Archive for the Yuri Manga Category


Yuri Manga: Like a Cinderella, Perfect Edition (この靴しりませんか?)

April 8th, 2016

KKSPE-e1459611124613Mizutani Fuka’s Kono Kutsu Shirimasenka? was a sweet little collection of modern fairytales with Yuri frosting. There wasn’t much to dislike in 2011 when it was released by Hobunsha as a collected volume.

Now Hakusensha has re-released it as Like a Cinderella, Perfect Edition (この靴しりませんか?). The stories from the original work are reproduced intact with no changes. The major change is a short epilogue in which all the characters cross each other’s paths and we pair everyone up neatly…even the nice lady at the Information Desk.

Mizutani’s art is a little less practiced than what we’re used to now, but her distinctive style is visible.

As a reissue it’s lovely and the new content is both forgivable handwavery and kind of cute. In fact, I think I like the stories a little better now that I did 5 years ago.

Ratings:

Art – 7
Story – Variable, but average 7
Characters – 8
Yuri – 7
Service – 1

Overall – 7

As I said in 2011, “This fairy tale collection is good for a smile, something we can all use from time to time.”





Yuri Manga: Hana to Hina ha Houkago, Volume 1 (ハナとヒナは放課後)

April 4th, 2016

HanatoHinaHana to Hina ha Houkago, Morinaga Milk’s newest manga series, reads like a Cards for Humanity “Yuri Tropes” edition. Which is not necessarily a bad thing.

Hana works at a character goods store after school, despite the school’s explicit rules against part-time jobs. (Potential plot complication, duh) At work, she meets tall, beautiful Hinako who loves character goods and turns out to be younger than Hana and a transfer student into her school.

The tropes are strong in this series and the formula is a bit Odd Couple, as Hana turns out to like the character goods’ cuteness, but not really get the whole concept of character goods (or collecting them) and Hina loveloveloves character goods and knows everything about them. She’s also a fashion model, good at sports and smart, while Hana is sort of average at best. But it becomes obvious that Hina likes Hana, even if the penny has not yet dropped for Hana.

And yet, by the end of this first volume I kind of still like them both – despite Hina’s apparent perfection and Hana’s lack of clue.

The best thing about the series is the pacing, which is awkward, uneven and slow. ^_^ The first chapter or two, I felt like were sliding too quickly into an obvious romance that would be pretty much be Himitsu no Recipe all over again. But no. Instead of a headlong rush into a mis-match, Hina turns out to be a really likable character, and you finish this volume pulling for her and hoping Hana doesn’t take too long to get that clue she’s missing. Hana is never unsympathetic, either. You can see she’s  on the brink of cluing in, but she’s an average high school girl and not used to thinking outside very typical boxes.

Ratings:

Art – 8 Cute things and clothes drawn cutely, Milk-sensei’s specialty
Story – 7 with potential for higher
Characters – halfway through I’d have said 6, but by the end, 8
Service – 4 I mentioned the cuteness, right?
Yuri – 4, climbing, slowly, but inexorably

Overall – 7

You want them to come together – but you want it to be realistic and have depth of connection, not just ’cause this is a Yuri manga. Fingers crossed.





Yuri Manga: Mahou Josei Chimaka (English)

March 28th, 2016

scanWhen Chimaka was younger, she had been a magical girl. But when it came down to saving the world, she didn’t have what it takes and failed to defeat evil, or realize her eternal fated love. Now she’s a bitter adult in a day job and is at loose ends.

In Mahou Josei Chimaka, (one of several Yuri works put out by Sparkler Monthly, the English-language josei magazine) the creative team KaiJu takes on the tropiest trope and decides to look at it from a completely different perspective: What if it doesn’t all work out? The cynic in me thrilled to the premise…and as I read, I found a lot to like in the treatment.

