Hitogoto Desukara, Volume 1 (ヒトゴトですから!)

August 7th, 2020

Hitogoto Desukara, Volume 1 (ヒトゴトですから!) , by Yuni is a very funny, outrageous and ever-so-slightly enraging workplace comedy manga.

Komori Mio is a self-proclaimed sales ace. She’s got skills closing contracts, especially with beautiful female clients. Komori hopes – and expects – to be rewarded for those skills…and is quite put out when the next transfers are announced and instead of a high-flying position overseas, shes transferred into HR. In HR she is assigned to very plain Yamanobe Kyouko to learn the ins and outs of helping employees with their problems.

Let me stop here and unpack this situation, (and my feelings about it.) I don’t know the specifics of how internal company transfers work in Japanese companies, beyond that annual transfers happen regularly between departments and locations but, based on 4 decades of working with larger corporations I have some thoughts:  1) This is enraging. We know no top male sales employee would be be transferred into a support position. 2) This is ridiculous. A top sales person in any industry is usually moved up into management where those same skills that are great for sales are toxic for managing people.  3) This is parody. Every company I have ever met has HR for one purpose – to protect the company from the humans they employ. This is not to say that all HR everywhere is terrible, it’s just that I have never met, or heard of any, that isn’t. ^_^;

One night Yamanobe and Komori end up running into each other as they, separately,  bring a date – female in both cases – to a hotel. They suddenly realize that, for the first time ever, they have a true peer in the company and agree to support one another in their womanizing. And so Komori learns that the skills she used closing contracts and getting women into bed, work for reassuring coworkers. And, separately, getting women into bed.

4) This is a comic. Let’s just agree that we should accept that absolutely nothing we’ve seen or are about to see can be used to be angry about this enraging, outrageous, ridiculous manga, shall we? If we don’t agree on that, we’re just going to spend 174 pages being angry. ^_^

Despite this appalling premise, Komori and Yamanobe are serious about their job.  After a young employee fails to return to the office, they visit her, only to find that she really hated everything about the job. “Kids today,” Komori says, and Yamanobe who, like Komori is not old at all, says “Do not go there.”

Under Yamanobe’s guidance, Komori begins to really get the hang of HR and helping people find solutions to their problems. Komori’s a little intrigued by Yamanobes refusal to take on a lover, but we can guess that powerful, beautiful, annoying as fuck, Kujou Natsu might be at the root of that.

Komori’s passion for HR comes to a screaming halt at the end of the volume, when Yamanobe declares her disqualified to be an interviewer. Why? Tune into Volume 2 to find out!

I love Yuni’s stylish art, I think the characters are a riot and the premise is so awful that I enjoyed it immensely. ^_^

Ratings:

Art – 9
Characters – 9
Story – I won’t. I can’t.
Service – 1? Even in bed, everyone is covered up
Yuri – 9 Between the two of them, we see them with at least half dozen women

Overall – 8

I’ll be definitely getting the next volume. This is not so much a Yuri story in the office, as an office sitcom about 2 lesbians.



Aikata System ~ Gakuen ga Eranda Unmei no Onna no ko~, Volume 2 (相方システム~学園が選んだ運命の女の子~)

August 4th, 2020

What if you entered a school that had a fabled old tradition and it sounded so beautiful and romantic that you couldn’t wait to be part of it…but once you did you found the system was broken and toxic?

Nao has been partnered with Asagiri Ibuki and she find that she’s genuinely falling in love with her sempai. Ibuki is kind and thoughtful and it definitely seems like the feeling is returned.

Kairo has been partnered with Abiko Yuuka, but while Yuuka and she have become lovers, Kairo is sure she’s being used. Abiko-sempai is emotionally manipulation and occasionally abusive and even when she is being kind, it hurts.

Both Nao and Kairo can see that Ibuki and Yuuka have a past. Ibuki lies about it to Nao, but Yuuka tells Kairo the truth.

Kairo is also going through a little crisis about herself. She refers to herself as “boku” and it’s pretty obvious that she’d like to be more princely. I think she’d specifically like to be Nao’s prince.

Yamada from the newspaper club says it first…the Aikata System is not working. People are being hurt. It’s broken and it needs to be broken up.

