Yuri Studio Early Access for Okazu Patrons – Top 10 Changes In Yuri From 20 Years of Okazu

August 29th, 2022

Happy 20th Anniversary Okazu! As requested Okazu Patrons, I’ve created a 20th anniversary video for Okazu, talking about the changes in Yuri that I have seen over the last 20 years.

For early access to all video and research, become an Okazu Patron today! ^_^ Your support goes directly into supporting Yuri creators.

 



Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – August 27, 2022

August 27th, 2022

Okazu News

Only a few days left to participate in the Okazu 20th Anniversary Yuri Treasure Hunt! Get your answers in!

 

Yuri Manga

Otherside Picnic Manga, Volume 2 has hit English-language shelves (and hell yes, I read it right away, thank you…. ^_^)  I think the manga version is doing an outstanding job on the Otherside creatures, making them both creepy and inexplicable without being gross. Highly recommended.

The Two of Them Are Pretty Much Like This, Volume 2 is up on the Yuricon Store and will be here in November (which is no longer that far away….!) I loved this manga in Japanese and am thrilled we’re getting it in English! I reviewed Volume 1 in July.

Hana Monogatari, Volume 1 (はなものがたり) is now on the Yuricon Store. This tale of a widow finding a new way to live with the help of makeup, scents and an attractive older woman to be friends with (or more), is so charming and sweet.

Canno’s new series, Koudou Ryou no Seizana Hibi (黄道寮の星座な日々,) Volume 1 is now out in Japanese!

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Via Comic Natalie, Watashitachi no Owari to (わたしたちの終わりと) is a post-apocalyptic collection with two stories. The first about two women who are the last people in the world and the second about two women in a world that has collapsed when news that a meteorite will hit is received. These were originally published as doujinshi and have been collected by Comic Beam.

Via Comic Natalie, we learn about Keiyaku Shimai (ケイヤクシマイ), a Yuri romance-comedy about an office worker who makes a “sister contract” with a high school girl. And also, there is a foodie component, because why not, it has everything else. Check it out on Comic Walker!

It’s all Comic Natalie today. ^_^ In Hogushite, Yui-san,  (ほぐして、癒衣さん。) an office worker helps her co-worker unwind during late nights with hugs and massage. Volume 1 is available or you can read a sample at Sega Nico Video!

 

Yuri Drama Recording

SukeraSparo has released Futari Photograph Club ~Mainichi Issho Ni Kore Kara Mo~ (ふたりフォトグラフ 〜毎日を一緒に、これからも〜) on DLSite. DLSite has a special gift for folks who review this! Now that Drama CDs have become rarer, it’s pretty fun for me to see a new original Yuri drama recording! If you’d like a taste, there’s a free trial download.

 

Yuri Doujinshi

Via YNN Correspondent Patricia B, we have news of Datura Magazine. “Edited by Sunmi, the magazine will contain four stories by Pa-Luis, Emma Jayne, Mar Julia, and Cathy G. Johnson. This is the initial issue with plans to publish more if they are successful.” According to the official site, Datura is a “queer josei-inspired anthology series featuring a range of speculative and realist stories for an adult audience that, like the poisonous datura flower, might have an edge to them. We look to expand on ideas of “Girl’s Love,” along the lines of how its counterpart BL can be a gender-expansive space for exploring alternative sexuality.” Sounds fun!

 

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Other News

Don’t miss YuriMother’s incredible 2022 Yuri Pride Guide! It’s a deep-dive into “anime, manga, light novels, games, and webcomics that showcase love and passion for Yuri.” Speaking of YuriMother, check out the interview with her on Lilyka.

Via Comic Natalie, an interview with the creator of Yuri fantasy Oyasumi Sheherezade, Chiyoda Shuhei.

The JP Yuri accounts are a-twitter (pun intended) over new series IDOL x IDOL by New Game creator Tokunou Shoutarou. Probably it’ll just be cute girls being cute, but ya never know. Check out ANN for details reported by Rafael Antonio Pineda!

Manga Mogura reported on Twitter, “Roses of Versailles by Ryoko Ikeda is on the cover of the latest Geijutsu Shinchou (芸術新潮) issue 9/2022 for a special feature. Interview with Ikeda too.” Looks like the big news is that we’re getting a new anime! Can anything beat the Dezaki version? There was a trailer for a new anime some years ago at the Tokyo Anime Contents Fair when I attended…I wonder if that’s being resurrected. Not surprisingly, this issue is very sold out. I’ll see about getting a copy, but I’m betting I missed my chance. ^_^

 

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Yuri is My Job!, Volume 9

August 26th, 2022

Before we get to the meat that is Yuri is My Job!, Volume 9, let’s step back for a second and look back at a story that has traversed a whole lot of ground, while never moving. ^_^

The situation comedy that starred a young woman more concerned with how she appeared to others than anything else, became an emotionally fraught tale of two childhood friends whose idea of what they wanted from their friendship was irreparably different. Nonetheless, Yano and Hime are, at the moment, relatively functional as a pair of “schwestern.”  Now, we’re looking at the remain cast at this Yuri concept cafe and finding that again, things are wildly out of balance.

