Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – April 16, 2022

April 16th, 2022

Yuri Interview

We have some exciting news here on Okazu! Tomorrow, we have an interview with I’m in Love With the Villainess creator inori. I’m super excited for you all to read it.  (And for you to run out and ask Ichjinsha for an anime for this series. ^_^) Check back tomorrow for the interview!

Coming up this week, too, is our next Yuri Studio video. I have been looking forward to this one for a long time. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did. ^_^

 

Yuri Manga

Futari Daitai Konna Kanji, Volume 4 (ふたりはだいたいこんなかんじ) is the final volume of this adult life Yuri series. But you will be able to read volume 1 in English as The Two of Them Are Pretty Much Like This, this June from Seven Seas. I really like this series. ^_^

Haruka and Nao’s story continues in Syu Yasaka’s Monologue Woven For You, Volume 2 headed our way in June, as well.

Fuzoroi no Renri, Volume 6 (不揃いの連理) continues Miman’s series about various Yuri couples, including a punk girl and her career woman girlfriend.

To celebrate the release of the first collected volume, Miman’s comic Sempai, Oishi desuka? (先輩、美味しいですか?) has been given a voice comic, available on Youtube!

Men-men Musubi (麺面むすび) is a collection by Yuri anthology contributor Yodokawa, with 7 short stories about life and loves of adult women.

Hatsuka from Comic Yuri Hime showed off the RIDIBOOKS Comic Award for Watashi no Oshi ha Akuyaku Reijou., on Twitter! Now we just need an anime for this series! ^_^

 

Yuri Webtoon

War Bunny’s Appolonia is a gay cowgirl drama that has reached 1000 subscribers on webtoons! Give it a try for your recommended daily dose of gay cowgirls!

 

 

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Yuri Light Novel

Out now from Yen Press is the LN of The Magical Revolution of the Reincarnated Princess and the Genius Young Lady, Volume 1. It’s very similar to the manga, but seems more good-hearted, with less yelling. (Or maybe I read it with less yelling, since I don’t have to look at the screaming faces…)

New from Kadokawa, is Hataraku Watashi to Kanojo no Dosei (働く私と彼女の同棲) about a woman who takes in a relative’s daughter after her mother dies. I don’t know if this is Yuri, per se, but it looks like they find healing and family in each other, and I am all for that.

 

 

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Anime News

There is a lot of chatter on JP channels that Watashi no Yuri ha Oshigoto desu! / Yuri is My Job! will be getting an anime adaptation. According to anime “leak” site, SUGOI Lite, the domain watayuri.com has been registered. Fingers crossed. Next up, let’s get an anime for Wataoshi, as well. ^_^

I had a chance to watch the first three episodes of The Executioner and Her Way of Life and I’m going to give it a recommendation. The art is much better than it has a right to be, there’s much less guro than in the light novel, and the tightened timeframe of the anime amps up the tension.  HIDIVE is streaming this series and the Light Novels (which have been reviewed here: Volume 1 | Volume 2 | Volume 3) are available from Yen Press.

Birdie Wing – Golf Girls’ Story is >this< close to being the sports anime I need. All it needs is some Yuri. ^_^ It’s a story about financial inequality and crime and and intense competition and…golf. It’s bonkers in exactly the way I love. I recommend this higher than highly.

 

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Yuri Doujinshi

Lilyka is running a “pay what you want” sale on Sachi Miyabe‘s works, starting at $1.99.

 

Other News

Cherry Magic! Manga Artist Donates Film Rights Fee to Marriage For All Japan, reports Kim Morrisy on ANN. Cherry Magic is a goofy BL series about adults in the workplace, and having a popular BL manga, series and movie boosting Marriage for All is really terrific. I love when Yuri and BL acknowledge the real lives and issues of queer folks.

Absolutely unrelated to Yuri, but I thought you’d appreciate this video of Michelle Yeoh talking about her most iconic characters. ^_^

Tamsyn Muir’s Gideon the Ninth made an appearance on Jeopardy! of all things, this week. Boter the Ninth has the clip on Twitter. ^_^ Thanks to YNN correspondent Ashley who caught that!

 

Thanks to our Okazu Patrons who make the YNN weekly report possible! Support us on Patreon or Pixiv Fanbox to help us give Guest Reviewers a raise and to help us support Yuri creators!

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



Yuri Espoir, Volume 1

April 15th, 2022

Kokoro has just learned that when she graduates high school, she is to be married to someone to whom her father owes a significant favor. She is not happy about this, and refers to it as “dying” after graduation. As a result of her impending “death,” Kokoro wants to live a happy Yuri life while she is in high school. She may never get to date the girl of her dreams, but she can at least draw pictures of the Yuri couples she observes and imagine their lives. Kokoro enlists her best friend and fellow art club member, Amami, in her plan.

