Archive for the Yuri Manga Category


Yuri Is My Job, Volume 8

March 7th, 2022

Hime is leaving Liebe. She has resolved that, to stop hurting Mitsuki, (and, as Mai is once again hale and hearty,) she will leave. Yuri Is My Job, Volume 8 begins with the tensest birthday celebration of all time.

No one wants Hime to leave, Hime does not want to leave, but she simply cannot think of a way to resolve this issue. The entire staff conspires to get Hime and Mitsuki to talk one last time….but will it be enough? Well…maybe. It’s enough for now, at least.

With their relationships patched up, but extremely fragile, the entire staff heads out for an overnight and photo shoot which causes cracks all over again. New cracks, though. Hime is, for the very first time, very aware of Mitsuki’s body, and has no idea how to handle what is going on in her head.

I sympathized so strongly with Mitsuki through this volume. She’s so vulnerable and honest about not being able to understand Hime’s intentions. About halfway through this volume I was ready to make an ultimatum…no more beating on Mitsuki. But, then the worm turns and it’s Hime struggling with who they are as schwestern. I’m fine with that, I just don’t want Mitsuki to be hurt any more.

By the end of this volume this arc is, finally, put to rest, thank Gott. Mitsuki and Hime carve out a tenable working relationship. Now we’re free to movie on for a bit.

I did genuinely love the photoshoot idea. I constantly think that Mai would be a very good manager of a cafe. The end notes are narrated by Mai, as she walks us through the school uniform policies. And again, in the author’s notes, we get insight into Miman-sensei’s process. At 8 volumes, and no sign of the story slowing down, it feels good to know that there is a plan.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 8
Characters – 9
Service – 4
Yuri – 8

Overall – 8

Next volume we’ll turn our focus to Sumika and her left-over baggage and the new stuff she’s picked up since Kanako arrived. Trust me, she’s got a lot of stuff to deal with. ^_^

Nice work by the team at Kodansha, for an overall gripping volume!





Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – March 5, 2022

March 5th, 2022

Yuri Manga

ANN’s Adriana Hazra has news that Kodansha has licensed the newest from Kamatani Yuhki, Hiraeth ~The End of the Journey – . The first chapter is available for free in Japanese on moae.com and it’s just beautiful. Take a look!

Otona ni Nattemo, Volume 6 (おとなになっても) is up on the Yuricon Store. I am really enjoying this series and think it’s Shimura-sensei’s best work to date!

Exciting news from Wings magazine on Twitter, Fujio-sensei is returning to Yuri with a new series! Onna x a Onna Umakuikana Renai Essay parlor, Volume 1 (女×女のうまくいかない恋愛エッセイ parlor) is “an essay comic about her own woman x woman’s ‘unsuccessful love.'” I haven’t seen Fujio-sensei’s work since Pure Yuri Anthology Hirari. And yay for another autobiographical manga about/by queer Yuri manga artist

Volume 1 of 18+ comedy Android ha Keiken Ninzuu ni Jairimasuka??, (アンドロイドは経験人数に入りますか??) from Comic Yuri Hime is now available as a collected volume.

Jitsugyounonihonsha publishing company is releasing Kanojo. Yuri Shousetsu Anthology (彼女。 百合小説アンソロジー) this month. It will also be available in Japanese as an audiobook! I don’t recognize a single name in the authors’ credits, but I chalk that up to me not keeping up with Yuri prose at all. If any of you have read any of these authors, let us know!

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Via Comic Natalie, the April issue of Comic Flapper has a new manga, about an older woman whose heart begins to pound as a woman at the store applies her makeup. Biyou ni Mezameru o Baachan no Yuri Manga, (美容にめざめるおばあちゃんの百合漫画) by schwinn will probably have me popping over to Bookwalker to grab this issue when it’s out. ^_^

Volume 1 of Hime to Onna Yuusha ga Musubareru Tame no 12 no Hijiri Koui (姫と女勇者が結ばれるための12の聖行為) is out in print, but before you commit to this pervy Yuri fantasy, check it out on Pixiv. A female hero asks for the princesses underwear as a reward.

