Double Your Pleasure Yuri Anthology, Guest Review by Luce

November 24th, 2021

A cropped header of the cover of Double Your Pleasure Yuri Anthology. (I have used the cropped one as the full image whilst not explicit, is not really safe for work)

I’m Luce and often my curiosity gets the better of me. See also: I read and reviewed it so you don’t have to! Gave Erica a break, anyhow. You can find me on the Okazu discord as farfetched, and on tumblr as silverliningslurk. Onward, at your own peril.

Double Your Pleasure is an erotic yuri anthology based around twins, from authors such as Naoko Kodama who has done Days of Love at Seagull Villa. I think this is what they call ‘Dead Dove content’, also known as ‘does what it says on the tin’. I don’t know if I was expecting anything different from what I got, to be honest.

This review could be as short as: a series of twins having sex in various places. That’s pretty much all this is. If that’s your thing, then it’s great. I do find twins interesting… but not so much in this context. As far as I’m aware, sibling relationships are much more common in Japanese media than they are in English media, as are teacher-student relationships. I don’t know why – someone more versed in Japanese culture might be able to comment more thoroughly on it – but for some reason, they seem to go down a treat, at least with enough people to get published. I somehow can’t imagine something like this being published in the western world, but this made it here, so presumably there is some demand. I could possibly guess the type.

To be honest, where a third party was included it was a bit more interesting to me, but the focus on twins being so obsessed with their differences felt quite odd. Maybe it was low-hanging fruit, but nearly all of the stories featured twins either trying to be exactly the same, or very focused on the few things that they matched in. I’m not a twin, so I can only imagine that it probably is something they are concerned about to a degree, but I feel like most twins (I happen to know two separate triplets, too) I know don’t like being compared, and are no more interested in their siblings than non-twin siblings.

Basically, this is a fetish-catering manga. There is a lot of focus on nipples, and the sex is shown. The preview on Bookwalker has one full short story, and it’s about the same from there. One of the ones that particularly irked me was a story where two twins are very different… but their weights are the same. Why? Because the one tries to match her intake and output to the other. Loosely linked to binary stars?

Basically, if you’re into it, you’re into it, and it does what it says on the tin, and does that pretty well. If you’re not, you’re probably reading this with a sense of horror. If you’re curious, read the preview on Global Bookwalker, (with an 18+ warning to click through) and if you hate that, it only gets better in the sense that the rest of the book isn’t quite as non-consensual. Oh, did I mention that? In the first story, the twins get annoyed that someone can tell them apart and force themselves on her as punishment. It’s my least favourite… not that I had any favourites. I won’t be reading this again.

Ratings:

Art – 7 – mixture of artists, all fairly decent.
Story – 1: twins have sex, sometimes someone else is included, in one it was a dream. I think.
Characters – 2 – few characters have any depth beyond ‘I’m obsessed with my twin and this correlates to sexual activity with them’.
Service (level of salaciousness) – 10. Lots of sex. Every story. Dead dove content, if you will.
Yuri –  10, I mean. They’re all explicit yuri, so…
Overall – 4.

Thank you to Seven Seas for the review copy. I’m off to read something a little more wholesome.

Erica here: Thank you Luce, for once again stepping in to give us a solid review of this jiggly collection.

For my part, I was merely sad that none of the creators tried to do something interesting with the premise. Like, an astronaut returns fall in love with another astronaut of a space station and they find they were separated at birth…or something. But as you say, this is “a series of twins having sex” so, if that’s a reader’s thing, then that reader ought to like it.  ^_^



Ayaka-chan ha Hiroko-sempai ni Koishiteru (彩香ちゃんは弘子先輩に恋してる), Volume 1

November 23rd, 2021

Ayaka-chan is fashionable and cute. As a result, she’s super popular with her male colleagues. Unfortunately for them, she isn’t interested. Ayaka only has eyes for her cool, competent sempai, career woman Hiroko.

Hiroko is put out greatly by Ayaka’s flirting. The problem isn’t that Hiroko isn’t interested…the problem is that she is. Very interested. And this apparently straight girl is driving her out of her mind. Poor Hiroko drinks away her pain every night at a lesbian bar, screaming at how vexing this all is!

In the meantime Ayaka amps up her seduction techniques. It drives her crazy that Hiroko never seems to notice her, no matter what she does. There is a punchline of course: What Hiroko will do when she finds out, is the subject of Volume 2. ^_^

And so their days go, each driving each other crazy in Sal Jiang’s office romance, Ayaka-chan ha Hiroko-sempai ni Koishiteru, Volume 1 (彩香ちゃんは弘子先輩に恋してる).

As usual with a Jiang story, the art is stylish, the characters feel completely real and the collision that’s coming is set up in a way that could be amazingly fun or bad (or both at the same time!) and still be equally entertaining.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 8
Characters – 10
Service – 5 Ayaka is not above using her assets to get Hiroko’s attention, so mostly T&A.
Yuri – 7
Lesbian – 9

Overall – 8

I’m interested and pleased that this book is a Futabasha book. I’m always glad when Futabasha puts out openly queer work. You can read sample chapters in Japanese on Web Action, if you’d like to get a feel for this – I know there are plenty of Jiang fans reading this blog.

