Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – September 18, 2021

September 18th, 2021

Yuri Studio

I’m doing a special of recording of the next Yuri Studio! Tomorrow at 3PM Eastern US time, I’m going to address two great questions, I got from Okazu Patrons. They both are questions about literature and writing and Yuri and I want to talk about them at length, so join me on Yuri Studio Live tomorrow!

If we have time and energy, I’ll be taking a few questions after, as well. ^_^

Yuri Manga

We have a pile of new titles up on the Yuricon Store. I’ve been working diligently to clear the backlog.

We start with THREE new manga volumes from Usui Shio!

Kaketa Tsuki to Donuts, Volume 3 (欠けた月とドーナッツ) is out in Japan this weekend. Will Hinako and Asahi figure out what they are to each other? You can read Doughnuts Under a Crescent Moon, Volume 2, now out from Seven Seas!

Ususi-sensei’s story about two friends who get married and life for them begins to change, Onna Tomodachi to Kekkonshitemita, Volume 1 (女ともだちと結婚してみた。) is also out now in Japan.

Last, up is Kimi no Tame ni Sekai ha Aru (きみのために世界はある), a collection of 6 shorts by Usui-sensei.

Takeshima Eku’s charming school life girl band story, Sasayakuyouni Koi wo Utau, Volume 5 (ささやくように恋を唄う) is out now in Japan. Whisper Me a Love Song, Volume 3 is out from Seven Seas in English!

Tsukiatte Agetemo Iikana, Volume 7 ( 付き合ってあげてもいいかな)  hit Japanese bookstores this week and you can read How Do We Relationship, Volume 4 next month and *finally* we can talk about it again.

This one is a don’t-miss for me, Sal Jiang’s office romance Ayaka-chan ha Hiroko-sempai ni Koi Shiteru (彩香ちゃんは弘子先輩に恋してる).

 

Kimi to Tsuzuru Utakata, Volume 2 (君と綴るうたかた) continues this story of PTSD and love by Yuama.

Sayonarajaneeyo, Baka. (さよならじゃねーよ、ばか。) is a collection of Yuri stories by Akiyama Enma, that include a “business Yuri” idol story.

Mermaid horror Yuri, Watashi o Tabetai, Hito de Nashi, Volume  2 (私を喰べたい、ひとでなし ) is on the Store. I’m reading Volume 1 now and I think I like it. ^_^ Take a look at this fabulous Promotional Video from Kadokawa for the series. This is one of the two best I’ve seen.

Kyou, Koshiba Aoi ni Aetara, Volume 3 (今日、小柴葵に会えたら) is on shelves now in Japan. Volume 2 of Chasing After Aoi Koshiba is available in English!

 

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Yuri Anime

Pretty thinly on the line for “Yuri” but Funimation has added Aria and Gakuen Alice to their catalog, reports ANN’s Alex Mateo.

ANN’s Kim Morrissey reports on Netflix sharing some of the key animation drawings from the Sailor Moon Eternal movies in a short video, with multiple language subtitles. Kim also reports on another exiting Sailor Moon tidbit, as DiC’s Sailor Moon dub cues and soundtrack have been resurrected from oblivion and shared around.

ZeroReq011 has a nice look at Takarazuka-inspired anime over on ANN. Obviously they are more familiar with current series, as the major franchise in that category has been left out…hopefully for someone to write something comprehensive about. Sakura Wars is a multiple-genre franchise since 1996, with games, anime, manga, live action-plays and is wholly rooted in Takarazuka and Taisho mecha.

 

Queer Manga and Comics

Seven Seas announced a new license fox X-Gender, by Asuka Miyazaki, an autobiographical comic essay manga about nonbinary life and love.

Today at 1PM is a free online event. Illustrating Identity: Visual Language & Queer Stories. You do need to register, but the event is free.

 

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Thai Live-Action Yuri Drama, 7 Project, Episode 3 – Remember

September 17th, 2021

Thai BL is having a boom moment and it’s worth noting that Thai Yuri is starting to develop in that same market. One of the most recent BL/GL series in Thailand is called 7 Project. You can find all of it on YouTube, and if you turn on Closed Captions, an English caption option is available. Today I’m looking at Episode 3 of this 4-episode series, “Remember.”

“Remember” stars Samantha Melanie Coates as Proud and Pannin Charnmanoon as Jaidee. Proud learns her boyfriend Tac has cheated on her. While she’s recovering from this shock, she becomes friends with Jaidee. a girl in one of her classes. As Tac flails at being honest, Jaidee and Proud become closer. When Tac forces a confrontation, Proud learns things that can destroy their friendship.