Yuri Espoir, Volume 1, seemed like it might be fun. It quickly became…extraordinary. Yes, Kokoro sees Yuri couples, then draws what she imagines their story to be. The next chapter the tells us the reality of their story. As it tuns out, Kokoro has solid Yuridar. She gets the basic situation right, but the details are different and more complicated than her imagination. Everything in this book is more complicated than Kokoro imagines, in fact. Amami’s feelings, their art club advisor’s secret…everything. 

 I loved that we got the story of the Yuri couple and that those stories are truncated. We get bits and pieces, and maybe the wrap up…maybe they don’t. We may never know what happens to them, or we might, but it was compelling.  Unpredictable, ebullient, with a complicated and much vaster plot that it initially seemed, every chapter was a revelation. I couldn’t put it down.  What a fun and unusual manga!

Mai Naoi’s art is not practiced and slick, but solid enough that both Kokoro and Amami has vastly different styles that are themselves recognizably different from the main narrative.

The main narrative may or may not be good in the end, but the individual chapters are a fab collection of Yuri tropes remixed in and out of “reality.” I cannot stress this enough – I have not seen a story like this before. It was really very interesting. You may not like it, but I’m going to say Yuri Espoir, Volume 1 was worth reading.

Ratings:

Art – 6
Stories – 8
Characters – 8
Service – 0
Yuri – 9

Great job to Caroline Wong on translation and  to the entire Tokyopop team for a surprising Yuri manga. Thanks so much to Tokyopop for the review copy! I hope you’ll pick this up when it hits shelves this summer; it was genuinely intriguing. I’ll definitely be grabbing Volume 2 when it’s released in October.



Amayo no Tsuki, Volume 1 ( 雨夜の月)

April 14th, 2022

Saki loves piano. Or does she? She loves taking lessons with her teacher, she’s sure of that. But her teacher is leaving…

In Amayo no Tsuki, Volume 1 ( 雨夜の月), on the street, heading towards lessons, Saki bumps into someone. A lovely girl about her age, drops piano music. Saki helps her pick it up. The girl gestures at her, but Saki doesn’t understand. The next day in school  the girl turns out to be a transfer student, named Kanon. Kanon is hard of hearing, but can read lips and speak. Their teacher asks Saki to help Kanon out, but Kanon tells Saki to leave here alone.

Saki heads to the new music teacher her teacher recommended and the final coincidence drops into place. Her new teacher is Kanon’s mother, a veritable ogre of a teacher. 

Saki finds that she cannot leave Kanon alone and just keeps trying to be a friend to the new girl. There is a clique that is clearly out to bully Kanon, but Saki is not having any of it and protects Kanon. Kanon appreciates that Saki always turns towards her when she speaks, which helps her to lip-read. Slowly, Kanon opens up to Saki. When her impossible piano lessons are over, Saki retreats to Kanon’s room, the sound-proof music room behind the house. There, she learns, Kanon finally feels relaxed, without the mosaic of fractured background noises of daily life around her. There, if Kanon gets close, she can hear Saki. And there, Saki starts to rethink her love of piano….

As Saki finds herself thinking more and more about Kanon, and how intimate they are, she also starts to realize that it was never piano she loved, maybe, but it might well have been her piano teacher.

In school, while the bullies scheme, Saki’s friends join her and Kanon. Kanon is finding it harder to isolate herself, even as the effort of talking with new folks exhausts her. When Kanon makes an effort to go shopping with her, Saki decides to learn sign language to hopefully make that less stressful for Kanon…one day.

Saki is awakening to a new self, Kanon is awakening to a new self and this fact is the key strength of this series. Kanon is very clear that she does not need or want a hearing person to be her savior or her guardian, but she is becomingly less resistant to Saki as a friend. Saki is starting to get a hint that her feelings for Kanon are not just friendship, but she can see that friendship is more important. I actually want to know what will become of them and I kind of hope it’s not either/or.

This is the first new series by Kuzushiro-sensei in a while and I’m pretty pleased with the way it’s turning out. Her art is solid, she’s come a long way, with a recognizable style. The pacing is good, although I could lose the creepy bullies constantly threaten to make life hard for Kanon. But over all, I’m glad it neither fetishizes nor romanticizes deafness. Instead, it is a bit of an explainer manga, which gives Kanon a chance to speak for herself and to correct Saki’s mistakes and misunderstandings.

The volume ends with a few chapters of another Kuzushiro series that had too much screaming for me to enjoy it. Adults in an office just don’t scream that much… but Egao no Taenai Shokuba Desu., Volume 1 (笑顔のたえない職場です。) might be more your cup of tea.