The art is competent and I like the inclusion of a WoC as the main character. More important to me than the art, always, is the story – and in this I think this book excels. Not only is it a unique rendering of a magical girl story it is, I dare say, a “magical” love story, between two characters who would be more than welcome to come over for lunch. ^_^

Chimaka is available in a Digital edition or in Print and I recommend it highly. Not only do you get the satisfaction of supporting Sparkler Monthly, which is  fine thing to do, and domestic Yuri manga, which is equally dopamine-inducing, but also you get a very fun story, with a lovely ending for the money. All in all, I wouldn’t mind a sequel. Hint Hint. ^_^

Ratings:

Art – 7
Story – 8
Character – 8
Yuri – 7
Service – 1 on principle, because people are weird

Overall- 8

Congratulations to KaiJu and Sparkler Monthly for winning a DINK award this past weekend!





Yuri Manga: Junsui Adolescence Perfect Edition (純水アドレッセンス 完全版)

March 13th, 2016

Junsui-275x390Through 2007 and 2008 an interesting little manga was running in the pages of then-quarterly Yuri Hime magazine. I hadn’t realized it was an actual serial for quite a few chapters, but in 2009, when Kowo Kazuma’s Junsui Adolescence was first collected I finally was able to follow the whole story.  The manga quickly fell out of print, as Ichijinsha was doing very short runs of manga just then. And so, like most here-and-gone stories it was quickly forgotten.

But not by me. It was because of this story I became a fan of Kowo’s work and have read her current not-Yuri series in Rakuen Le Paradise with great enjoyment.

It’s so fascinating going back to something that’s almost 10 years old and seeing if it holds up. In Junsui Adolescence Perfect Edition (純水アドレッセンス 完全版) we find that the answer is “not too badly.”

Nanao is a passive-aggressive student who has developed an apparent crush on the school doctor Matsumoto. Only, it’s not a crush and Matsumoto returns the feeling. They become lovers. Nanao seems to be holding up the lion’s share of the angst about their age difference. She feels it keenly, and is often close to blowing their secret. Matsumoto is not without concern, but she does come off a little glib sometimes. It’s very much a work of it’s time in Yuri Hime, which was focusing on Yuri=illicit love at the time.

Despite Nanao’s graduation crisis, the end is slick, rushed and happy.

If you’re made very uncomfortable with teacher/student stories, you will probably be made uncomfortable by this story. Matsumoto, especially, didn’t stress nearly enough to make her likable, until she finally has a genuine breakdown about the whole thing. The dynamic between Nanao, who is actually pretty confident and strong, and Matsumoto who becomes stronger for her, is the best part of the story.

Because this is a Perfect Edition, this single volume includes both the final chapter of the original collected volume and a new chapter. Happily-ever-after is not without conflict, but it still is happy.

Ratings:

Art – 8 Kowo’s art is much tighter now, and this has been cleaned up a bit, but the beginning is still a little messy.
Story – 7
Character – 7 Flashes of the kind of brilliance in characterization that made me a fan
Service – 5 and random
Yuri – 8

Overall – 8

A not-unpleasant look back to a story that’s weathered the many changes in what we expect from “Yuri.”





Yuri Manga: Comic Yuri Hime January 2016 (コミック百合姫2016年1月号)

March 11th, 2016

CYH0116-275x392Woops! Apparently I had not reviewed the January issue of Comic Yuri Hime (コミック百合姫2016年1月号) before I gave you all an overview of the March issue. I don’t know if I’ve ever done that before. So, woops – and sorry. ^_^;

Worse, pretty much every thing I said for the March issue applies to January… even more so, really. (It does explain why all the series seemed slightly different when I reviewed them.) So it is in this issue that Takemiya Jin’s new series begins and in this issue that “Prince Prince” turns to the lives of two otokoyaku girls in the school, and the arc of “Kanaete! Yuri Yousei-san!” following the two office ladies starts here….and so on.

So instead of beating a dead horse, this issue strikes the exact same balance as the March one. If you like a series, you’ll continue to like it, and if you don’t, you won’t.* ^_^

Ratings:

Overall – 7

*But you may like a series you already don’t like even less. Citrus has taken on the unfortunate tic of Mai slapping Yuzu every chapter. That series really gets on my every last nerve. Mai has all the behaviors of an abused child, but the story doesn’t back that up. The gap between what we see and what we’re told is insurmountable and inexplicable.