Before I get into the plot too much, I want to hearken back to the Afterschool Specials of my youth. These were always “very special episodes” and dealt with stuff that Boomer parents just would not actually talk about (despite the fact that they had been the sex and drugs generation /eyreoll/.) The defining characteristics of these specials were bare-bones writing, acting and staging in order to express teen drama, starring popular teen actors of the time. Watching “Remember,” I felt very much as if I was watching something equivalent to those Specials. The narrative beats were set up from pretty far away. I actually expected a final complication that never did appear, but the others all sort of slam down all at once towards the end and then it wraps up in a relatively satisfactory manner.

The Afterschool Specials are relevant here once more as the reason we all really watched them were the actors (and when when the substitutes couldn’t teach the class and showed them, instead.) The reason to watch “Remember” is, likewise, the actresses. They do fine work with this Ikea furniture plot design. Coates is a very sympathetic Proud, and Jaidee is very likeable, even as things begin to fall apart. Tui Tui Puttachat Pongsuchat’s portrayal of Proud’s mom was outstanding. Best character, best lines, best acting.

Ultimately the end of the segment is ambiguous, but leaves room for hope and that’s a damn sight better than no hope. One can end the story imagining that Proud and Jaidee might well have a chance to become something together.

Ratings:

Cinematography – 7
Characters – 8
Story – 7
Service – 2
Yuri – 8

Overall – 7

I’m pretty happy to welcome Thai Yuri on to our screens. Check out the WabiSabi channel for more of their videos and let them know you enjoyed 7 Project!.

Today’s review is thanks to gentleman and scholar Thomas Baudinette, who is my new pipeline on Thai Yuri! ^_^



SHWD (シュード), Volume 1

September 16th, 2021

Kouga is a woman who wants to make a difference. She wants to be part of the elite Special Hazardous Waste Disposal team – the team that fights the Dynamis, an inhuman form of mental and physical pollution.  Kouga joins Sawada, a tough as nails supervisor and eventually, they are joined by their American counterpart, Leone, Leo to her friends. Kouga is likable, Sawada’s the jaded veteran, Leo is a study in contrasts.

In Volume 1 of SHWD, by sono.N, the monsters are huge, but the women are large, strong and up to the task.

The details of what, specifically, the Dynamis are, is wholly unimportant to me at this point. If they become more interesting, along the order of Silent Mobius‘s Lucifer Hawks, that’s fine, but right now they are those inhuman baddies that poison human minds.

This is a series that gives us something we rarely see, even in action series – beefy, large, muscular women. When we meet Sawada, she’s doing one-armed pushups on a dumbbell. Kouga out-masses her by a lot. She, Leo and Sawada are large-bodied, large-chested, large-muscled women who fight to save people from an enemy that drives them mad. In this volume, we get a single page back story on Kouga, and instantly understand her issue with the Dynamis is personal. And we do see Kouga take her enemy head on – along with Sawada’s knife skills and Leo’s marksmanship – with a giant fucking ax. ^_^ 

There’s a fair dollop of love for the women’s bodies in this series, and a bathing scene, so we can appreciate them up close and personal. None of this is done coyly – this series is a love letter to huge, muscular woman. I really enjoy the heck out of it, from the very first time I encountered it at Comitia as doujinshi series, to this collected volume.

Clearly we’re going to get more of Sawada’s story and Kouga’s experiences. There’s no Yuri here in Volume 1, but I can see Sawada and Kouga going there eventually… .I peeked at the next chapter last night and yep. Kouga’s really cute about it, too. ^_^ Here in V1, the extended backstory we get is Leo’s.

Where this book is likely to go, I’m not sure, but I hope it takes us somewhere fun. In the meantime, you can read the original doujinshi this series is from in English from Lilyka! So if you’re looking for women with shoulders big enough to handle the burden of the task ahead of them, talk a look at the first 5 doujinshi, the 1st year anniversary and the Sports Day Edition of SHWD on Lilyka or, if you want to check it out in Japanese, take a look at the Comic Ruelle & Comic Jardin site where new chapters can be sampled.

Ratings:

Art – 8 Honestly great, despite kind of being exaggerated in a bunch of different ways.
Story – 7 Solid action story storytelling
Characters – 8 Also exaggerated, but fun.
Service – 5 Yep No nipples or genitalia, but lots of nekkid women with massive shoulders.
Yuri – Not yet, but shortly.

Overall – 8

I picked this and a few other Yuri series from up Comic Ruelle & Comic Jardin when they ran what they labeled their Heterdox Yuri Festival, including Sal Jiang’s Black & White, which I adored. This promotional name has absolutely delighted me, so I kept all of the inserts in all the books, just because they make me smile. ^_^ Yay for Yuri that bucks the trends and gives us strong women who look like they can lift you with one hand.

