Yuri Manga: Kiss & White Lily for My Dearest Girl Volume 8 (English) Guest Review by Christian Le Blanc

April 17th, 2019

Welcome back to Guest Review Wednesday here on Okazu! Today we have a special Guest Review by Christian Le Blanc of 3DComics! His love for Kiss & White Lily is infectious. Let’s all be whisked away by his enthusiasm!

“Love is not gazing at each other, but looking in the same direction together.”

So opens Volume 8 of Canno’s Kiss & White Lily for My Dearest Girl from Yen Press (translation by Leighann Harvey, lettering by Alexis Eckerman), and it’s as romantic a spin as can possibly be put on this volume’s tsundere vs. tsundere cover stars. Hikari Torayama (reddish-brown hair, Tiger type, Ayaka analogue with her long hair and headband) and Nagisa Tatsumi (silver hair, Dragon type, Yurine analogue with her cool personality) are rivals for the position of Student Council President. Who can’t stand each other. And who also, as luck would have it, live together – a twist of fate has landed Hikari as a guest in Nagisa’s house. We need this plot device to force them to spend time together, because otherwise they’d avoid each other like the plague and we’d have a different pair of girls on the cover. Which would be a shame, because once I got over the fact that these two are not going to be acting lovey-dovey and give me anything to swoon over, I started to enjoy their relationship, which exists as a mirror for Ayaka and Yurine. Ayaka and Yurine are rivals who want to be more than just that, while Hikari and Nagisa can’t think of anything they’d rather be than rivals with each other. “Even if we stop being rivals someday…we might eventually see eye-to-eye,” Ayaka tells Hikari…”But just as classmates, of course!” she adds, still in denial.

The Tao of Canno

It’s easy to suppose how Canno came up with Hikari and Nagisa – start with the idea of tsundere vs tsundere, and then inform their personalities and rivalry with Tiger vs. Dragon, the eternally-opposed yin and yang of Taoist mythology (the kanji in Hikari’s last name means “tiger” and “mountain,” while Nagisa’s means “dragon” and “sea”). Both are symbols of strength, of course, and both girls dominate over the rest of Seiran High School: they excel in academics, they’re in competition for Student Council President, and they feel ‘larger than life’ compared to everyone else; they’re the boss characters, if Kiss & White Lily were a video game brawler (now there’s a thought!). Of Tiger traits, Hikari demonstrates protection: “She’s good at taking care of people.” She’s concerned about the smaller, more vulnerable clubs, and picks up after Nagisa at home. Of the Dragon traits, Nagisa demonstrates prosperity: she favors the larger clubs, and acknowledges that “My family is relatively well off.” They hang out on the forbidden school roof a lot (the heavens); naturally, the little white cat they’re looking after together adores Hikari and hates Nagisa. Maybe they complement each other, maybe they even need each other, but it’s no accident that we don’t see them exchanging chocolates in next volume’s Valentine’s Day back-up story. All the same, through their three chapters together, it’s fun not only watching them bicker, but also seeing how they react whenever something threatens to send them in different directions.

Our Returning Champions, Ayaka and Yurine

The book opens with Ayaka considering her own run at the presidency, which organically introduces our cover stars who go on to enjoy the spotlight in the next three chapters. Yurine has started to act goofy and awkward around Ayaka, a result of her growing and changing feelings towards her, especially after Ayaka helped her out of her depressive episode last volume. She’s torn between wanting to support her friend, knowing she could help the school as much as she helped her, but also knowing she won’t get to see as much of her if she wins. When Ayaka tells her her decision concerning the elections, it helps Yurine realize her true feelings for her, and grow out of her selfish and simplistic ‘deredere’ (constantly, clingingly affectionate) archetype. She can finally be honest with herself, something Ayaka is still struggling with when we see them again in the fifth and final chapter.

Speaking of this last chapter, Ayaka’s cousin and roommate Mizuki has had just about enough of Ayaka’s blitheness. She’s graduating soon, and, having been her emotional support for the past several years, wants to make sure Ayaka will have someone she can talk to after she’s gone. When she realizes that Ayaka still doesn’t even have so much as Yurine’s phone number, she demands that she asks her for it first thing in the morning, later hinting that she needs to be way more honest with herself.