Via Yuri Navi, DolYan! (ドルヤン) is a Idol x Yakuza Yuri oneshot webcomic available in Japanese on Sunday Webry.

Also via Yuri Navi, Yuri manga Wakuto Komako  (わくとこまこ) “depicting the frustrating love pattern of two girls” is being serialized in Japanese in Big Comic 4, on Yahoo JP.

 

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Yuri Events

Galette Works is celebrating the 5th anniversary of Galette magazine with a Galette 2nd Yuri Matsuri! March 20, Nihonbashi Hamacho Plaza Marm, From 11AM – 4PM. It’s basically a Galette Yuri pop-up shop event.  If anyone one can make it there, do let us know how it goes!

I’ll be a Featured Panelist at Anime Boston, May 27-29 in Boston, MA. I hope you’ll drop by and join one of my many panels. ^_^

My book, By Your Side – The first 100 years of Yuri anime and manga will be out in June! If you’d like me to come to speak at your event, school or organization, Contact Me! Pre-orders will be going up next month – stay tuned!

 

Other News

I wrote a review! I know, I know, that’s not that exciting in itself, but this review was not for a Yuri title, which is exciting and it’s on ANN, which is also exciting. I actually read a lot of manga that isn’t Yuri, so it’s nice to be able to share this one with a broad audience. Check out my review of Summertime Rendering, Volume 1 on ANN. It was really a great read.

Adriana Hazra has a manga-focused breadown at The Comics Beat report about the growth of graphic novels sales. It’s worth reading this breakdown. It has always seemed obvious to me, but this really makes the case that when a manga exists for a popular anime property, making a strong connection will really bump those numbers up. (I still feel like Yen and Funi blew it entirely on the Madoka franchise. If they had coordinated, it would have owned the world for a while, at least.

Speaking of Funimation, RIP their endlessly crappy streaming service. Ding, dong, the glitch is dead. You’ll be watching all of their anime, along with Verve and Wakanim on Crunchyroll now. Even NPR noticed that this is big news.

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Thanks to our Okazu Patrons and Fans who make the YNN weekly report possible!

Become a YNN Correspondent: Contact Us with any Yuri-related news you want to share and be part of the Yuri Network. ^_^





A White Rose in Bloom, Volume 2

March 4th, 2022

In Volume 1, we met Ruby, a student at a prestigious girls’ school who, because of family problems, stays at school over the holidays with only one other student – the alluring and standoffish Steph. As the volume closed, Ruby’s parents tell her that they are divorcing and her mother explains that she’ll need to leave the school, but Ruby believes she has found a way to stay.

She’ll take the scholarship exam. Only…her Latin is grades are really bad. Once again, she turns to Steph. Steph agrees to tutor Ruby. Which causes friction with another student, Liz. Liz is obsessively close to Steph, in fact Ruby saw them kissing.

A White Rose in Bloom, Volume 2,begins as the tension between Liz and Ruby has exploded in public. Each of them bearing the red mark of the other’s anger on their cheeks, they are called in to the Headmistress’s office..and they come precariously close to losing everything.

The fight with Liz uncovers another complication – Liz and Steph are half-sisters and both children of the Headmistress. Ruby’s no dummy, she keeps her mouth closed.  As the exam draws closer, it looks like she might make it after all. Until her father shows up at the school and throws a wrench into the whole works.

Nakamura Asumiko-sensei’s ability to create a narrative that exceeds it’s initial setup. What tension there is between Steph and Ruby is shown, but mentioned only briefly. We can all see it, so can Ruby and Steph…and Liz. Steph is old enough to realize what damage her behavior may cause and smart enough to regret it. Ultimately, it is the fact that Steph and Ruby are both sharp-witted that carries this story through to an end of an arc that was vastly better than I imagined it would be, as I read the chapters in Rakuen Le Paradis magazine.

Whether you enjoy Nakamura-sensei’s art is purely personal, but I have grown fond of her unique style. She’s among a handful of artists whose art I can recognize in any context. I genuinely love the variety of faces showing discombobulation and shock that fill her work.

