika is a bear witch, but actually she’s just a kind person. And Kureha and Ginko are fated not to destroy each other.

In the end, we learn what that Ginko’s secret is, that it is untrue, that the real secret is that Ginko and Kureha are the inheritors of a love triangle between their mothers and Yuriika, everyone who we thought was dead is alive and we all end up happily ever after.

The end.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 7
Characters – 8 I cannot be the only one who would like a story about Leia, Yuriika and Kale in that Estonia Bear preserve.
Yuri – 8
Service – 3

Overall – 8

I’ve read this twice, watched it three times and it still basically makes no sense at all. ^_^ Which is perfectly okay.

I raise a glass to everyone at Tokyopop who worked on this, because there was no real way to make it make sense, which complicates things like translation and editing considerably! That said, Tokyopop, can you please confirm final covers on your solicits? It looks weird with all your listings saying “cover not final” for eternity.





Comic Yuri Hime Magazine, April 2020 (コミック百合姫2020年4月号)

March 8th, 2020

Here we are at the April 2020 issue of Comic Yuri Hime magazine(コミック百合姫2020年4月号). This year the cover theme is women in ill-fitting clothing having what always looks like furtive assignations in back alleyways and deeply weird fonts.  ^_^

A number of series have wrapped up and to fill the spots, the editorial staff have done some interesting things. This month I want to focus on two specific entries, as we did last month.

First up, in Ruume’s “Yuritsukushi no Kyoushitsu de” (ゆりづくしの教室で) which appears to be a class full of “Yuri” pairings, the first chapter is focused on establishing the people in the story, so there’s a bit of wandering about and “meeting” everyone. Among the characters we meet a fat girl, called “Sachin” by one of the other girls. Sachin is fat and pretty. She’s not slightly, vaguely plump, like we are usually given, she doesn’t just have a very slight bit of fat when we’re making a point (I’m looking at you, “Pochi Climb.”) Sachin is large. Sachin is also sparkly and kind and has food with which to feed those around her. She reminds me of my wife. ^_^ It was nice to see some body size variety that ins’t just big breasts in the magazine.

Secondly, there is at the end of the issue, a short 4-page story from/intro to the Rakugo school Yuri manga by TNSK, “Uchi no Shisho ha Shippo ga nai.” (うちの師匠はしっぽがない) You might recognize the creator’s name as the person who did the cover art for Yuri science fiction LN, Last and First Idol. I’m not yet convinced that this will be for me, but I’m willing to give it a try, as the idea of a Rakugo Yuri story works, and I’m a sucker for Taisho period stories. The first two volumes are out in Japanese (Volume 1 and Volume 2) and the series is running in Kodansha’s good!Afternoon magazine. You can read the first chapter on that site, in Japanese.  Which is why I wanted to point it out – this preview is not for a comic in Comic Yuri Hime at all. That interests me a lot. It’s not the first time we’ve seen this, but it’s the first time I’ve seen it for an already well-established comic in another magazine.

Ratings:

Overall – 7

The May 2020 issue will hit shelves on the 18th of the month which means, for the first time since this magazine went monthly I am ahead of the curve. Haha, take that, giant piles of things to read! There’s no cover image up yet, so I have no idea what monstrous font they’ll use this time. Did you notice this month the title was in English? ^_^

Last note: I think it’s time to drop the “Yuri Manga”, “Western Comic”, etc., tags from the titles on Okazu posts. Back in the day when Yuri manga or anime was super hard to find, those tags made an impression and people needed to know that that stuff was out there.

If I drop the tags from the title, will it be too difficult for you as a reader to recognize what the thing I’m reviewing is? Let me know in the comments whether you find the title tags useful or distracting!





Yuri Manga: Ichido Dake Demo, Koukaishiteimasu., Volume 1(一度だけでも、後悔してます。) Guest Review by Mariko S.

March 4th, 2020

Welcome to Guest Review Wednesday here on Okazu! Today we welcome back reviewer Mariko S. as she takes a look at  a book that was mentioned in last week’s YNN report, Ichido Dake Demo, Koukaishiteimasu., Volume 1 (一度だけでも、後悔してます。). Please give her your attention and your warmest welcome once again!

24-year-old Kozuka Chiyo is a typical manga protagonist. She loves anime and games, and used to work at a game company until a few months ago, when she lost her job due to vaguely hinted at circumstances. She’s spent the time since holed up in her apartment burning through her savings on living expenses and obviously necessary figurine and video game purchases, but, alas, not on rent. One day her landlady, a petite girl of 19, comes to collect and, finding Kozuka unable to settle up, suddenly bluntly proposes that if they have sex, she’ll work out a way to get her caught up. Despite not being sexually interested in girls, with no better alternative Kozuka apparently agrees and, after a few beers, wakes up naked next to the landlady the next morning with regrets, but at least a path forward.

The landlady’s plan – she’ll move in with Kozuka, and Kozuka will pay off her debt in blocks of 10,000 yen, each one to be checked off when Kozuka is deemed to have rendered “good service.” The landlady is clear that she wants this to be/include sex, but Kozuka is eager to find alternatives. The problem being, as you might expect, that Kozuka has no life skills to offer – she can’t cook, clean, or do laundry – while the landlady is extremely put together and competent. Kozuka finds her own life improving more by the landlady helping her, instead of anything she’s able to do in return benefiting the landlady, at least at first.