Kanako was and is, obsessively focused on Hime. To the point where she really hates even thinking about sharing her with Yano in any but the most superficial way during work hours. This is, of course, not healthy. Sumika, as Kanako’s older sister offers to help her navigate this, but she’s finding that all this Yuri around her…and her own history…has gotten into her head. She’s having decidedly unsisterly feelings about Kanako.

I like Sumika and this arc is killing me.  For oh so many reasons. Mostly because she’s a big assholey clueless straight girl in a very gay Yuri cafe and is an utter dumbass about everything possible. ^_^ Kanako’s obsession makes her almost impossible to like, but you have to sympathize with big ole dumbass Sumika, until….

As Sumika’s brain plays gay games with her, bad news arrives at Liebe and the next few volumes will be a 4-way train wreck between Sumika, Kanako, Sumika’s former little sister, Nene and the woman who broke it all, the woman who destroyed Sumika’s happy days at the cafe the first time and is looking like it’s her plan to to do that again, Gouto (cafe name Goeido) Yoko.

You know I love me my evil lesbians, but in this arc, my hat is thrown into the ring for Nene and her “fuck you, straight girl” faces, which I might need to make into a meme.

Miman has take us so far from the opening salvo and I’m still hooked on every chapter, wanting to know where and what and who and why. The art is orders better from early chapters as well. Facial expressions are outstanding this volume. Since the story is focusing on conversations over cafe scenes, faces and body language really have to carry the visual weight. They do that successfully.

This volume has a short extra story of unrequited love, “I am Your Destiny,” Miman-sensei’s author’s notes which are always interesting and another page of the Cafe’s “Operating Manual,” for fun.

Ratings:

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

Overall – 8.

As I said in my review of this volume in Japanese, “A fantastically unpredictable volume from a series that never stops surprising me.”

Top notch translation from Diana Taylor, solid lettering by Jennifer Skarupa and editing by Haruko Hashimoto makes this an easy reading, set-up for next volume’s gut punches.  Get yourself ready… Volume 10 will be here in November.



She, Her Camera, and Her Seasons, Volume 1

August 25th, 2022

Ten years ago, I stated to review a series called Kanojo to Camera to Kanojo no Kisetsu, (彼女とカメラと彼女の季節). It was a complex love triangle that spent 5 full volumes at increasing levels of intensity, and yet…

And now, we have She, Her Camera, and Her Seasons, Volume 1 by Tsukiko, out from Kodansha. It’s going to be a very interesting ride to see how this story holds up after a decade.

Akari is a girl who feels that she has no particular value in her life. Her family is poor, her house shabby, her mother work nights as a hostess and she works at a convenience store. She has no hobbies or interests, and the chatter of the girls around her does not interest her much, although she’s able to fake interest. When a classmate takes a candid photo of her with an old camera, Akari’s life will change.

She becomes closer to Yuki, a classmate who has a passion of photography, and Rintarou, a guy on the school baseball team. Their lives become entwined and intimate almost immediately, in ways that alienate Akari from her previous superficial friendships. Right from the beginning there is a lot of tension in this triangle. Akari is falling for Yuki, who seems to have a thing for Rin, who is interested in Akari. This triangle will grow tighter and more taught over the next volumes in a way that I found very hard to look away from. ^_^

Translator Nate Derr did a great job of showing us Akari’s life cracking and reforming in a way that she would not be able to predict. Character voices come through well: Akari’s startled objections, Rin’s doofy charm and Yuki’s coolness and sudden passionate discussion of cameras. Lettering is the standard English near the Japanese – I am *always* going to wish that companies gave letterer Salud Campos Blasco time and money to do retouch. In a story like this where Tsukiko’s art provides the whitespace needed and in a story where composition is a very real matter of both text and visuals, it would have been nice.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 8
Characters – 8
Yuri – 6
Service – 3

Overall – 8

At the moment, this release is digital only through Kindle & Comixology and Bookwalker. It’s a good choice for this tense and compelling tale.

Thanks very much to Kodansha for a review copy for this volume!



Flamecon 2022 Event Report

August 23rd, 2022

If you paid any attention to my social media this weekend, you knew that I was attending FlameCon 2022, back in New York City for the first time in a few years.

My FlameCon started with…a panel! And, in the tradition of this particular panel, technical difficulties!  ^_^  But being one of the first panels, meant that I had the rest of the con to enjoy myself. This year, that mean hanging out with Rica Takashima, selling her self-published mini-comics edition of Rica ‘tte Kanji!? and, of course, By Your Side: The First 100 Years of Yuri Anime and Manga!

The energy  at FlameCon was amazing. It took Rica and I 20 years, but there I was at a queer comics convention not explaining Yuri manga, so much as just telling everyone to go watch Birdie Wing. ^_^

It was great to see some folks who have been following Okazu for years! Thank you all for coming by and chatting. It was also really lovely to catch up with old friends.

