Archive for the Yuri Manga Category


Yuri Manga: Shitsuji Shoujo to Ojousama

June 16th, 2010

What’s not to like about a manga called Butler Girl and Senorhita? (English translation provided by the book cover, so don’t bother correcting me.) Well, sadly, in the case of Shitsuji Shoujo to Ojousama (執事少女とお嬢様) there was way more not to like than one might reasonably expect.

When I opened it up, I had already violated a few of my sanity-preserving expectations rules. I expected it to be light-hearted, I expected it to be fun and for some reason, heavens knows why, I expected it to have a good plot. Probably because of all the potential plots *I* might have chosen, most of them were fun and light-hearted and a fair number were good. So when I started reading and the plot immediately bogged down into depressing and emotionally torturing, I was not pleased. Nor was I amused.

Hinata is a nice, slightly lazy girl whose parents run away to another country to avoid a debt, leaving her behind. She’s offered a position working for the family that sponsors the elite girls’ school she attends, by the chairwoman of the school. She’s not thrilled but, it’s be a maid or live on the street, so Hinata agrees. Unfortunately, she’s a) not going to be a maid and b) not working for the lovely and cultured chairwoman, Tsugeyama Saori. Hinata is going to be a a) butler and b) be working for Saori’s younger sister, star of the school, Saki.

Even more unfortunately, while at school Saki is lovely, gracious and cultured, at home she’s a spoiled, tempermental brat with a sister complex. Hinata is thrown to this wolf, who quickly sees a chance at making someone with no power to fight back miserable…and does. Saki is horrible in every way she can imagine.

At the point where she drags Hinata in wearing long butler morning coat and a collar and chain, I really almost stopped reading. Shades of Maria + Holic and abuse of the weak as “comedy.” Ick.

I will says this for this book, every time it got *just* on the edge of intolerable, it pulled away quickly and found a not-horrible way to solve the problem. It was apparent that the creator had a strong sense of where that line was and why it should not be crossed. Nonetheless, the story kept veering close to that line, over and over. And over.

At school, Saki wants no one to know about the whole butler thing, but still insists that Hinata serve her…which makes it look like they are too close for comfort. The story comes out so at least Hinata’s best friend knows and can help them to preserve the farce.

Saori’s butler, Haruna (also female), tells Hinata that her Number 1 priority is to love her mistress and with that, Hinata works hard at not trying to keep up with Saki’s antics, but to lead her on the path of righteousness. It works. Saki stops acting out so much and starts to appreciate Hinata more. Using the old Cutey Honey maxim that all S&M Queens want, in reality, to be dominated, Hinata starts to dictate the terms of their relationship, all the while wrapping herself in the role of “butler.” In a chapter that should have been touching, but wasn’t really (for a lot of reasons) it becomes apparent that Hinata’s feelings are starting to approach more than just a butler’s love for her mistress.

When Saki’s admirer from another wealthy family, Sorako, arrives, things spiral downward fast, ultimately ending up in a shooting (no, you didn’t misread that – Sorako attempts to murder Hinata)  that makes Saki start to realize that Hinata means something to her after all. And in a grand finale that again, wasn’t really anywhere as near as wonderful as it could have been with loads of icky groping, fake kisses and other tediousness, Hinata becomes the prince to Saki’s damsel in distress.

And then the book ends in a massively unsatisfying non-joke. Sigh.

I spent the entire time it took me to read this ready to stop reading at any moment. With such hi-larious antics as beating up innocent Hinata, random men feeling up Saki in public, school bullying and other yucks, I felt half-brutalized myself through the series. I spent the entire time thinking how it *didn’t have to be this way.*

Ratings:

Art – Moe, of course
Story – Pissed me off
Characters – Coulda been contenders
Yuri – Gatchi Yuri
Service – Obviously

Overall – 4

It could have been a great book, with a fun fantasy setup and a happy/romantic/sexy butler and her mistress ending…only, it wasn’t. And it makes me kind of angry that it wasn’t. There ought to be a law that a love comedy should be free of demeaning sexual and emotional harassment. Sheesh.