It isn’t until the walk home from school that day that Ayaka finally does clumsily take the next step, managing to ask Yurine for her number. She tells her “Sorry. I kept you waiting too long” when she makes her miss her crosswalk light, but I think it’s meant to apply to more than just that.

This entire chapter, Yurine has been the model example of supportive. She knows Ayaka’s been trying to tell her something, and gently gives her the opportunity. Instead of making a huge embarassing deal out of getting her number, she just lets her know that she can call her anytime. Which is good, because Ayaka’s mom phones her that very night, triggering one of those depressive episodes that Mizuki was so worried about. Yurine handles it like a frigging champ, though. She didn’t really know what she was doing when she helped her out of a similar episode in vol.5 (we see an allusion to this episode on this chapter’s title page), but between that experience, and the help she got from Ayaka last volume, she’s become the epitome of everything you’d want in a friend helping you out when you’re at your lowest.

Lastly, we’re treated to two bonus stories at the end of the book. I didn’t really need an origin story for how Nagisa was recruited into the student council, but it did at least give Canno an excuse to bring back the eternally beleagured treasurer from vol.3 (who Yukina kept butting heads with…she even gets a name in this volume!). The other story brings back Amane, Ryou and Nina, the cover stars from vol.6, to show where the little white cat came from.

In fact, there’s a ton of returning characters this volume, obscure and otherwise: Rika “not good with her hands” Kouno is in one panel, who was only ever in two pages in vol.4. Tsubasa and Karin appear in one panel at the dorm, who likewise were only ever on two pages from vol.2 (Tsubasa was the one who accidentally locked Chiharu and Maya in the dorm’s storeroom together). We see members of the public relations committee again from vol.5, and, charmingly, their club sign that’s still only taped up over the more permanent “science” placard underneath. Characters who had leading roles in previous volumes play supporting roles here as well (we only get the back of Izumi’s head in one panel, but she’s there!). Not only does this provide more of an ensemble feel for the book, but it’s a good bit of world-building that makes Seiran High School feel more ‘real’ and lived-in. Further realism is established via small details like how Nagisa has a ‘lazy’ version of her hairstyle when she’s lounging at home, and how she and Hikari are on a first-name basis, sans honorifics, when noone else is around. This all makes re-reads a lot more interesting for me, because it always feels like I’m catching some small detail or other that I hadn’t noticed before. We’ll be seeing more adherence to continuity, as well as progress on Ayaka and Yurine’s relationship, in the penultimate Volume 9, due out very soon on May 21st, 2019 from Yen Press.

Ratings

Art – 7 I feel so petty bringing this up, but the English edition again uses significantly thicker blacks than the Japanese version, which causes tones and shading to suffer on occasion. Worse, however, are the jpeg compression artifacts visible on the front and back covers. As for the art itself, it is as detailed and charming as ever. Hair in particular has a great deal of definition and shading, rendering it with a great deal of volume and depth, and the snow and moon in the last chapter are rendered beautifully. (I’ll admit that maybe…in the right light…Canno isn’t all that great at drawing cats, but that just adds to the charm for me)

Story – 9 I average an 8 for Hikari and Nagisa, and a 10 for Ayaka and Yurine. We’re nearing their endgame, and watching Yurine be there for Ayaka was one of my favorite chapters in the series. Leighann Harvey has done a wonderful job translating every word, barring a weird side note concerning the quotation at the start of the book: my wife recognized the quotation, which is from Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s Le Petit Prince (uncredited here). The quotation at the start of the Japanese edition is already in English, and is closer to the more proper quotation “Love does not consist in gazing at each other but in looking outward together in the same direction.” I think Leighann Harvey must have translated the Japanese version of the quote into English, ignoring the English version that was already there, all of which says nothing of the original French version of the quotation (!). Not a big deal, just a neat peek behind the curtains of translation.

Characters – 9 There’s a ton of character development going on in this volume.

Yuri – 7 That might seem like a high number considering three out of four main characters are tsundere, but you have to keep in mind that nearly everyone at Seiran is in some form of Yuri relationship.