Bet on Sawada’s backstory being that her partner/lover was polluted by the Dynamis and attacked Sawada, so she had to kill her?  ^_^



I Summoned a Ghost to Be My Girlfriend, Guest Review by Jennifer Linsky

September 15th, 2021

Hello and welcome back to the first of several Guest Review Wednesdays in a row, hopefully. ^_^ Today we welcome back Jennifer Linsky who has graciously offered to review one of an increasing number of independently published Light Novel- and manga -inspired creations on Kindle.  So let’s settle in and let Jennifer have the floor!

The number one thing I say that I want from lesbian cinema is less lesbian cinema, and more movies that are whatever they are, and happen to include two female characters who kiss each other. So when I saw the light novella I Summoned a Ghost to Be My Girlfriend on Amazon, I figured it was worth the two bucks to buy it and try it out. I’m glad that I did, because it’s the kind of book I enjoy — a book about things.

It was written by “Kyuuen,” which is a pen name for Chris Ing, as he himself says in the author notes at the end. And while I know nothing about Kyuuen as a person, I can tell you two things: he’s a hard-core light novel fan, and he doesn’t actually live in Japan. I know the first of these things because he captures the beats of light novel writing perfectly; I know the second because he puts the characters on a train from Tokyo to Okinawa… a train route which doesn’t exist. But those complaints are easily considered and set aside. What’s more important is that the book has things which make it a joy to read.

Mae, the protagonist, is a high school student at an all-girls school in Tokyo. While on a class trip to a museum, she falls in love at first sight — with a girl who has been dead for eighty years, a girl she sees in a photograph on the wall. She delves into necromancy, and before you know it… well, it’s right there on the cover.

Beatrice, the love interest, reacts surprisingly well to being summoned back to Earth, and begins a campaign to set right the things in Mae’s life which have led to Mae being alone and lonely enough to fall for a dead girl in a photograph. Thus begins a sweet tale about the healing power of love, as Mae gives her love to Beatrice whole-heartedly and unconditionally. In return, Beatrice’s support helps Mae heal the wounds of the betrayals she has suffered.

This is a good book, but it could have been a great book. The antagonist is two-dimensional, a snarling figure of nastiness who never does reveal why she’s nasty. Mae forgives far too easily, and Beatrice is barely examined as a character. If the book had paid more attention to substance while upholding the style with which it is crafted, it could have been a solid ten. As it is, it’s light, it’s fluffy, and the girls do some smooching. What more can you ask for, when all is said and done?

Ratings:

Art – N/A
Story – 6
Characters – 7
Service – 3
Yuri – 10 
Overall – 6

Jennifer Linsky was born in Japan, but grew up mostly in Arizona. She’s the author of Flowers of Luna, available from Amazon or Smashwords, and she tweets sporadically as @walkyrjenny.

Erica here: Well, thank you Jennifer! I’m really glad you took a chance on this and even gladder that you brought it to our attention.



Kimi ni Tsumugu Boukaku, Volume 1 ( 君に紡ぐ傍白)

September 14th, 2021

Nao saw a stage performance when she was in middle school and she was simply blown away by it. Now, a first-year in college, she very much wants to be an actress. Haruka, a second-year college student has just decided to quit acting. Unbeknownst to both, their lives will be bound together in Kimi ni Tsumugu Boukaku, Volume 1 ( 君に紡ぐ傍白).

This full-color manga by Yasaka Syu is a surprisingly gentle meeting of two people going in opposite directions past the same goal. It will probably not surprise anyone when it turns out that Haruka was the performer who so influenced Nao, but it did surprise me that their differences are not particularly a source of conflict. Haruka supports Nao’s choices and is happy for her when she gets the role. Nao is sad she won’t see Haruka perform again, but understands how that goes. And all of that is secondary to the relationship, the friendship into more, that is building between them.

Because there is so little conflict, I’d recommend this series for a nice girl-meets-girl story, but for one thing. The art is much too moe for my taste, the character look that timelessly infantile that simplified art style favors. I’d vastly prefer this story if it were graced with an art style that captured the actual ages of the characters as we are told them. If you like the uncomplicated facial features (and accompanying lack of facial gesture and expression of the oeuvre,) then you will probably enjoy this. I felt that it robs the concept of “acting” right out of the middle of the story, to be honest. They can’t “act”…they have only simplified faces.

What did honestly surprise me was that the series is not a one-and-done; this volume pretty much ends when it ends. I’m not put off by it, but I have to imagine that the story must shift away from meet cute /mate cute to something more substantial in Volume 2, which has been out since March, and Volume 3 which will be out next month.

Ratings:

Art – 6 Adequate, but not a style I feel suits the story
Story – 7 Pleasant girl meets girl
Characters – 7 Earnest
Service – 1? Bathing, some mild, partial nudity
Yuri – 8

Overall – 7

You will be able to tell me what you think in February 2022, when this series comes out in English from Seven Seas as Monologue Woven For You, Volume 1! (I’m still waiting on links from Bookwalker and RightStuf and will add them as they become available, but pre-order is up on Amazon.)