Yuri Manga: Yuri Pop

June 14th, 2010

Yuri Pop, subtitled Girl*Girl stories, reminds me a lot of playing with dolls. Specifically the little SD characters one gets at arcades, or with candy.u

“Hi, I’m Miharu,” we say, moving the little toy back and forth so you know it’s “talking.”

“Hi,” someone else moves another little piece up and down while they speak in a ridiculous falsetto, “I’m Yuyu. Miharu, I like you.”

“Really?” we reply as if talking to a child, moving the little figurine in our hand. “I like you too!”

Then the two figurines are slammed together and each of us make a “mwah!” noise to indicate that the two plastic figures are now “kissing.”

Reading this book is just like this same scenario, with 10 little dolls. The stories we create are a little different and, because we’re quite creative, some of them are kind of fun. Is Haruka-sempai really stalking Yuki? (No, silly, she just wanted to get to know her better….) And what is with Erika and that white cape? (It looks cool, DUH.)

And in the end, we get all 10 dolls into the story and we have a good laugh and then Mom brings us cookies while we watch cartoons.

More importantly for me, Yuri Pop wins as the only Japanese manga I have ever read that uses the words, “Namby-Pamby” and “Herkimer Jerkimer.” In English. Spelled right. Used right. Which has to win some kind of award, really.

Ratings:

Art – 6, but what do you expect of SD characters?
Story – 8, surprisingly, for variety and fun
Characters – 8
Yuri – 8
Service – 2

Overall – 8

Best page of the collection is the back cover. I stand agape with respect for the sheer freaking whimsy with which this utterly silly collection was built.





Yuri Manga: Comic Lily Plus, Volume 1

June 10th, 2010

Given my recent issues with a number of less than stellar Yuri manga anthologies, you might forgive me if I’ve become a bit twitchy. I opened Comic Lily Plus, Volume 1 (which takes the place of Comic Lily, Volume 4. I don’t know why the name change, as it otherwise is pretty much the same. It could be any number of reasons) with some mild concern.

While nothing in this volume made me cringe, it didn’t break new ground, either. Not that I need every anthology to push the envelope. This volume had a surprising number of continuing stories, which might confuse anyone picking this anthology series up for the first time, thinking this is truly a first volume. And there was a rather nostalgic return of the razor-wielding hair-cutting lesbian stereotype, which I haven’t seen in some time.

There a few kisses in this volume, and some vaguely satisfying endings as Girl A and Girl B agree to start liking one another simultaneously – a nice place to start but kind of a maddening place to end. Other than one story about loli catgirls with big breasts in bloomers (a story I skipped, you will not be surprised to learn) there was nothing here particularly objectionable. So, why do I object?

Needless to say, I read a *lot*. Not just Yuri manga, not just Japanese books and comics. I read pretty much nearly every waking moment I am not sleeping. I read when I eat. I read, no kidding, when I walk. I read as obsessively as Yomiko Readman reads and have since I was old enough to read.

What the hell is it that I am looking for in these anthologies?

Last night, as I reread some of Takemiya Jin’s doujinshi, it dawned on me – I’m looking for conviction. It’s not that some of these stories are retellings of the basic Story A, it’s that so many of the stories I read lack conviction. They don’t know who their characters are, so of course we don’t, either. The situation is thin, sometimes barely in existence. We never see the characters explored outside the setting of the story, which would work if the creators were adhering to Aristotelian rules… but that’s rarely the case.

The creators I like best – whether they are creating a fanwork or an original work, have conviction. They write and draw it into every line and every panel. In 10 pages, we learn volumes about each character – and what we don’t learn is begging to be filled with our imagination.

For example, let’s look at Takemiya Jin and Nishi UKO. Both of these artists do really great fan work and they also do fantastic, compelling original work.

