Throw Away The Suit Together, Volume 1

July 31st, 2024

Two women only wearing button down white shirts, sit on a house veranda under a blue sky, smiling.by Matt Marcus, Staff Writer

I have a morbid fascination with LinkedIn. I often peruse the site for a sort of black comedy, a satire where people are genuinely excited about how one divine moment of #leadership made their company infinitesimally more profitable. Even though I decided to willingly join this farce of productivity posturing, I pride myself on holding onto my skepticism of this bizarre forum. I am the man wearing the They Live shades, firm in my knowledge that I can play the game while acknowledging its hollowness. Yet, some days my confidence falters and I wonder if there’s a way to escape all this, to find some means of providing a life for my family that doesn’t require me to use phrases like ā€œmaximize stakeholder valueā€. But it’s a passing feeling, one I have become quite adept at swallowing.

When I go to my feed, what greets me is a deluge of banal job hunting advice, questionable claims about the current job market, rosy prognostications on the future of AI. Each post I scroll by fills me with more and more dread. Does my resumĆ© have a snowball’s chance in hell of even making it through to human eyes anymore? And after that, can I prove myself to be skilled and savvy enough by answering inane questions through three, four, five-plus interview rounds? These days, it’s distressingly common to see desperate posts from strangers with the #OpenForWork badge added to their profile picture loudly shouting about their many, many months of failed job searching. I feel lucky that my current job is secure, but it’s not the kind of luck I can savor. I cannot imagine what the pressure might be like for those fresh to the job hunt.

In this first volume of Throw Away The Suit Together, college student Haru is one of those struggling job seekers. All she wants is some security for her and her long-time girlfriend, Hinoto, so they can live a comfortable life together. Unfortunately, she bombs her second-round interview at one company and proceeds to not pass the first round at several others. Under the pressure of these failures, she snaps, throws all her job applications out into the street, and decides that they should escape Tokyo on ā€œHii-chanā€ā€™s scooter. Hinoto, ever supportive of her partner, agrees to go along with her, abandoning her internship. They head off to Hinoto’s aunt’s summer house on an unnamed island.

Their plan, what little of it there is, doesn’t go smoothly. After falling asleep overnight on the beach, Hinoto’s bike, which held all of their belongings, is taken by a local who thought it was abandoned. They arrive at the house, only for its owner to call and tell them they are not welcome to live there (Hinoto had, of course, neglected to ask for permission). They have no idea what they are going to do for money. But they are in love, and their belief in that love is what will pull them through it.

Things do turn around, a little. Hinoto’s aunt gives the girls her blessing to use the house (all she wanted was some honesty). The bike and its contents are returned by the young woman, Naruko, who took it, and it turns out she’s a diving instructor who may have a job to offer. After an initially awkward proposal from Haru, the girls agreed to upgrade their relationship status to “engaged”. The volume ends as the two lovers begin writing up a marriage application, though they know that gay marriage isn’t fully legal in Japan.

Keyyang-sensei nailed the anxiety and feelings of futility in the job search. Hell, I’m nearly tempted to put a content warning for it. Given that, you’d expect this story to be a straightforward escapist fantasy: screw the rat race, let’s move to an island and live a good, simple life. But, there’s something here that gives me pause. So far, every step Haru and Hinoto have made has been messy and poorly thought out, though they have so far managed to overcome these unforced errors. Nevertheless, it is hard to shake the feeling that the specter of Tokyo and the world it represents still haunts them.

Haru in particular seems to keep pushing away facing the difficult questions and escapes into deeper and deeper fantasies. Hinoto is more pragmatic, but she is willing to do anything to make Haru happy right now, fuck the consequences. I should feel relieved by their adventure, but I’m not. The fears of failure have been merely tamped down, like when you decide yet again to binge YouTube videos instead of updating your years-old resumĆ©. Haru has thrown a rug over the mess, expecting it to disappear. The escape doesn’t feel complete.

As for the art, it’s much like the protagonists: earnest but a bit sloppy. The characters don’t seem consistently drawn, particularly Hinoto whose hair inexplicitly develops a flat top with corners for a couple of panels. That said, there are two really solid two-page splashes which seems a bit excessive for how little happens in the plot, but I can’t begrudge it too much. It is a little odd just how much page space includes our protagonists in some state of semi-sexy undress, though I’m willing to give it a pass as a sign of the level of comfort and intimacy they share (they have been dating since before college, though we don’t know much else). Things don’t actually get spicy until a bonus comic near the end of the comic, the purpose of which I don’t quite understand. The only thing that I can come up with is that it reinforces the motif of Haru attempting something with good intentions and failing, with Hinoto brushing it off and showing her support.