I’m going to hope that if her Black & White (which I reviewed here earlier this year and has since been licensed by Seven Seas,) does well, we’ll see this goofier story in English as well. ^_^ Normally, I wouldn’t assume, but Seven Seas already licenses stuff from Futabasha, so it’s not a stretch.

 



For The Love of Anime, NYC

November 21st, 2021

I have been drawn back into the con world and my return, my first in-person convention since 2019, was the event that I now consider the best anime/manga event in North America, Anime NYC.

NYC is not a con-friendly space. It is expensive and hard to make a splash. With ReedPop’s New York Comic Con just weeks previous, it wouldn’t seem like there’d be room for an anime- and manga-focused event. But NYCC is not a comic con, really, and not a media con, really. It was growing into a decent publishing event for a while, but tossed that for another try at being a major media con, which ended up as San Diego Comic Con’s sad East Coast echo.

And then there was anime. NYCC was getting big company presence. Viz and Funimation sell to exactly the audience Marvel and DC comics are assumed to appeal to, (the coveted group of people with the least money and most inclination to bootleg, the 12-18 male demographic,) so they were bringing star power to NYCC. Their reward was to be two of a handful of non-western media booths, along with toy and game vendors and all other anime and manga companies were first exiled to the Piers and then just disappeared.

So despite the proximity of the larger event, there is indeed space for excellence available. In 2019, Anime NYC resoundingly took the lead as the con of choice for NYC otaku. I wrote a report for Comics Beat that year, that laid out the case that Anime NYC was the destination of choice. And then the pandemic hit. NYCC was held earlier this year and again, it had the two major anime guns there. So how would Anime NYC fare?

First the negatives. Javits Center remains an object lesson in how not to build or run a convention center. On Day One, lines for Anime NYC straggled for blocks. Part of this is attributable to vaccination status checks being handled the exact same way bag checks are – as a roadblock that only dribbles a few people in at a time. It doesn’t take a genius to know that vax card checks and wristbands could have been handed out on the line. After two days of the usual clusterfuck of lines at Javits, AnimeNYC – not Javits – created a far more sensible priority line policy. People with badges and wristbands in one line, people with one not the other in a second and a third for folks who needed both. Tada!

To be very honest the only reason I was able to attend the event at all was because they required mask and vaccinations, so thank you NY State and Anime NYC. Many of you know I have been unwell most of this year and there would be no way at all I could have thought about attending without both a vax and mask requirement. And thank you to everyone who kept those masks on all day. I really appreciated it. It made me feel like this community cares.

Anime NYC staff was fantastic. Everyone I spoke to was super helpful and knowledgeable.  After checking in, I hit the floor to pursue my main objective – catching up with folks.

I spent time seeking out some of the manga and LN publishers who attended. I already knew there weren’t going to be any major Yuri news items, so I was just more interested in the lay of the land. Sam Pinansky from J-Novel Club was generally very pleased with how things were going. He noted that J-Novel Club has released so many titles in the last year, it almost approaches a title a day for a year, which is an outstanding pace.

Yen Press was so busy when I dropped by, I contented myself by just looking over their wares. Denpa Books had a full crew and I got to catch up with Ed Chavez, who was extremely positive about their acquisitions and sales.

Viz and Kodansha were not there this year, both for valid reasons, but looking at how voracious the crowd was, I think it was the wrong decision. I really hope we can get Seven Seas out here next year and UDON, with Manga Classics. It’s a great con and people come to buy. As I walked around Saturday evening, booths were selling out left and right.

I sat for a bit with artist Rica Takashima; she had a steady stream of buyers. At one point she looked at me, amazed, “People are buying my stuff!” Author, translator and lecturer, Zack Davisson, completely sold out his table by Saturday evening, as well. I had dropped by his table earlier in the day, where he invited me to be on a panel. Of course I said yes.^_^

Which is how I was on a Localization/Translation panel with Zack, legendary Dark Horse publisher Carl Horn, equally legendary translator Mari Morimoto, and ANN Executive Editor Lynzee Loveridge. LumRanmaYasha did a great live tweet of the panel (Thanks Lum! Aways good to see you. Lum runs the fantastic Manga Mavericks podcast with co-host Colton.) if you’d like to see what we talked about. I didn’t get a title card because, as I said, Zack asked me to join like 20 minutes before it started. ^_^

I had a brief chance to just walk the floor and see the vendors. Caught up with old friends at CheapManga.com and Anime Castle. And the thing I learned (again) is that the supply line problems are killing manga. Almost no vendors had manga at the show, except a few major bookstore chains. It’s become so hard to get manga or keep it in stock, it was actually almost impossible for vendors to sell manga. I know I’ve said it before, if you see a manga on the shelves and you think you might want it…get it. Print publishing is struggling to get books on shelves right now.