Fan work is often easier, because one doesn’t have to explain much. The reader knows why and how and where and who. But really exceptional fanwork doesn’t just explore the known, it explores the unknown – the time off the screen, the stuff left out, the holes in the story. In order to create fanwork that stands out, the artist or writer needs an accurate grasp of the characters, the setting and what makes scenes work between them.

In the case of the above, I’m reminded specifically of two doujinshi in my collection. One, a Maria-sama ga Miteru doujinshi, in which Takemiya Jin creates a Rosas so cynical and cruel that they becomes absolutely sublime. It’s totally out of character – only, it isn’t.  Because the characters’ actions are composed with conviction, it works. In a Hayate x Blade doujinshi, Nishi UKO has a short between Hitsugi and Shizuku that is so exactly true to their characters that I’m still kind of shocked that it hasn’t been stolen and used in the actual series.

In an original doujinshi, Takemiya Jin takes builds an entirely new, original and fresh character from the kind of characters created for the fan works. The protagonist is cynical, and therefore fragile. She is realistic and therefore an idealist. It’s a great series and there’s a terrific sense that the characters are, even before they are drawn, alive beyond the confines of their medium.

For Nishi UKO, I’ll refer to her works that have been collected in Yuri Monogatari or in the new Rakuen Le Paradis anthology. In either case, not only do we see the main characters interact, but the reactions of the people around them and how it affects them. They are, almost instantly, real people we might meet. Again, real beyond the fact that they are 2-dimensional representations of women in love with other women.

So, when I read stories about these Girl As and the only thing they have to themselves is a vague longing to be with their Girl Bs, it fails. Not everything I write is genius, but I try to give my characters more depth than that, even in a throwaway fanfic or original work. So, it pains me to see characters created with so little motivation beyond, “this is a Yuri story.” I can’t tell you a thing about the characters in “3 Lies,” from this collection, because outside their love triangle they don’t exist. There’s nothing to them. There’s no reason to care if two of them get together or not. There is no conviction. Most of the time, I can’t remember their names after I finish the story.

My point here is not that the people who write for these anthologies are inferior – everything in life has a distribution curve. My point is that this anthology is on the largest part of that bell curve. It is “mediocre” in the sense that it is okay. And if “okay” is okay with you, then I recommend it. :-)

Ratings:

Overall – 7





Yuri Manga: Jormungand, Volume 3 (English)

June 8th, 2010

I think it’s reasonable to say that Volume 3 of Jormungand is as Yuri as this series is likely to get. Which is to say, not really all that much, but enough. ^_^

Volume 3 is more fragmented than the previous volumes, which is either the author’s way of letting us know he thinks we can handle it, or his way of saying “fuck it, I’m going to do whatever I want and if you can’t handle it, then don’t read it, see if I care.” ^_^

To begin we learn a little of Jonah’s background and why he hates arms and arms dealers, and we also see that he has a soft spot for other children, something that seems likely to bite him in the ass. This being Jormungand and not something else, when it *does* bite him in the ass, it’s actually kind of funny.

We then turn our attention, in a somewhat ADHD manner, to several sub-plots that will all undoubtedly come to a head in somewhere, Africa. If you like your tales neat and beginning-middle-end then this volume may pose a challenge, as characters, plot complications and, well, just about everything are thrown at us in a jumble. Works fine for me, but your mileage may vary.

In between the big plot points and obvious set-ups, we do meet a few new characters…and get to spend a little more time with our resident lesbian, Valmet. She has a real name, did you know? Sophie. I’ve always liked that name. I also quite like crazy, violent women who wear eyepatches, so if Valmet ever tires of Koko (and presuming I was a character in this manga,) I’d be glad to pick up the slack. ^_^

Along the way, we meet an unnamed female bodyguard, who will obviously be our next enemy….oh look, she is. We also meet “Dr. Miami” a researcher specializing in butterflies who appears to also have an unrequited thing for Koko. Understandably so.

Fights break out. Guns are shot. People we don’t care about die.