Aikata System ~ Gakuen ga Eranda Unmei no Onna no ko~, Volume 2 (相方システム~学園が選んだ運命の女の子~) did not go *anywhere* I thought it would and wow, am I impressed. Creator Hakamada Mera is showing us a version of Marimite‘s souer system that is a poisoned well, and I find that, as difficult as this book is to read or enjoy, it’s a compelling story.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 7
Characters – 8
Service – 3 Partial nudity, sexual situations.
Yuri – 6

Overall – 8

Although I was deeply distressed by Abiko-sempai’s treatment of Kairo, I was relieved that by the end of this volume, Kairo, Yamada and Nao are all aware that this system is not working. I think it would be interesting to see the first-years band together and take down the system, although that might be asking too much of this series. ^_^



A Study in Honor, by Claire O’Dell

August 3rd, 2020

Well, we’ve managed to make to August. Congratulations us! August is traditionally the time of year where I do kind of crash and burn, so reading a pleasantly fanficish story starring queer, black, female Holmes and Dr. Watson was absolutely 100% what I needed.  A Study in Honor, by Claire O’Dell was so exactly on point for me that I read it in a day and have the sequel lined up for tonight. ^_^

Dr. Janet Watson is a veteran of the New American Civil War and has no patience for the bullshittery of the VA. She wants her life back, but the emergency replacement of her arm with a part that’s too big and too clumsy to do surgery is only one of a dozen problems she’s got. She’s too Black, too female, too everything else an uncaring government and society attaches to those two words and she’s running out of options. When an old friend introduces her to the wholly, wildly, unreal Sara Holmes, Watson’s life becomes a study in perseverance, and of course, honor.

I loved this book. It has everything I needed in a Holmes fanfic, that is to say, an understanding of what makes a good fanfic, and a good story as well as a comfortable familiarity with the source material. And it has everything I want in good science fiction and in a good war story. The plot was comfortable and original in equal parts, the unreality of the tech balanced by the realness of the politics. I loved that Watson’s voice felt wholly grounded in the now, with attention to the kind of details that many white readers largely still don’t understand about being a Black woman in the United States. It helped me feel Watson’s daily, everyday discomfort and helped further to highlight her other levels of discomfort as a veteran, a disabled person, a queer woman.

This book is political, as well. Current politics are extrapolated into future politics, which blossom into the socio-political background radiation of this book, and create the scenario that allows the bad guys to do what must be discovered…and stopped.

It’s a rollicking yarn, as well, with chases, and gun fights and cyberish crime, all of which culminate in Newark, NJ. As you can imagine, this was the coup de grace for me. ^_^

Watson, in this iteration, is coming off a failed relationship and while no Mary Morstan appeared, it gave Watson room to develop the friendship with Holmes we’ve all come to know and adore. Holmes is a far less well-developed character and there is a great deal about Sara Holmes we’re left not knowing. Since the original Sherlock Holmes was a whole piles of handwaves in a suit, I’m content allowing the enigmas to exist without complaint. ^_^

Ratings:

Overall – 9

It was an honest, fannish joy to get the queer, Black, female Holmes and Watson we’ve always deserved.

Now, on to Hound of Justice!

 



Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – August 1, 2020

August 1st, 2020

Yuri Anime

RetroCrushTV is adding more new titles that were fundamental back in developing Yuri fandom a few decades ago. They have Key The Metal Idol, Vampire Princess Miyu, Devil Lady.

Alex Mateo reports on ANN, at the end of August, RetroCrushTV will be adding Riyoko Ikeda’s shoujo classic Dear Bother. This series is pure shoujo, no magical girls, no aliens, with high melodrama and it really holds up as some of the director Dezai Osamu’s, best work. If you have never had a chance to see Dear Brother this is a great opportunity to watch it legally, free, ad-supported.

RetroCrushTV has also launched an ad-supported linear streaming network available on Roku and other smart TV platforms.

Sentai Filmworks has pulled their entire catalog from Crunchyroll, doubling down on their investment in HIDIVE. Miles Thomas on Crunchyroll has the list of titles that are leaving. Sentai also announced a dub cast for Fragtime. Joseph Luster  has the report for Crunchyroll News.

Not Yuri that I know of, but I just wanted to make a rude noise about the title of the Cartoon Network/Crunchyroll collaboration anime title, Fena: Pirate Princess. Seriously? Xena: Warrior Princess might have something to say about that title. Adria Hazra at ANN has the details about the series.