“Ichido dakedemo…” isn’t quite as dire as its skeevy and salacious (skeevalacious?) setup portends. The initial sex trade happens off page and, though the service quotient is high, it’s not especially gross. Once/if you can look past that “no woman would ever do this” setup, the subsequent “services in lieu of rent” are more of a slow burn toward relationship development/general intimacy and friendship, including things like playing games together, talking about their pasts, going on a shopping date, and a “redeem any time” hug offer. Hara, the landlady (we don’t learn her first name and only learn her last name late in the book) is very clear about wanting more, and her internal monologue suggests she’s in love with Kozuka and has been for awhile, for reasons we can only guess at (other than her stating that she likes older women).

The surprising turn comes when Hara is shown to have been struggling with same-sex attraction and the way people have treated her for it for a long time. When she and Kozuka are out on the shopping date, they run into one of the landlady’s old high school acquaintances and her boyfriend. The acquaintance outs the landlady to her boyfriend, and even though neither reacts badly, they are pretty callous with how they talk about her. Kozuka comes to Hara’s rescue, and they have a sort of coded talk about how it’s been for her and Kozuka’s attitude about gay relationships. We see that what Kozuka really can offer Hara is a chance to connect with someone else, more than just physically, who actually cares about her and needs her.

The biggest problem with this manga so far, really, is that since it’s obviously intended to be a romance, Kozuka is undoubtedly going to come around to falling in love with the landlady, even though she’s been nothing but clear about not having any same-sex desire. That said, the landlady does bring a lot to the table for her, at the very least as a roommate and companion, so if they do end up together they should be relatively happy.

I don’t think any of this excuses the problematic sexual coercion/power abuse setup. I do think the author tried to offset that by making the landlady so much younger and smaller, so that it feels more like Kozuka consents to the terms for her own gain rather than because she feels threatened or forced. It’s not going to be a title for everyone, but I was pleasantly surprised at it… not being as bad as it could have been? No, more being way better than I would have expected? How’s that for an endorsement. ><;

 

Ratings:

Art – 7   There’s a certain sloppiness to it that is kind of refreshing, and the proportions and poses are generally good, but it rarely has much reason to push the details and creativity beyond “nice enough.”

Story – 6   The hook is ludicrous, and many of the vignettes pretty standard adult slice-of-life variants, but there’s some good potential for the future if they delve into the hinted-at discrimination that cost Kozuka her job, or more explicitly into Hara’s struggles with being gay.

Characters – 7  Maybe a little high, but I’m just glad that they’re cute without being (too) moe and have adult bodies. Oh, bar, why must you be so low?

Yuri – 5  Since only half of the characters fit the description thus far.

Service – 7  There’s the usual assortment of “walking in on each other naked,” “conversation about bras,” and “occasional cleavage shots.” Also, I guess, the premise is literally about “service.” Service thing that bugs me little: somehow Kozuka, an otaku couch potato who lives off of cup ramen and doesn’t exercise, has an incredible body under her dumpy clothes. Don’t get me wrong, the artist excels at drawing Kozuka’s curves, but you just don’t get that body without a lot more effort than she puts in. ^^;

 

Overall – 6

Erica here: Thank you Mariko for another great review of a manga that I would never know anything about otherwise. That’s the best part of guest reviews!





Yuri Manga: Tsukiatte Agetemo Iikana, Volume 3 (付き合ってあげてもいいかな)

March 2nd, 2020

2020 marks an interesting new phase for me in regards to Yuri manga. Because there are so many more comics about adult women, written for adults, my specific vocabulary of school-related words is more irrelevant than ever before. ^_^ As a result, I find myself reading manga through two or even three times, to make sure I’m following the complications of more adult language and situations. I’m not complaining! Tsukiatte Agetemo Iikana, Volume 3 by Tamifull was a frustrating read, every single time I read it, but wholly worth it.

The volume starts off by wrapping up what might have become a problem. Unbeknownst to Miwa, band drummer Tsuruta has developed a pretty intense crush on her. Miwa never learns about it, but we watch Tsuruta try to figure out his feelings without causing too much collateral damage. Although he does muse about leaving the circle, in the end he doesn’t. But he’s legit hurting and the fact that he never had a chance doesn’t make it better.

Miwa and Saeko stay with Saeko’s family and once again, family dynamics complicate their relationship. Miwa discovers Saeko’s “secret past” and meets some of her old friends, while Saeko want nothing more to distance her current self from that past self.

And they are still having a hard time having sex. I really feel for these two, it’s like their bodies and minds are just conspiring against them. Miwa’s worked past her bad experiences, but Saeko’s really struggling with her body which just won’t respond the way she wants. From our perspective, we can conjecture several things this might be, but without good communication between them, we’ll never know what it is.

I’ve talked about “after the happily-ever-after” many times here on Okazu. This is the big honking problem with first love and school love stories. Once the princess and the princess get together the story just ends, We know that that is hardly the end of the story…for most people it’s just the beginning. Relationships are hard. Communication is complicated. People are complex systems that are constantly changing and are affected by internal and external stimuli….that any couple manages to work at all is almost a miracle. There’s no miracle here – yet – for Miwa and Saeko, but I’m sure I’m not alone in hoping that they figure it out.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 8 Getting harder, not easier to read, but getting more relevant as it does
Characters –  7 I’m rooting for everyone, but not sure I actually like anyone
Yuri – 8 / LGBTQ – 6 still room for more
Service – 3

Overall – 8

Complexity is complex. This is much less a Yuri romance at this point than a referendum on relationship communication issues, featuring a same-sex couple.

How Do We Relationship, Volume 1 from Viz Media will be another June baby, so you’ll have a chance then to weigh in with your opinions on this.