Kageki Shojo!!, Volume 2

March 13th, 2022

If you are a fan of all-female musical theater review troupes, then you really don’t want to miss this series by Kumiko Saiko. I reviewed Kageki Shojo!! The Curtain Rises, which was the prologue to the story, following the fortunes of a number of young women as they seek to enter the Kouka Musical School.

I read, but did not review volume 1, as it was covered fully in the anime, which I did review and is for the moment, still streaming on Funimation.

In Kageki Shojo!!, Volume 2, we learn why, specifically Sarasa is here and the forces that have shaped her abilities. This volume motivated me to talk about the character of the Girl Prince in Yuri Studio S03 E01: The Girl Prince. In part because, as I say, Sarasa is a Girl Prince and there is never any doubt that she will be able to play one on the Kouka stage, but also because this story also struck at the heart of the fundamental inequity of the Girl Prince archetype.

In Volume 2 we learn that Sarasa should have been able to perform on the kabuki stage. That she would have been a natural – that everything her childhood friend Akiya has to work to master, came naturally to her. We also learn that she very likely may be the illegitimate daughter of a kabuki master. We don’t need to ask why she is never given that opportunity, do we? The answer is, of course the same sexism faced by all girl princes since the archetype first entered literature. And you know what? I am sick of it. I am sick to death of men (and they women who prop them up) telling women that they cannot do or be something.

Sarasa is an amazing character. Instead of letting the way the kabuki world treated her get her down, she’ll take the exact same path laid down by Oscar to create her own reality as Oscar. It’s maddening that she is not allowed to do what she would be best at, but it will be triumphant when she is equally the best at what she has now set her sights upon.

Not all of us face the kind of barriers Sarasa faced, but all of us face some barriers, whether they be societal expectations or familiar barriers. And, like Sarasa we can take steps to create our own path. If we can’t all be Oscar, we can all be Erminia, letting the world that held us down burn, while we run off to make a new life for ourselves, the way we want it to be.

Like Oshi ga Budokan Ittekuretara Shinu, Kageki Shojo!! is not great at cheerleading the industries it’s portraying, but it’s doing a great job in helping me envision a future where this controlling bullshit is history.  ^_^; Now if only the people in those industries could imagine that, as well.

Saiki’s art is gripping, she does amazing body language, as one might expect, since this is a 2-d manga about a 3-d form of performance. Her characters are blank canvases upon which each scene has to be created. Except for Sarasa, who is as fully formed as Athena when she stepped out of Zeus’ head.

Ratings:

Art – 9
Character – 9
Story – 8
Yuri – 0
Service – 1 on principle

Overall – 8

As this series touches deeply into the worlds of musical revue and kabuki, I think it’s a worthy read for fans of the female kagekidan and kabuki traditions.

Kageki Shojo!!, Volume 2 is available from Seven Seas on Amazon, Global Bookwalker, RightStuf or your favorite manga store.



Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – March 12, 2022

March 12th, 2022

Yuri Anime

Sentai Filmworks has licensed The Executioner and Her Way of Life.This means that it will be exclusive to their HIDIVE streaming service. The anime will be premiering in Japan on April 1, Alex Mateo on ANN has more details. The first 3 light novels have been reviewed here on Okazu. (Volume 1 | Volume 2 | Volume 3)

 

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Yuri Event

Galette magazine’s Yuri Matsuri event is being held on March 20th, but if you can’t get there, maybe you can still get yourself the 5th anniversary 2-set on Booth! This anniversary special includes an anniversary book, a signed card and an original tote bag (they are currently out of stock, but fingers crossed they get more after the Matsuri is over.)

 

Yuri Visual Novels

SukeraSparo has a new Yuri VN out now in Japanese. Naisho One Room ~ Sewayaki Imouto to Sugosu Kyuujitsu ~ (ないしょワンルーム ~世話焼き妹と過ごす休日~).

MangaGamer is running a White Day Sale through March 21st, with 75% off of selected titles. They are including a number of Yuri titles in the sale, so drop by the sale page!