Service – 1, by default. (I thought it was a cute touch when Nagisa’s mom told her to stop laying around in her underwear, but Canno withheld such salaciousness from the visuals)

Overall – 9



Sailor Moon SuperS Anime, Part 1, Disk 1 (English)

April 15th, 2019

It’s been a long time since I watched Sailor Moon Super S the very first time and I am not at all surprised to find that I consider it as unwatchable and excruciating as I felt the first time! It’s got just about everything I don’t like all crammed into a very thin plot (Chibi-Usa, Pegasus, creepy Amazon Trio ripping women’s dreams from their chest while they beg them not to….shudder…) , and while I – like all good fans – have rewritten and retconned it in my own head to be a valuable piece of the mythology, in reality it’s really pretty eh, unless you genuinely enjoy Chibi-Usa and Usagi screaming at each other for a lot of episodes.

That said, there are actually a couple of really interesting plot needles among the rest of the plot hay. So, I’m basically ignoring the story of SuperS for all of those.  You know the rule – it’s 25 years old, there can be no spoilers.

The first interesting plot element is that the Amazon Trio are all male (do not try to make sense of the name, therefore) but Fish Eye is the second gay male character who crossdresses in the series.  With all the women who pass as men in the spotlight of ‘S’ and “Stars”, its sometimes easy to forget Zoisite and Fish Eye who provide the queer quotient in the first season and “SuperS.”

The animation suffered significantly for this season. Remastering could only work so far when the original just wasn’t that great to begin with. The sound quality was surprisingly good, but as the music was mostly on automatic, it adds little to the overall experience. Even the end theme “Baby Baby Love” is not one of the strongest in the pantheon of Sailor Moon music. Especially when you consider the end theme of Stars, which is weep-messy-tears worthy.

I hope you will forgive me for otherwise ignoring much of what happens in this season. I would probably not even be reviewing it but for the most amazing thing being included on Disk 1. The Sailor Moon SuperS Special consists of 2 short stories both of which are basically the only reason this whole season has for existing. This is the first official release of this special in English and you must run out and watch this immediately if not sooner.

Part 1 of the SuperS Special follows Haruka and Michiru as they encounter the Dead Moon Circus at a resort hotel. Haruka is sick in bed and flirting with the maid who is taking care of her, forcing Sailor Neptune to fight the Dead Moon Circus alone.  The punchline of this episode is Michiru’s line – which is the one of the three best lines in all of Sailor Moon – “There seems to be a misunderstanding. It’s not worth saving a world without Haruka.”

Part 2 is the only Chibi-Usa story I can tolerate and is one of the chapters from “Chibi-Usa’s Picture Diary” from the manga.

Ratings:

Art – 6
Story – 2 Ask me how much I care about Chibi-Usa and Helios. Have a seat. It’s gonna take a while.
Characters – 3 Hawk’s Eye and Tiger’s Eye did not age well as character designs or concepts, but we’ll get more Inners, later.
Service – More BDSM creepiness than I’m comfortable with, frankly.
Yuri – 10 A whole episode of Michiru and Haruka being so very, very gay.

Overall – 9 for the Special, 6 for the rest of the season

The SuperS Special and the SuperS movie are good. The rest of the season can go hang. ^_^



Oyasumi Sheherezade Manga, Volume 1 (おやすみシェヘラザード)

April 14th, 2019

Oyasumi Sheherezade, Volume 1 (おやすみシェヘラザード) (Subtitled in English “Nighty-Night Sherezade) by Shinofusa Rokuro is a Yawara Spirits webcomic that is surely in the running for the strangest thing I have ever read.

Asato hears rumors of “the 13th witch” who lives in Room 13 in her dorm. Should she ever be taken into that room, she will never come out the same, she is told. But one night when the dorm mother is about to catch her out on a late-night bathroom trip, the door to Room 13 opens and Asato is pulled in. And it turns out that rumor, as far as it goes, is true.

What Asato sees is a voluptuous young woman, dressed in sexy lingerie…who begs Asato to keep her company. Herezado Shie was used to talking with her mother as she fell asleep and being in this huge room by herself makes her lonely. What Shie wants is to tell Asato about the movies she loves. If Asato is able to stay awake all night with her, she will receive a “treat” of undetermined nature.