I didn’t know what to expect with this series, but what I have gotten is a pretty solid series from a creator I really like.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 7 Rough spots here and there, but it finds its own pace before the end of the volume
Characters – Same
Service – Implied only
Yuri – Implied only, but…

Overall – 8 by the end

Amayo no Tsuki is not a manga about DHH people, it has a character who is hard of hearing in a Yuri manga. If you are a DHH reader, and you have had a chance to read this manga, I would welcome your  opinion, which will obviously be from a different point of view than mine.



Gunbured x Sisters, Volume 2 (ガンバレッドxシスターズ), Guest Review by Mariko S.

April 13th, 2022
I’m extremely pleased to welcome back the Okazu Guest Reviewer who takes on series that I’m not going near…Mariko Shinobu! /extravagant flailing of arms/ For a refresher, check out her review of Volume 1, which is now available in English from Seven Seas. Please welcome back Mariko with your warmest Okazu welcome!
 
Time for round two of everyone’s favorite (and likely the only) Yuri nunsploitation manga! In honor of the official English release of volume 1, I’m here to whet your appetite for the further adventures of Dorothy and Maria, our dynamic duo of Church-adjacent violence and sex in Gunbured x Sisters, Volume 2 (ガンバレッドxシスターズ).
 
As the story continues, we think we know the lay of the land. Our heroines will investigate and confront the escalating vampire threats to keep the populace safe, while attempting to unravel the deeper mysteries surrounding both the undead and Maria herself. When the volume opens, we meet what is surely to be the next major threat for the Red Sisters – a dapper, regal-looking vampire who perches on an overstuffed armchair sipping premium blood from a goblet. And just as he’s gearing up for his big villain speech… exit, stage left, courtesy of Maria’s pistol and Shannon’s daggers. These women are not intending to play “business as usual,” and they’re not about to let a preening villain get in the way of the conversation (read: “fist fight”) they need to have about Dorothy.
 
However, convolutions are writhing beneath the surface of the story. We get the first hints that the Church is not a pristine force for good courtesy of wunderkind inventor Chloe and her massive robot sidekick Sanders, whose grandfather invented the Optare (the cross-like weapon Maria wields when she really means business.) Meanwhile, Dorothy tortures a vampire she captured – not for information, but “just because (she) wanted to.” She ends up with info on the new vampires anyway, but again we see the damage that hides beneath her “perfect leader of the Church” facade. A facade which, by the way, she doesn’t even attempt to keep up around her friends, and barely maintains around the Church elders.
 
And then, suddenly, things get real. The force behind the sudden uprising of new, more powerful vampires reveals herself – “Doctor J,” the pure-blood vampire mad scientist. She has been testing the Church with her hybrid genetic monstrosities, and is utterly and completely unafraid of anything our heroines can throw at her. She looks at every encounter as a chance to gather data, whether it’s Dorothy and Maria fighting one of her creations, or shooting herself in the head with Maria’s gun. And the data she gathers is foreboding – she is able to counteract and reverse Maria’s dhampir mode, regenerate any injury completely and instantaneously, and only decides to retreat from Shannon’s entire Knights of the Cross brigade because it might be “annoying” to kidnap Maria under those circumstances.
 
Despite the complete and total loss, though, Maria finally gets the bit of critical information she has been seeking all these years: Noelle is alive, and Doctor J knows something about her. As the book closes, we glimpse even more foreshadowing that things are not as they seem with the Church or the vampires. And we are left with so many concerns for both Dorothy and Maria, who are hiding so much pain from themselves and each other. Dorothy, in particular, has a scary way of being tender and kind with Maria directly, but dead-eyed and mercenary when discussing her with others. Does she have any genuine feelings for Maria, or is the dhampir nothing more than a monstrous tool to effect her revenge with?
 
If you’re back for another helping, you don’t really need the warning, but the buffet of service of all kinds continues unabated. There’s lingerie and blood. Shower scenes and severed body parts. Nighttime liaisons, flashers, and bloodlust-as-intimacy. There was even “Maria beats up some guys who were creeping on Dorothy and one of them ends up with a daikon in a very uncomfortable place,” which is not a type of service I knew I needed but nevertheless enjoyed. Caveat emptor. As far as Yuri, we’re mostly on the same wavelength as the first volume, just a little more intense: Shannon is desperate to be Dorothy’s princely protector, to win her favor and reserve “Dolores-sama’s” affections for herself. Dorothy and Maria continue to have a very physical relationship as the result of Maria’s vampire needs. Some of it Dorothy clearly plays up for her own amusement, but there are definitely signs during, for example, the night Maria spends in Dorothy’s bed, that there’s more developing. Maria catches herself a few times getting emotionally invested in Dorothy’s past and well-being, and though she tries to correct herself… she’s catching feelings. Dorothy is a thornier issue, though. While publicly she is flirty and forward, even at times kind and affectionate, when her mask slips it becomes very unclear if she is capable of love for anyone, or if all that will ever matter to her is her mission.
 