Via Yuri Navi, Lycoris is pleased to announce their newest Yuri VN,  Uso kara Hajimaru Koi no Natsu (嘘から始まる恋の夏). You can check out the Japanese-language trailer for The Summer Begins with a Lie on Youtube.

 

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LGBTQ Media News

Kabi Nagata’s newest manga My Wandering Warrior Existence will be hitting shelves in English this coming week! This book delves into Nagata-sensei’s connection to her gender, and her sexuality. CW: childhood sexual assault. I reviewed this in Japanese last year.

One of the very few podcasts I listen to regularly is the Mangasplaining podcast, featuring Christopher Butcher, David Brothers, Deb Aoki and Chip Zdarsky. Last month they launched a new feature – Mangasplaining Xtra, a substack newsletter with all the show notes, extra commentary and they are publishing manga that has never been seen before in English. I was honored to have an article published there, as a companion piece to their show on Takako Shimura’s Even Though We’re Adults. In An Introduction to Takako Shimura’s Work in English, which is free to read, even if you don’t subscribe, I take a broad look her other works that are available in English for folks who might not be familiar with her.

Senior YNN Correspondent Eric P wants us to know that a new Korra comic is on the way! The Legend of Korra: Patterns in Time, will be hitting shelves this summer. With stories by series creators by Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko and illustrated by Heather Campbell, Jayd Ait-Kaci, and Killian NgI’m really looking forward to this.

Last week Ogata Megumi-san, the voice of Haruka in Sailor Moon, Shinji in Evangelion, won the Seiyuu Award for Best Actress. Ogata-san’s acceptance speech was a forward-looking hope for genderless awards, and an announcement they don’t consider themselves male or female. The speech has been translated in this Twitter thread and its worth a read. ““There is so much talk about being “genderless” nowadays and there are voice actors in the industry who have come out [as queer]. And like myself, there are people out there who go on about their daily lives mostly not thinking of themselves as women.”

 

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Yuri Novels

Pixiv and Comic Yuri Hime are pleased to announce the 4th annual Yuri Novel Contest. I’m just finally starting to read the winners of the 2nd year and I love this contest so much. Here’s to more Yuri fiction! Nominations can be made by you for your own work or for someone else’s work. Submissions are open until March 10. Here’s to more literary Yuri fiction! Full details are available on Pixiv.

Not Yuri, but certainly Yuri-inspired, The Marble Queen by Anna Kopp with cover by Gabriell Kari pings all the Utena strings. Take a look at that beautiful cover and I’m sure you’ll agree.

Onna-doushi toka Arienaidesho to Jiharu Onnanoko o, Hyaku-kakan de Tetteiteki ni Otosu Yuri no Ohanashi ( 女同士とかありえないでしょと言い張る女の子を、百日間で徹底的に落とす百合のお話), Volume 1 and Volume 2 are a very Gangan Yuri novel series, about a girl who does not believe that women can fall in love. A classmate pays her for 100 days to prove that they can.

 

Last thing – this month Okazu is doing a supporter challenge! If we break $700 from subscriptions on Pixiv, Patreon and Ko-fi by the end of this month, we’ll support two new Yuri creators instead of our usual addition of one new creator. I hope you can help us get there. If you enjoy this news report and all of our reviews and articles, we’re asking that you give us as little as $5/month to keep our guest writers paid and help us support the Yuri ecosystem. Many thanks to our current 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. ^_^



Kase-san and Yamada, Volume 2

March 11th, 2022

Kase-san and Yamada have been dating for a few years now, and while they are both working on building lives for themselves that include each other, their schedules make it very difficult. And maybe that would be okay, but it means that they haven’t really had the time they need to discuss themselves with each other.

A surprise summer vacation for both Kase-san and Yamada makes them very aware of those gaps where their lives don’t mesh. In Kase-san and Yamada, Volume 2, that gap seems impossibly wide to Yamada. Unsure, made to feel unconfident, she still sees Kase-san as someone too cool and popular for her, someone she’s not worthy of. This causes a number of problems for them –  and for us, as readers. We’d become used to seeing Kase-san be unreasonably jealous, and thought we had left that behind. Now it’s Yamada’s turn to be unreasonable and we’re likely to be less tolerant as a result. But…is Yamada being unreasonable?