I then had the pleasure to be on a panel with the illustrious Princess Weekes from The Mary Sue and First Second’s Kiara Valdez, moderated by Michele Kirichanskaya from GEEKS OUT. We had so little time, but we covered a lot of ground with Michele’s great moderation.

I then capped my day with a lovely talk over dinner with Kodansha‘s Ben Applegate who again talked about the supply chain (seriously, it’s a real thing right now in manga publishing, a year ago, manga took a few months from editing to print, now its more like 9-10 months) and age ratings on manga and a ton of cool titles.

Attendee estimates were higher than 2019, and those attendees were super enthusiastic and ready to embrace and enjoy the events at Anime NYC. Panels rooms were full pretty much every room I saw. Saturday night, the con actually opened two extra rooms for attendees to watch the 1000th episode of One Piece. (I watched it today, and only teared up a little at the use of ‘We Are’ as the OP. Also Jimbei! At last!) Sponsor Crunchyroll was holding a number of premiere sessions through the event weekend.

YNN Correspondent Sean Gaffney has two items to report:

Kodansha did announce a Yuri title, Run Away With Me Girl, by Battan. I know some folks have asked me about that. I haven’t read it at all, so look forward to it. Adriana Hazra has details on ANN.

The trailer for The Executioner and Her Way of Life anime was running on screens around the convention center. I managed to never see it (go figure,) but you can watch it on Youtube. ^_^

As Anime NYC 2021 comes to a close, I am once again convinced that this is exactly the event that NYC needs and deserves. I can’t know what 2022 will bring, but I hope that it will bring us a revitalized publishing industry. In the meantime, Anime NYC is once again an outstanding event for lovers of anime and manga.



Manga Panels, Podcast and Talks You Won’t Want to Miss!

November 19th, 2021

It’s been a super busy week for me and there’s still a bit to go, so I just wanted to run down where you can and will see me talking about manga!

November 2021

I had a lovely talk with Ashley from the Shoujo & Tell podcast about the Rose of Versailles. Let me reiterate that working on this series has been one of the greatest honors of my life and I am always thrilled to talk about it. ^_^ Ashley was a lot of fun.

The American Library Association’s Graphic Novels and Comics Round Table sponsors the Manga in Libraries series of talks. We had an *amazing* panel that is online this week: Manga in Libraries: The LGBTQ+ Community, hosted by Jillian Rudes, where I got to talk with tremendous folks in manga publishing and libraries.

On Saturday, November 20 at 5:15pm at Anime NYC, I’ll be bringing the cool level down with GEEKS OUT panel, Serving Magical Person Realness. I’ll be at the con for a relatively short period of time, Saturday afternoon and evening, so drop by and say hi!

 

December 2021

Keep your calendars free on December 16 when I’ll be the joining in a Japan Foundation of NY conversation about The Power and Influence of Shoujo Manga. I’ll add the link for registration as soon as it goes live. I’m super excited about this one.

Catch me and James Welker in conversation at Casacon online on Discord, Friday December 17th, 8PM Eastern US time.

 

February 2022

In conjunction with Michigan State University, I will be facilitating a Japanese Pop Culture Transmedia Translation Workshop, with the most amazing line-up of Guest Speakers. This will have open registration but very limited spaces, so keep your eyes peeled for that. I’ll mostly be out of the way and letting the pros talk. I’m really looking forward to learning from everyone.



Sasayakuyouni Koi wo Utau, Volume 5 (ささやくように恋を唄う)

November 18th, 2021

The battle of the bands is coming! Now that Yori-sempai has officially joined the SS Girls, they are raring to go. Only, they seem to have developed a rival in the process.

Shiho, leader of the band Lorelai, seems to have a history with SS Girls’ leader Aki and a bone to pick with Yori. But Himari kind of likes prickly Shiho and decides to get to know this new player on the stage. Unexpectedly, she meets Shiho one afternoon and asks the older girl to sit with her. Shiho tells Himari her whole backstory and, even she admits that it does not make her look great.

Himari gets an idea and, along with her sempai in the baking club, Momoka (who also has a history with Shiho,) they decide that only thing is, on the eve of the battle of the bands, the members of the two bands are brought together to hash their issues out. Reluctantly, Shiho agrees…but she has one condition. And that condition is intended to cause the most chaos possible.

I’ve mentioned how much I enjoy this series every volume, but this volume really puts a point on it. This story could have been Volume 5 of a generic Yuri love story, with Himari and Yori gavotting around one another; will they/ won’t they? Instead… I can’t wait for the battle of the bands! I *want* to hear/read Yori’s love song. I want to see if Shiho and Aki can be friends again. and see what will happen with the rival bands and the other wild card that just showed up. I’m not kidding, either. I really can’t wait to find out. ^_^

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 8
Characters – 9
Service – 0 It’s such a delight
Yuri – 8

Overall – 8

Takeshima Eku-sensei has created a charming story about characters you really want to know about… even if they are so cute they make my teeth hurt. ^_^