Initially, Asato is sure that this treat will involve physical intimacy, as Shie is very sensual and free with her body. Asato metaphorically girds herself to have a sexual experience with Shie, but, no, all Shie wants is to talk about (and sometimes act out portions of) movies. Asato, who has no particular interest, ends up falling asleep every night.

Asato shares her story with her friends who are delighted and cheerfully freaked out. When they meet Shie-sempai, one of them turns out to share her love of movies, but her friends are bored to tears. Partially because Shie talks about the movies in great, yet random, detail. Even movies I know sometimes are hard to follow. And Shie’s acting looks more like scenes from a horror movie.

As volume 1 comes to an end, we learn that there is a history between Shie and Asato’s super-strict and apparently uptight class President. I am not sure whether I actually wish to know what it is. I was torn between finding this so bizarre and ridiculous that I couldn’t stop reading…and kind of boring, so that I’m not sure if I’ll keep reading. Like Asato, I don’t much care about movies.

Shie is actually kind of cute in an obsessed way and Asato and her friends are pretty normal. The weirdness is only in the setup, within which everyone seems kind of nice. The art is quite good when it comes to pinups of Shie and purposefully mediocre at other times, which I quite like.  I just don’t know if I like it enough to keep reading.

 

Ratings:

Art – It can be as high as an 8, but often isn’t
Story – ????? I have no idea how to score this at all
Characters – Same
Yuri – 1
Service – 8 All cheesecake

Overall – I don’t know! 8? 3? I have no idea! Even if you like movies, I think it would still be really strange. Let’s call it a 7

 

If you wish to experience this series in all its unique strangeness, then catch the newest chapter on the Yawara Spirits series web page.  You’ll at least get to see what I mean about Shie’s lingerie.

Volume 2 is already available and Volume 3 will be released at the end of May.



Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – April 13, 2019

April 13th, 2019

Yuri Manga

We’ve got a bunch of new manga on the Yuricon Store!

White Lilies in Love Kaoru Toki, Anata ha. Shakaijin Yuri Anthology (White Lilies in Love 花香るとき、貴方は。 社会人百合アンソロジー) is yet another adult life Yuri anthology from Kadokawa. I am not complaining. ^_^

I have been waiting for this book for literally a couple of years now – Liberty (リバティ), Volume 1 by actress Kitta Izumi and manga artist Momono Momo is finally getting a collected volume!

End of the world Yuri fantasy Sekai no Owari to Majyou no Koi  世界の終わりと魔女の恋 by KUJIRA looks interesting.

Haru meets Midori, her best friend’s daughter at the funeral. She’s not great with human relationships, but she’s got to take care of Midori in Haru to Midori (春とみどり).

Iwami Kyoko’s short story collection Transparent Light Blue is out in English this month, and her vastly superior ongoing Comic Yuri Hime serial Luminous= Blue, Volume 1 (ルミナス=ブルー ) was released in March. Hopefully we’ll get that series, as well.

It’s Vampire x Vampire Hunter in Akiyama’s Killing Me! hitting shelves this summer in English from Yen Press.

Here’s an online illustrated novel (in Japanese) I’ve got on my to-read list: Sheets no Shita ni Juu Futatsu (シーツの下に銃ふたつ) with art by Kitao Taki and story by Hoshii Nanase, about a criminal and a cop who fall for one another.

Lastly, for fans of Otome no Teikoku by Kishi Tojiroo, a digital-only Otome no Teikoku / Ah-Chie Special (オトメの帝国/あーちえスペシャル) is available on JP Kindle inside Japan and Book Walker outside Japan. Follow the extra adventures of couple Ai and Chie including special color illustrations!

 

Yuri Anime

YNN Correspondent Super lets us know that ANN has the scoop on Anime Fans Pick the Most Heart-pounding Yuri Anime! The list has a surprising few series.

 

Yuri Game

So I popped on to HIDIVE to watch something and found that there was a huge banner announcing pre-registration for the Shoujo Kageki Revue Starlight game in English. According to the Lilycat, pre-reg has reached 300,000 as of this past week. I’m still smarting from the loss of Sailor Moon Drops, and need a new game, so I’ll give it a try.

Yuri Nurse fetish game Nurse Love Syndrome is getting a new game and an English release, says Joseph Luster over at Crunchyroll News. The PC game with English subtitles will be followed by a PS Vita iteration.