Quinta Brunson on Twitter announced that she’s playing Alex on SYFY’s upcoming Magical Girl Friendship Squad, a magical adult women, no BS comedy. Click the link for the profanity-laden teaser. ^_^

 

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Yuri Manga

Via Senior Corespondent Louise P, Yuri manga creator mk has a lovely little series call Osananajimi no Yuri Fu~fu Seikatsu (おさななじみの百合夫婦生活) that you can purchase for digital download or physical copy with worldwide shipping on the creator’s Booth.pm page. The story is about two old friends who are now a couple. ^_^

ANN’s Alex Mateo once again has news, this time that Square Enix has licensed Otherside Picnic manga and Okura’s manga I Think Our Son Is Gay.

Yen Press on Twitter has revealed the cover to Éclair Rouge: A Girls’ Love Anthology That Resonates in Your Heart, the fourth entry in the Éclair anthology series.

 

Other News

Yoshiya Nobuko’s story from Hana Monogatari, Tsuriganesou was made into a movie…twice. The 1935 original and a 1940 remake. Here’s a YouTube clip from the 1940 version of Tsuriganesou (釣鐘草).

Via Grace Ting, I want to share this beautiful short story, Patient. Written by Wong Yi, translated by Jennifer Feeley for Asymptote‘s “In This Together: Writers from Around The World Respond To The COVID-19 Outbreak” series. This story is part of Wong Yi’s “Ways to Love a Crowded City.”

In case you missed it, I did a review of the two sites bringing us legally licensed translated Yuri doujinshi, Lilyka and Irodori Sakura.

One last item from Alex Mateo on ANN is the news that Niantic has committed money from the last Pokemon GO event to organizations that support Black game developers, Black trans folks, and Black Lives Matter groups.

Which brings me to this week’s editorial. Comments on this will be heavily moderated.

In case I have not made it clear, the Okazu family and I believe Black Lives and Trans Lives Matter. I regularly donate to a local BLM group, support queers creators of color with our Okazu Microgoals on Patreon. There is nothing capricious about the way I choose the people we support.

When comics, and anime, and gaming keep saying “We have a problem,” and the problem never seems to go away, there is not just one problem. Comic and Gamer gates are groups dedicated to the harassment of women, queer folks and people of color. This is not “a problem.” They are *the* problem – that there really honestly are, at all levels of all industries, men who think their skin color and the fact that they have a penis makes them better at all the things.  This specific belief kills people every day.  This belief is destroying our planet.

Anyone arguing that “politics” needs to be kept out of art is a not arguing from a strong position. Art is political. Business is political. People’s lives are inherently political. You’re being political when you choose to back companies and individuals who rage against empathy and diversity or who pretend to support it, then make it somehow impossible for non white, non-male  employees to move up in the ranks. You’re being political when you choose to support marginalized creators. The Hugo Awards last night showed that the Worldcon membership was ready for and welcoming of a diverse future…and leadership chose a rambling old man whose derivative book series remains unfinished, who spent most of his time praising a fascist while host and presenters mispronounced people’s names *and* their winning titles. The problem is that no one in Worldcon leadership thought to make sure this didn’t happen….again. For the umpteenth year in a row. During segments that were pre-recorded, for fuck’s sake.

Be political. Give your money and time and attention to creators and companies who foster environments where everyone’s work is valued, where people are treated like people, not like replaceable resources. 

One last thing, for readers in the US, please make sure you are registered to vote and do vote. If we do not, this may be the last election we’ll see in our lifetime. Not hyperbole. We are on the very brink of not being a democracy. The President has told us that he will do everything to make sure this election is declared invalid. He has told us and shown us. This must be a landslide. Be political.

Become a YNN Correspondent by reporting any Yuri-related news with your name and an email I can reply to – thanks to all of you – you make this a great Yuri Network! Special thanks to Okazu Patrons for being an important part of the Okazu family. I couldn’t do it without you!



Yuri Doujinshi Roundup – Lilyka and Irodori Sakura

July 31st, 2020

Doujinshi (同人誌) are small-press and self-published manga created by individuals or groups The English-language equivalent are mini-comics and indie comics. (Although I love how all the machine translators call them “literary coterie magazines.”) Like mini comics, doujinshi are a way for amateur artists to put together their own work to sell. Unlike English-language indie comics (until very recently, and I’ll get into this in a second) Japanese comic markets and after-show selling means that the printing industry for short runs and small prints was very highly developed and more affordable for artists in Japan. Even relatively small print doujinshi runs can look very classy, with texturing, fine insert paper and other ways to make a book stand out.  Digital printing was adopted more quickly by these doujinshi printing companies, and it’s possible to have books delivered to the artist’s table at a show for larger printings. There are catalogs available for cheap(ish, paper is never cheap anymore) printing to standard formats and sizes.