I think it’s worth remembering that Kase-san’s sempai teased her rather mercilessly only a year so so ago, and now she’s dealing with Kase-san’s roommate Fukami being a grade-A jerk. (It’s super obvious that she has a crush on Kase-san and all I can hope is that rather than dealing with that noise, Fukami will realize how shitty she’s being and feel badly about it.) As an adult reading this book, I kind of want to have a stern talk with Fukami-san. The more I think about this story, the more I think that Yamada’s done amazingly well, given how much crap she’s had to take from other people. So, I’m cutting her some slack her as she wallows a bit here. It is very easy to find other people’s relationship drama annoying, but since we’re reading How Do We Relationship…maybe we can cut Yamada a little break? ^_^

When it comes down to dealing with the problems, Kase-san shows she *has* matured. She accepts Yamada’s concerns, is supportive and understanding AND addresses the underlying issue – what does their future look like? Neither they nor we know what shape their future will take, but Kase-san is trying to create a future that will include Yamada and that’s good enough right now.  It would be nice if the two of them get to just be together and talk without everyone wanting to get in their way, but oh well, it’s a rom-com. ^_^;

The fantastic translation by Jocelyne Allen means I’m hearing different characters sounding like different people and outstanding lettering by CK Russell. It feels so much like it’s part of the original, I hardly notice it. Thanks again to the entire Seven Seas team for their great work.

If you’re looking for a comedy college life Yuri series that feels awfully like real life, with bumps in the roads and fully-fleshed out characters, Kase-san and Yamada fits the bill.

Ratings:

Art – 9
Story – 8
Characters – 9
Service – 5 a bit of skin
Yuri – 10

Overall – 9

In the middle of all the running around, Hana being a rube and tanning jokes, let’s give a round of applause to Mikawacchi for finally figuring out a path forward for herself!



Onna Tomodachi to Kekkonshitemita, Volume 1 (女ともだちと結婚してみた。)

March 10th, 2022

If you are a regular reader here, you probably know how much I like Usui Shio’s recent work in Comic Yuri Hime. I’ve been really happy with Kaketa Tsuki to Donuts / Doughnuts Under a Crescent Moon. That series is not the only one Usui-sensei is working on for the magazine. Running concurrently has been another story, one that is quite different.

Onna Tomodachi to Kekkonshitemita, Volume 1 (女ともだちと結婚してみた。) is comedy drama about two best friends, Kurumi and Ruriko. Ruriko is a day person. She wakes up early, cooks breakfast and heads out to her day job. Kurumi, a journalist, is a night person. She heads to bed after Ruriko leaves, waking up later to work into the night. Kurumi is working on an assignment right now, and she and Ruriko are the test subjects – Kurumi is writing a series about being married to a woman.

Friends for years, Ruriko and Kurumi agree that they *will* go back to being friends when this experiment is over, but we know that unbeknownst to Kurumi, Ruriko is in love with her.  So…will they, really? I don’t know…and I don’t think they do either.

After the initial setup of their “marriage,” something begins to happen. Kurumi is depending on Ruriko a lot. And she’s starting to think about her all the time, which is new for her. On a solo overnight, she keeps thing about Ruriko, or even talking to her, without thinking about it.  Ruriko is already in that headspace. In a terrific scene, Ruriko takes a picture of a lone daikon laying in the street and thinks, “Kurumi will love this.” Kurumi loves it.

Ruriko starts to not feel well, but she doesn’t want to bother Kurumi. When Kurumi comes home and find Ruriko not there…and gets a message that she’s in the hospital, Kurumi runs over, asking for her wife at the front desk. Once assure Ruriko is okay, Kurumifinally gets a bit angry. They are married after all, Ruriko should have said something!