A White Rose in Bloom has the most conventional set-up, but the unconventional ending and the change that it brings to the heaviness of the opening, makes this series totally worth reading.

Great work by Jocelyne Allen on translation, Kat Adler on adaptation and special high marks to Alia Nagamine on lettering and retouch. It’s always so much more time intensive, but it just looks so good. Fantastic work from the team at Seven Seas.

Ratings:

Art – As I say, YMMV, but 8 for me
Story – 9
Characters – 9
Service – 4 Mildly provocative staging from time to time
Yuri – 7

Overall – 9

I’m honestly so glad you all have a chance to read this quirky schoolgirl Yuri series!





Oshi ga Budokan Ittekuretara Shinu, Volume 8 (推しが武道館いってくれたら死ぬ)

March 3rd, 2022

Yippee! A whole volume of this manga in which I never once wanted to shake the daylights out of the creator!

Ahem.

But seriously, Oshi ga Budokan Ittekuretara Shinu, Volume 8 (推しが武道館いってくれたら死ぬ) was… nice. No obnoxious jokes about Maina and Eripyo not being able to communicate in an excruciating way.

The volume begins with a nice juxtaposition of the Cham-Jam members delving into Youtube videos and dreaming about more opportunities (as well as Aya eating her weight in doughnuts.) This smoothly dovetails into several collaborations between Cham Jam and singers from other groups (notably, Reo’s old group Maple Doll.) Once again, the personal lives and relationships of the other girls in Cham Jam is the best part of the story.

And then the volume winds down and I steeled myself for the dumb joke du jour. And it came, as I expected it would.

There is a running gag in the series that Okayama, where Cham Jam performs, is best known for being the setting of the story of Momotarou. Cham Jam always brings kibi dango with them as a gift, because that’s the local souvenir. More specifically, because they can never think of another notable thing about Okayama. So, Cham Jam is invited on another group’s show and they are struggling to come up with something unique about Okayama, beyond kibi dango.  Maina is wearing a cute shirt and is asked if it’s a local exclusive brand. Embarrassed, she admits it’s a 480 yen shirt – at which point her adorableness is discovered by the world at large. Suddenly, Maina becomes “480-chan.” Obsessed with 480-chan, Eripyo buys things for 480 yen, talks about 480 yen, to the point of mania. (So, no change for her, really.)  At their next appearance, “480-chan” has a line of fans waiting to get a handshake! Eripyo is blown away that she’s actually got to stand on line to speak to Maina  – she is in heaven! Ecstatic that Maina has been discovered at last, Eripyo cannot wait to see her favorite.

When she finally sees Maina for the first time in a while, Eripyo starts to call her “480-chan…” but stops. Maina, for once(!) figures out what’s going on in time and asks Eripyo to call her to please call her “Maina.” Eripyo turns to the line behind her and calls out “Her name isn’t 480-chan, it’s Icchii Maina!”…then she turns back to Maina. I actually cheered, as she said, “Right, Maina-chan?” And Maina smiles and says “Right!”

I practically cried with relief. Thank goodness. A whole volume without once wanting to commit an act of violence.  I ought to give it a 10 just for that…..

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 9 I didn’t hate a single page. It’s a Cham Jam miracle!
Character – 8
Service – 0
Yuri – They had a conversation and it wasn’t incoherent. 10

Overall – 10 There.  Good job, Hirao-sensei. See? You can do it.

You can find this manga on Amazon JP, Bookwalker JP (where I read it) or CD Japan, if you’d like one <bleep>ing volume of this series that isn’t utterly enraging. ^_^





How Do We Relationship, Volume 5, Guest Review by Matt Marcus

March 2nd, 2022

It’s another Guest Review Wednesday and we have another great review! Matt Marcus is a cohost of various projects on the Pitch Drop Podcast Network, such as the JRPG games club podcast Lightning Strikes Thrice. Please welcome Matt back to Okazu!

How Do We Relationship is a story about two college students Miwa and Saeko who learn together how used to date. In How Do We Relationship, Volume 4, the couple broke up over a myriad of problems around communication and personal hang-ups, but despite lingering feelings they try to go back to being friends.