The thing about Jormungand that really makes it stand out from all the other crazy lunatic violent series I read is that it’s…erm…funny. Very little angst here in this world of people who sell guns that kill people for a living. Which is good, because if they were all moping around like they do in Dogs it would be a dire, non-linear pile of crap. But since they are having such a good time, it’s the least I can do to enjoy it. So I do.

And there’s some Yuri. Yay!

Ratings:

Art – 7
Story – 7
Characters – 8
Yuri – 3
Service – 3

Overall – 8

If Valmet ever crossed series to work for Balalaika, I might die of fangirly joy.





Yuri Manga: Kimi Koi Limit

June 7th, 2010

Kimi Koi Limit is one of the Yuri Hime cell-phone manga releases by Ichijinsha. Drawn and written by Momono Moto, it tells the story of Sono, one of the most selfish cretins to ever inhabit a manga.

We start the manga with a scene late in Sono’s high school life when she confesses her feelings to, and is rejected by Satomi, who is leaving after graduation to go to school in Tokyo.

Time flies and we see Sono, now also in Tokyo, with a lover Hiroko. Sono contributes nothing at all to the household – she’s a slob, a slacker and a jerk. Hiroko can tolerate all that but when, not for the first time, Sono says someone else’s name as they make love, Hiroko has had it – she throws Sono out.

Sono quickly becomes homeless, because she’s a slacker. And in a crazy, unbelievable, but nevertheless predictable, handwave she is found and rescued by none other than Satomi.

To her credit, Sono moves into Satomi’s life as if she has been given a chance to find happiness by the gods. She starts to clean, cook, she even gets a job at which she perseveres. She knows she can’t stay with Satomi forever, but she can at least get herself straightened out to be worthy of her. She still lusts after Satomi and this proximity isn’t lessening that one bit.

In yet another unbelievable yet predictable handwave, not only do Hiroko and Satomi attend the same university, they work together at the same library on the same shift. In a casual conversation about Hiroko looking unhappy, Hiroko spills that she just threw her lover out and is worried that she is homeless. Satomi mentions why, how odd, she just found a friend who had been homeless, thrown out by her lover! But it’s not until Satomi *sees* a picture of Hiroko and Sono toghether that they put it all together. Hiroko’s feckless lover and Satomi’s roommate are both Sono! zOMG!

Before I go on, I have to say that, at this point, I absolutely loathed all three of them. There was no ending that was going to make me happy, unless it ended with Sono going the hell away. And what were the chances of that?

Through a series of even more handwaves, uncomfortable situations and cliches, Sono leaves Hiroko for Satomi who decides inexplicably that she’s suddenly in love with her. Honestly, getting Sono out of her life was probably the best thing for Hiroko.

In the end, we’re to believe that because she attained her dream, suddenly Sono found ambition, skills, a career, etc. We see her in typical careerwoman get-up, while Satomi plays the role of wife. And they live happily ever after.

Bleah….

While this manga is nicely drawn, extremely well-toned and really, really well-executed as compared with, say, Gokujou Drops, Kimi Koi Limit had so many things I had to just accept, so little plausibility, that *my* Koi Limit was stretched. And on top of that, Sono was just an unlikable little prat. If Sono had been a good lover to Hiroko, a kind friend to Satomi, I might have been able to hack it. But she wasn’t. She was a selfish, narcissistic jerk right to the very end.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 6
Characters – 4
Yuri/Lesbian – 10
Service – 4

Overall – 5

This is probably the best-looking of the YH cell-phone manga. I just wish I liked the story a bit more than I do.

And, in the way of such things – I have an extra copy to give away! Yes, you too can be annoyed by Sono and her inability to appreciate what she has.

To enter you must be 18 and this time, I’m keeping it domestic – contiguous 48 states only. Not because I don’t love you overseas folks, I just want to cut back on shipping.

So – if you are from the US (not Alaska or Hawaii) and would like a copy of this beautiful, but emotionally unsatisfying manga, please tell me in the comments where *you* draw the line. Keep the comments non-pornographic please. I’m not asking for your least fave sex position, I just want to know what behavior stretches your love to breaking point.