In the US we just did not have this until very recently. When I started ALC in 2002 I worked with graphic novels in part because not one printer I spoke with would do 24-36 page pamphlet-style comics. Because offset printing was the only kind of printing available to me and it was so expensive, I figured we had to do collected volumes to make it make sense. If you look at older mini-comics in America, most of what you’re seeing is photocopies (“copy books” in doujinshi terms) and cheaper hand-made covers. Damned few printers did short runs of under 1000 copies, either. I watched as every convention I ever worked with struggled to find printers to do a few hundred or a few thousand of their program books for prices that didn’t eat up the budget. Printing services weren’t better. There were a hundred print stores in every town, but they were all geared towards making fliers, or signs. Comic artists here in the west just did not have the infrastructure or ecosystem that doujinshi creators had. Even at anime and manga artist alleys, you don’t see nearly as much original work even now, because what sells is parody art. Online art changed all of that, but that’s a conversation for another day. ^_^

Yuri doujinshi has finally made it’s way over to US shores and happily we have two companies at the moment working to bring you Yuri doujinshi for different tastes. It seems like a good time to look at both imprints, their websites, and a few of their titles, to give you an idea of what to expect.

This is not a competition – we’re not pitting these sites against each other  Both Lilyka and Irodori are bringing out a variety of doujinshi, and the more, the better for all of us. Depending on your tastes, and interests, you might find you use one of these sites more than the other, but today’s post is an overview, not a battle. We can and should welcome both companies and any others who enter this field. There are a lot of great Yuri doujinshi artists, including many professional artists who do their own doujinshi as well.

These sites were tested on Firefox, Chrome, Edge, IE, Opera. I don’t have Safari, so if someone wants to jump in and let us know how that works, that’d be swell!

 

Lilyka

Lilyka is the name for the Yuri doujinshi imprint of Digital Manga Publishing. DMP is best known for Boys’ Love titles, but they’ve made several forays into Yuri, licensing titles digitally, with limited titles in print.

Lilyka launched in spring 2019, with a selection of titles from that February’s Comitia. Completely coincidentally, I had attended that event, so I recognized a number of the books they offered out of the gate, and had picked up a few in person myself.

 

Site

Lilyka’s website is clean and simple. The scrolling header gives you the newest news, and you can forward and rewind, if you miss something.  This is followed by a gallery of new releases. Titles on the shop are organized with featured titles across the top, then alphabetically. Their search worked on all the browsers I used.

Search allows you to search an author, title, term, with broad categories, e.g. “romance,” and formats, to limit further. At the moment, their have a small enough catalog that a little scrolling will give you a good idea, but as they offer more titles, this will be useful. There are options for reviewing a title and “Ask a Question” which is an interesting idea.

Lilyka is also running interviews with creators, which I’m finding to be surprisingly interesting.

 

Comic

Lilyka comics are easy to read, reproduction is clean. Translation is fine. SWHD has made-up terminology, which is always complicated.

However, no one is credited. The translation, clean-up, lettering and editing apparently has manifested magically. If you’re a reader of doujinshi you know that even untranslated doujinshi will have credits: The other folks in the circle, the assistants, friends, the printer. I believe it is essential that publishers credit people who do the work. It’s hard enough to be taken seriously, to negotiate or to put things on a CV when you’re doing unsung work, but if you never appear on a credit page, it’s just that much harder. There are other, more historical reasons as well, that DMP needs to be an overtly good actor in this endeavor. 

 

Shop

The titles I read for this review are SWHD and Tadokoro-san. I picked these titles for very specific reasons. SonoN’s SWHD is an action title that I bought the first three issues of at Comitia. It’s about beefy women fighting monsters and in between, it’s really quite sweet. It has recently been picked up by Comic Ruelle & Comic JardinTadokoro-san had just been collected into a print volume from a new-to-me imprint, Valkyrie Comics, and I wanted to take a look to see what it was like. I also had been given Lily Fairy Tale Rapunzel and Sleeping Beauty by mintaro, who now has a story “Pochi Climb” running in Comic Yuri Hime, as a review copy and again, it had been a doujinshi I bought at Comitia, so was pleased to see it here.

Buying from Lilyka is easy, flexible and I honestly have to give it thumbs up. Once your credit card is processed, you have the option of 7 formats to download in, including cbz, mobi, pdf and epub. Most importantly, you are allowed to download multiple formats.  To walk through this, I purchased Twa’s Shiori and Yuki, which was very cute, especially if you like stories that include children acting like children.