Day one, I spoke with Jennifer Camper, who was in to do a retrospective of Howard Cruse with co-chair of Queers & Comics, Justin Hall, along with Rupert Kinnard, Carlo Quispe, Denis Kitchen and Karen Green. Howard is among those first-gen gay comix artists who we have only recently lost. The Queers & Comics conferences were designed to create an archive of their stories, so when they were no longer with us, we would have a record. (It was incredible for the years it was held and the information is and will be  invaluable for years to come. ) Jennifer said she’s working on a collected retrospective of her work. The world actually needs this. While it’s true that we’ll start losing first-gen gay comix folks, we still have second-generation folks like Jennifer and Alison Bechdel, whose recent success – I hope – signals interest in other queer comix artists. 

Jennifer noted that the one thing this con had very little of was queer comics. She wasn’t wrong. As I walked the floor, there were some comics by queer folks, but surprisingly few queer comics. I especially felt there was very little comics by/ about/for queer women. Most of the comics on sale were by/about/for queer guys, with a small showing of women doing fannish comics of queer guys.

I spoke with Justin Hall about that on Sunday. Justin is an amazing comic artist as well, and the editor in chief of No Straight Lines and QU33R anthologies. Justin noted that it’s relatively easy to create a print, and with digital tools, you can make it shiny and colorful and print off a bunch and sell them, in the time it takes to make one page of a comic. Then you have to do the next and the next and tell the story…. so folks are going for merc,h that is easier to make and sell over comix/comics which are much less so.

I also had a theory that maybe, with so much queer content out there these days, there isn’t the desperation to tell those stories there used to be. Sure folks want their story and art on the table , and I did see some lovely minicomics for sale, but fan art and merch (fannish and original) was primary.

That said I did meet a bunch of folks doing fun stuff!

I spent a moment admiring Shauna Grant’s new book, Mimi and the Cutie Catastrophe, which is out now from Scholastic Books (how exciting!) about Mimi, who wants to be valued for more than just her cuteness. I love her work. It is, actually, quite cute. ^_^ The one ‘zine I picked up was by Ruya Hopps, Mannish Women and Violet Decor:The Language of Lesbianism in Pre-Code Hollwood. Rica immediately pronounced this “precious” because of the level of work creative ‘zine work. To be very honest, I really felt that way about every comic there.

And I love Emily K’s, “off-brand Sailor Moon” (her quote) comics, Gothic Cosmos Child and Lunar Felines. She’s got some of these up on Twitter. Really funny stuff.

I was gifted a beautifully dark Sweeney Todd comic by Nakata “Knack” Whittle, when she dropped buy Rica’s table to get a signed copy of BYS. And I met a lot of great new friends there, plus I was able to see some old pals and just hang around with Rica for a couple of days which we have not been able to do in years. Put a pin in that, I want to get back to us.

But, very importantly, I was able to speak with the adorable and talented folks from Yurisoft Games! Their new game The Songbird Guild is going to be out by the end of this year, hopefully, but I told them I’d tell you and you’d make them get it out. ^_^ This Magical Girl story started life as a jam. You can wishlist this on Steam and follow them on itch.io.  Here’s the synopsis from their site:

“The Kotori Mori has always looked up to her father.  As one of her town’s only (competent) magical boys, he almost singlehandedly protected their community from the dark creatures that tried to tear it down.

Now, at the age of 21, Kotori is finally old enough to pursue her own magical girl dreams in the biggest city of them all: Larimar.  However, she finds the life of a big city magical girl more difficult than anticipated, and soon the decision will threaten her life.

Kaida Hikari, a slightly older magical girl, becomes inseparably close to her during this ordeal, but will their bond be enough to get them through it, or will they crack under the pressure of being the city’s guardians?

It’s really cute and also kind of dark. ^_^ Emily, Kale and Tess introduced me to the spider lady villainess, Elledonna. I made a deal with them that if they gave her a wife who loves how evil she is, I’d actually read the VN. By Sunday they had a sketch. I’m doing this thing, I hope!

Overall Flamecon was exceptionally well-run and super welcoming and friendly. I was busy at the table so saw none of the other panels (and nothing short of being drugged insensate will get me over to the stage to see the performances, I am allergic to skits,) but I heard all sort of great things about them.

Justin and I agreed that we’d like to see more narrative work and, we’d like to see Flamecon if not require, then prioritize and feature folks making narrative content. The room we were in would have been perfect for the “mini-comics room.” But, then I am always wanting to recreate Comitia at every event. Probably why I like TCAF so much. ^_^

Lastly, I want to thank and celebrate Rica Takashima. In the 1990s, she wanted to see a comic about real queer life in Tokyo and so, she drew one. In 2003, Rica ‘tte Kanji!? became the first Yuri manga published in English. Since then, Yuri has blossomed around the world and as we signed copies of By Your Side: The First 100 Years of Yuri Anime and Manga  – and just about sold out for the weekend! – we high fived, because it took us 20 years, but we actually changed the world. It felt damned nice. ^_^

And check these out! Rica brought me a pair of the Family Mart Tokyo Rainbow Pride socks from Japan. She gets me. ^_^

So thank you, Rica, for a great weekend and thank you, FlameCon, for a lovely convention. I hope to see you again next year!