 

Other News

Check out Wild Nights with Emily, a new movie based on poet Emily Dickinson’s passionate love letters to Susan Ziegler.

 

 

Do you have questions about Yuri? Write in and ask and I’ll do my best to address them on the Okazu YNN Podcast, 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!



Yuriten 2019 in Osaka, Guest Report by Zoey B.

April 12th, 2019

This week is a super-special week – we had a guest review from Christian LeBlanc earlier this week and today, we have a special Guest Event Report! Zoey B. has once more been able to visit the Yuriten Exhibit in Osaka and has returned bearing pictures and a report for us all! I hope you will all welcome Zoey back once more and make her feel welcome. Take it away, Zoey!

Yuriten is a small exhibition and shop of all things related to Yuri held yearly, hosted by Village Vanguard and Kadokawa. It focuses on Yuri in manga as well photographers and illustrators whose work is on the theme of Girls Love. It began in 2016 and this year is being held in over 5 different locations across Japan: Tokyo, Osaka, Sendai, Nagoya, and Fukuoka. The Osaka exhibit has just finished, and starting this weekend will move to Sendai.

This time of the year brings warmer weather and cherry blossoms across Japan, making for picturesque romantic scenes under the cherry blossoms trees – and also, all the Yuri you could ask for! This year’s event is bigger, and if I might say, better than last year’s – not only just in the number of locations, but the participating authors and material on display as well. I was fortunate to attend last year’s event in Osaka, and again this year.

The Osaka event was held in the same place as last year – in the event hall atop a huge shopping centre, Namba Parks, in the center of the city. People were free to come and go as they pleased, which made the amount of people there heartening. I went with my wife again this year – which I think is becoming a yearly tradition. We were fortunate to go on a weekday, at a quieter hour, as we were able to take our time with each one and not feel rushed. I say that, because we actually went again this past weekend to quickly purchase something and the amount of people there was quite significant!

As you walk in, the employees usher you towards the set route that’s laid out, going through the displayed artwork, sectioned off by author, photographer, or illustrator. I could tell immediately the difference from last year’s – there were a lot more on display than before! The route goes through the artworks and any messages from the authors, and also has some nice surprises, such as a poster for the event covered in the signatures of the participants.

 

 

 

 

At the end of artwork displays, it opens up into the shop. The amount of goods in the shop also helps to show how much bigger the event is this year. Like the exhibit, each participant or series had its own display and respective goods, and the area where you lined up to pay was full of all kinds of Yuri-related publications. Last year had a good range of the popular series, but we were happy to see some we’d had never come across, and other less-known works being collected and released by various publishers. From Comic Yuri Hime serializations and Galette Works, to probably some manga that I could argue weren’t Yuri, but maybe had some elements – there was a pretty vast range.
However, something special to note this year had to be the Yuriten Chronicle. It’s a nicely-printed A4 book, collecting of all the featured artists and artwork showcased at Yuriten from 2016-2018.

 

 

 

You can have the chance to get one of your manga signed by your favourite author, if you  attend and make a purchase on the weekend. This is done by lottery, as you can imagine the amount of people jumping at the chance. We did not partake in this, sadly, but it seemed like a relatively organized and calm affair.

Yuriten all finishes off as you exit the shop, with massive boards full of sticky notes – any visitor can write a message or draw an image, and these are really sweet to read through as you leave. My personal favourite had to be the person who wrote, “I want a 2DK, G-Pen anime”. On our second visit, my wife pointed out that the sticky notes began filling up the walls as well. Seeing all the little notes is a great reminder that there is an audience for this event! And that people are just as excited about Yuri as you are.

 

 

Yuriten may not have the craziness that Comiket or Comitia bring, but as an event, it has its own charm. Both my wife and I look forward to seeing how it grows from here. If you get a chance to attend one these events whether this year or in the future and are a fan of Yuri (or even just interested!), I would definitely recommend paying a visit.

 

Erica here: Thank you again Zoey! I’m very sorry I’m missing the event this year (I met Kawamoto-san from Kadoawa last February at Comitia and all we both could do is apologize to one another for poor timing,) but if anyone has a chance to see it in any of the other cities, please let us know. We’d love pictures of the setup! ^_^