Pricing is about on par for buying a doujinshi at Comitia. $4.95 for SWHD when I think I paid about 600 yen, so that’s right in the wheelhouse.

The selection on their shop is pretty good, actually. There’s some school life stories, some fantasy, some adult life and action. I like that the books are mostly SFW, with a little more implied. This is the kind of original work I tend to collect, rather than overt porn, for reasons I will get into when we move to Irodori Sakura. Adult lives written by adult women for an adult audience is still so refreshing that I am not yet tired of it. ^_^

Overall – 8

Lilyka’s over a year old and still going, so I’m hoping they’ll expand their credits, and their acquisitions, but at this point I do recommend them.

 

Irodori Sakura

Irodori Comics is a Japanese erotic doujinshi company who has relatively recently expanded to non-hentai doujinshi. Last year they developed a new imprint Irodori Sakura, with an eye to expanding their catalog with “BL, Yuri, and LGBT” titles. This compliments their general interest imprint Irodori Aqua.

Their shop. called Irodori Lite, for the moment contains SFW titles only. Their main page, which previously listed their NSFW doujinshi, appears to be undergoing renewal. If this is a little confusing to you, you are not alone. They launched Irodori Sakura with four titles, but, as you can see from the screencap to the left, the two available are SFW.

In fact, when we spoke the first few times, I made it clear that I would not be interested in the NSFW titles. The covers looked…unpleasant. I know that there are people who enjoy the spectacle of unhappy women in ill-fitting clothes, their breasts and pudendum uncomfortably swollen. I am not among them.

 

Site

While Irodori undergoes whatever reorg is happening right now, Irodori Lite is sparse, yet with a scrolling header it feels crowded and busy, in part because you cannot forward or rewind and have to simply wait to see that news item again. There are links to the different imprints, discussions of doujinshi and genres listed. With the minimal content currently available, it’s easier to search by genre.

The search feature did not pull up anything under Yuri, but they have two comics listed as Girls’ Love. Each comic is also given tags, so you can search by that author, category, genre, etc. The feature worked on all the browsers I tried it on.

 

Comic

So, of the two I had requested for review, the first is Isaki Uta’s Mine-kun is Asexual. I’m very pleased to see a comic that explicitly features a person who is asexual, and was further pleased that the story was not simplistic. Mine-kun is a pretty complex individual and so is the girl who becomes, for a short time, his partner, but ultimately neither of them are able to really communicate about what they need and want. The overall feeling was melancholy, but not unpleasantly so, just…softly sad. Not a bad story at all.

The second review copy was for Why Does Love Do This To Me?, by Ayanoayano, a story of two adult women who like each other and are both kind of not just asking each other the obvious thing, overthinking situations and generally missing the hints each other gives. If you like miscommunication comedy, it’s cute. If not, it’s annoying. ^_^

But as I write this, it becomes obvious that both these titles are about poor communication, and I hope that does not become  trend. Irodori has this month announced a new title for their catalog, The Albino and The Witch by Tendou Itsuki so we can look forward to that. ^_^

Irodori credits the folks who work on the comics, even if they are using non-standard crediting. Translation, lettering, “compiling and formatting”, QA (I guess that’s the production manager) all get named. I am pleased about that. Lettering is clean, easy to read, formatting is also clean.

 

Shop

Irodori Lite checkout was a breeze. You fill in your home address and it offers a list of possible rest of the info drop down, which I liked. I had choices of two possible sizes, but only one format, pdf. That’s fine with me, but if you use a epub reader maybe not so much for you.

To test the system, I purchased Hiroyuki’s Of Girls, Love and Money, which was a vaguely Yuri-ish school story. Everything went smoothly, the transaction, the download, the reading.

 There’s a tab about why is doujinshi so expensive on the about page, but  $3.99 is 413 yen, so probably slightly less than I’d pay at a comic market, to be honest. So in my opinion, pricing is fine.

Overall – 7

The site is working and I believe Irodori is sincere. Certainly based on conversations I’ve had with their reps, they really want to do this right.  I’ll recommend them with reservations, as their content is thus far, thin.

 

We’re still in early days for Yuri doujinshi in English, but I expect we’ll be seeing more if these early titles are popular enough. For a few dollars, you might want to give some new artists a try and let Lilyka and Irodori Sakura know how they are doing!