Just by looking at the cover of How Do We Relationship, Volume 5, you know you’re in for some shit. Gone are the big smiles, playful antics, and instruments of the past; they have been replaced by a disheveled Miwa, her hair grown out haphazardly, looking forlornly into the middle distance.

This volume has a theme: self-centeredness, selfishness, and greed. Almost every principle character displays these traits in varying degrees of severity and the effects of their actions ripple out until they become ship-wrecking waves.

Saeko, in what feels like a passive-aggressive move, casually pushes Miwa to reach out to her high school crush, Shiho, and confess her feelings. When the two former classmates reconnect, they make plans for Miwa to spend two months visiting Shiho in Okinawa. 

There is a lot I can say about Shiho because she is fascinating. When she first appears in How Do We Relationship, Volume 3, you wouldn’t be blamed for expecting her to merely be the love rival that forces Miwa to make a firm, definitive decision on to whom she will give her heart. As it turns out, she is a much more complex character. Yes, she managed to escape from the traumatic environment that was her family home, however she continues to bear scars from her upbringing. Tamifull does a wonderful job portraying her inner struggle and how it leaks out into the rest of her life: she lives in a barren apartment and wonders why it freaks out her friends; her previous romantic relationship ended due to her lack of interest; she doesn’t feel a need to fall in love, yet she is still working out her feelings towards Miwa while sending very mixed signals. What is crushingly sad is that she not only doesn’t know what she wants for herself, she doesn’t even know how to want. You will think that her ultimate decision about Miwa is cowardly–and it is–but she needs more time to heal and grow. I am hoping we get to see it. Regardless, the trip sends Miwa into a tailspin.

This puts her on a collision course with Saeko when school resumes. I mentioned in my previous review that Saeko’s behavior could be a barrier for some readers, and I think this volume offers the ultimate test of that. There is a moment towards the end of the volume that truly stunned me. I won’t spoil it, but it will send shivers down your spine. It may even disgust you. It’s a high risk move and we do not see it payoff before the volume ends, but I simply have to credit Tamifull for constructing a scene that packs such a wallop.

I haven’t mentioned her yet, but Saeko’s coworker Yuria takes on a larger supporting role and she’s still a delight. Not a lot of depth to her, but she’s a breath of fresh air given everything else that’s going on.

Out of the previous volumes so far, this one is the most consistent in tone. The focus has tightened and it benefits the storytelling because it gives more space to explore the internality of the characters. I will say though that I am still confused about what Tamifull is trying to say with Rika, beyond the fact that she is self-aware about her selfishness.

One major demerit I would give the story is how Miwa expresses a desire for self-harm through neglect that is not taken very seriously by Saeko–it’s melodramatic at best and disrespectful to the severity of the topic at worst. If the story’s direction continued down such a path I could see myself dropping the series, but I have it on good authority that this is the “lowest” point and that things get better from here. It really is about time that Miwa starts showing some serious development because the poor girl deserves it.

On the positive side, I want to give a shout-out to the localization team because I am continuously impressed with the fresh and naturalistic phrasing choices that provide a distinct voice to the characters while sounding realistically like college students.

If you have ventured this far into the series, be prepared for the choppiest waters yet. Despite finding myself emotionally wrung out by the twists and turns on my first read-through, I have found engaging with the characters in repeated readings endlessly rewarding. I’ll be waiting (im)patiently for the next volume which comes out in English this July.

Ratings:

Art – 8 Some great paneling and nonverbal expression.
Story – 7 Heavy, less funny, but still engaging. Docking it one point for overplaying its hand with Miwa’s meltdown.
Characters – 9 I love what they did with Shiho and Saeko continues to be compelling.
Service – 1 Sex is still present but it is not played for service.
Yuri – 9 / LGBTQ – 7 One door opens while another seemingly closes, so on balance it’s a wash.

Overall – 8 This continues to be a unique and engrossing yuri series.

Erica here: Thank you Matt for covering this volume so thoroughly. I can guarantee that everything will be different (for the better) now. and I’m so glad I can talk about this series again!