Will they make a real marriage out of this sham? I think they will…but I’m glad to give them as much time as they need. ^_^

This series is drawn with Usui-sensei’s gentle art style. Both Kurumi and Ruriko are likable, separately and together. While Kurumi occasionally comes off as thoughtless, that is because we’re likely to be on Ruriko’s side, gently hoping that she gets to express her true feelings. (Something that they are edging closer to in future volumes.)  This series is more goofy and light-hearted than Doughnuts, but at its heart has a similar core value – love takes many forms, but can not be returned if it’s not expressed clearly.

I’m hoping that if…when…Ruriko and Kurumi express their feelings clearly, it’ll be a good thing for them both.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 8 then shifting to 9 by the end
Characters – same
Service – 0
Yuri – 6

Overall – 8, with loads of potential

My fingers crossed that we see this licensed soon, for the “She’s my wife!” moment at the very least. ^_^

 



5 Seconds Before A Witch Falls in Love, Guest Review by Luce

March 9th, 2022

Welcome to another Guest Review Wednesday on Okazu. We welcome back Luce who is taking a look at a collected volume of stories by Zeniko Sumiya that ran in Comic Yuri Hime. Take it away, Luce!

5 Seconds Before a Witch Falls in Love actually has three stories in it, although you wouldn’t know from the outset. The first and third are linked  in that they follow the same characters in stories set about a month apart: The ‘Untouchable Sorceress’ Meg, and the witch hunter Lilith. They fight frequently, although Meg has always managed to one-up Lilith, so never getting caught. When Meg turns Lilith into a cat and someone makes off with her, things change. A bit. In the second story, from Lilith’s point of view, a month afterwards, she is convinced that Meg has cursed her with a love spell. Why else would she be feeling so het up!

The third story is sandwiched between them, and isn’t at all related. In this, Kamiari Kanna is an otherwise normal school girl, who can see supernatural beings, and offers to help them. After finding the demon Belphegor wounded and the angel Samael apparently collapsed and offering to help them, they both fell madly in love with her and follow her around near constantly. A transfer student seems a bit suspicious though, and a supernatural entity is on the loose…

This book is a one shot and totally contained, which I do like. I’m not so fond of tsunderes, which Meg and Lilith emulate somewhat, but they were different enough that I could kind of get behind them. Being so short helped – you don’t actually have to endure the swathes of denial prior to the depicted story. I’m pretty happy about that. Meg was pretty fun, everyone calls her an old hag which pisses her off, and while she’s implied to be extremely talented with magic, she generally uses her magic to play ridiculous pranks on the townspeople. That said, when she does get serious, she goes all in. I personally would have liked Lilith to have a bit more… pizzazz(?) about her? She is cute, though. What I liked most was the ‘warlock pharmacist/drugstore owner’ Hachi. Well equipped with an armoury of snappy comebacks, he was great, and seemed to know more than he actually stated.

I’ll single out something that pleasantly surprised me – Meg apologises for kissing Lilith without her consent (to turn her back from being a cat). Seeing as consent is rarely even mentioned or asked for in manga, I greatly appreciate this. Meg also gives Lilith the opportunity to leave, by which she means to allow her to leave the situation altogether. I like this, and these small details made it far more enjoyable.

I think I enjoyed the second story a bit more though, which is funny because the only advertisement it gets on the cover is the three main characters on the back. The blurb doesn’t even mention a third story at all! The idea of a kind-hearted girl helping all sorts of supernatural spirits isn’t new, but Samael and Belphegor being obsessed by her was made infinitely better by a.) Kanna saying things how she meant and b.) them not getting too handsy about it. They fight over her, but it’s never serious. It’s clear that she is very dear to them, but they never force their affections on her – Bel is upset because the transfer student hugs Kanna… Because she wanted to. Kanna hugs her. It’s actually really cute.

Story: Meg and Lilith 5, Kanna’s story 7
Art: 7
Yuri: 8
Service: 3?
Overall: 7

Erica here: Thank you Luce! I’ll be sure to pay attention to that third story when I have a chance to read this collection. ^_^