 

Ratings:

Art – 10     I still think it just “fits” this story, despite (or because of) its messiness. The fight scenes in particular do a great job of clearly orienting the participants in space and making the action legible.
Story – 6     Relatively little actually happens in this volume. But, I like the way subversive elements are casually woven into the story in pieces rather than having characters just exposition dump all the time.
Characters – 9     Chloe the disabled inventor, Sanders her robot bodyguard, and Father Marco, the deranged priest that wields a mace topped with a skull the size of a beach ball are worthy additions to our funhouse gallery of lovable weirdos.
Yuri – 6     Shannon is very clearly in love with Dorothy and wants to be her “prince.” Dorothy and Maria… it’s complicated.
Service – 10    All the service, all the time.

Overall – 8

 

The girls were sure in for a shocker
From the vampires’ perverted mad doctor
Much more violence and sex
And time for Dorothy to flex
All the assets her station has brought her

Gunbured Sisters, Volume 2 is available on Amazon JP, Bookwalker JP or CD Japan. in Japanese and in English in July, from Seven Seas!

Erica here: Thank you very much for the review, Mariko. I look forward to your reviews of this series more than to the series itself. ^_^ Tetragrammaton Labyrinth is the last Yuri nunsploitation series I can think of. It’s been a  while and we were due. ^_^



Dick Fight Island, Volume 1

April 10th, 2022

Today we’re doing something a little different. I sincerely mean that. too, because while it might seem that Dick Fight Island by Reibun Ike, is as far from Yuri as you could get, it has more in common with some of the issues I’ve talked about here on Okazu, than not.

Some while back I did an article on problematic content and why you may still enjoy it, you should also be aware that your enjoyment comes at the price of someone else’s dehumanization or, perhaps, trauma.

Dick Fight Island (it’s Japanese title is a much more staid  “8 Fighters”) is a story about Haruto, a young man who comes from a small archipelago of 8 islands, where once every 4 years a representative is chosen to “fight” in order to become the King of the Islands. The form of battle is a sex contest in which the winner makes the loser ejaculate first. This is entirely representative of world politics and also utterly ridiculous at the same time.  ^_^

Haruto has a lover on the “outside,” but he returns home to participate in the battle. That is basically 98.5% of the plot. Most of the book are the “battles” themselves, which, like the premise, are ridiculous. But when the battle part is done, it turns out that there’s a series of romances inside. Haruto’s lover arrives on the island and they are reunited, other pairs that were working out stuff in the battles live happily every after and I’m thinking that maybe just everyone could have kept the old king without all this mishegas.

The art in this volume was outstanding, honestly. Even aside from creative dick armor, the designs of the battle costuming was lovely and utterly exploitative. The fighters wore the male equivalent of elaborate chain mail bikini for female fighters. There was no question that this was supposed to be that very thing, and done beautifully. 

And then there are the “battles” themselves. If you can imagine gay porn where the participants have sex in an arena, and they and people around them comment on their techniques, you have the idea. I was reminded of a current manga running in Comic Yuri Hime called “Asumi-chan is interested in lesbian sex work!” (彩純ちゃんはレズ風俗に興味があります!) where different kinds of sex play are “explained” through teaching Asumi her job.  In both cases, the “explaining” isn’t making the act any sexier, in my opinion, it just casts the audience in the role of innocent/clueless voyeur. I imagine, based on how many porn stories utilize this role for the viewer, that it’s a popular one. Frankly, I far preferred the snark-filled worldliness of Sakuran. (I don’t think I ever reviewed it, but Kate Dacey’s review is a very good one.) When sex is stripped of intimacy, I’m inclined to accept thinking it of as a business more readily than as a contest.

I felt kind of icky reading about these “islanders” and their weird sexual ritual as a form of entertainment, as well. That just sailed right off the coast of historical fetishism of indigenous cultures and was impossible for me to ignore.

And lastly, as a gay person, fetishizing gay sex always makes me uncomfortable. The English title of this book establishes the tone for the story pretty solidly. This is meant to be “tee-hee”d at.  Treating gay sex as something to be “tee-hee”d at is still pretty problematic in my book.

So all this said, what did I think of Dick Fight Island? I don’t think I enjoyed it, honestly. I can see where BL fans would and it doesn’t quite make me happy.  I think it has some outstanding art and some lovely costuming choices – even beyond the battle armor. The characters were good enough that I probably would enjoy a slice-of-life around their fantasy islands more than this story.

As I said in my previous article, “It is perfectly all right for you to like problematic content but it shows you’re a decent person if you’re mindful as to why that content might be problematic to someone else.

As a title with which to revisit this idea, Dick Fight Island was perfect.

Dick Fight Island is available on AmazonRightStuf or wherever you get your manga.

For what I presume will be a completely different perspective, check out the Mangasplaining Podcast, which will be covering this same volume in third season!