I’m holding out hope that this trepidation I am feeling leaves me once the girls find some means of employment with Naruko, though we know that the jobs may only be seasonal. I’m rooting for these girls. They may not stay on the island forever but I’m hoping that this trip rebuilds Haru’s confidence, and maybe shifts her view on what her goal should be for what is only the very beginning of her career. If not, she could always consult LinkedIn.

Art – 6 Competent but a bit too sloppy for my liking
Story – 7 The road is there is there, but I’m nervous about the destination
Characters – 7 Haru’s avoidant tendencies and Hinoto’s blind support is a dangerous pairing
Service – 5 There’s sex, and the girls spend a lot of time in a state of undress
Yuri – 9 / LGBTQ – 5 There is a marriage proposal!

Overall – 6 Narrowly making it to the second interview round

Volume 2 of this island escape story hits shelves in October.

For all future prospective employers: all opinions expressed in this review are exaggerated for dramatic effect :)

Matt Marcus is a serial enthusiast whose range of appreciations include guitars, watches, and a particular genre of Japanese popular media named after a flower. Outside of writing for Okazu, he cohosts various projects on the Pitch Drop Podcast Network, where he frequently bloviates about video games, anime, and manga. He also hosts a blog Oh My God, They Were Bandmates analyzing How Do We Relationship in greater depth.



Comic Yuri Hime, August 2024 (ć‚³ćƒŸćƒƒć‚Æē™¾åˆå§«2024幓8ęœˆå·)

July 29th, 2024

On a dark green background, in an elaborate gold frame/flower arbor, two girls look intimately at one another. A gorl with short dark hair has both hands on the cheek of a blonde girl.After the behemoth of an issue last month, you might be concerned about the slimmer volume for Comic Yuri Hime, August 2024 (ć‚³ćƒŸćƒƒć‚Æē™¾åˆå§«2024幓8ęœˆå·)…don’t be. It jumps right in to a new chapter (and a “new chapter”) of Takisham Eku’s “Sasayakuyouni Koi wo Utau,” as Miki’s sempai from wind ensemble struggles with how to appropriately convey her feelings to the kouhai she both treasures…and likes as a person. Miki remembers how Himari felt tortured about Yori, now she’s in the same boat!

Lirium and Nana dig into their shared power in Isekai fantasy ā€œMuryoku Seijo to Munou Oujo ~ Maryoku Zero de Shoukansareta Seijo no Isekai Kyuukoku-ki ~ā€ by Tamasaki Tama. They may be powerless along, but together they are quite explosive.

In ā€œKanaria ha Kiraboshi no Yume wo Miru” Fumino is envisioning a life in fashion, with her new model, but there are forces that may work against her – including her own mother –  in this historical piece set in the Taisho period by SheepD.

“Osoto Gohan wo Isshi ni?” has, finally, and not all that welcomely, introduced a conflict.  Fuka is distraught when she learns that Yomogi might have to move. What will happen to their meals and time together?

Did you know that Lily is among the most popular characters in ā€œWatashi no Oshi ha Akuyaku Reijou.”? She is. Not mine, however. And this interstitial arc is very much about her feelings for Rae. As I am not a fan of one-sided obsessive loves, the fact that this arc is at least tied into the royal investigation into corruption keeps us moving forward.

Utatane Yuu’s “Odoriba ni Skirt ga Naru” finds Kiki and Michiru not vibing, but Kiki can’t quite understand why (Again. Still. But differently.) A talk with her beloved and admired older sister – who was their teacher’s partner when they were the star pair- gives her some insight as to what to do.

When confronted with a sudden crisis, Clarice takes charge, even at the risk of her own life in ā€œGakeppuchi Reijou ha Kuro Kishi-sama o Horesasetai!ā€ with art by Somtime and story by Suo.  Frost-sama is blown away at her actions (ngl, so was I) , and also enraged by her response when asked why she did it. I am confused at to why Frost is trying so hard to get rid of Clarice. Clarice tries to get closer to Frost, but fails, during a game of chess. I like this story and look forward to Frost unclenching.

“Gara no Hime” by Korose this issue was a tear-jerker as Hime and Isana run across broken automatons who have been left activated but unable to fulfill their programming for centuries. Their resolution to set them at rest was touching.

Kodama Naoko’s ā€œUtsotsuki Hanayome to Dousei Kekkon-ronā€ shows us a slightly stronger Shigizawa than we’re used to (stronger than most of Kodama-sensei’s protagonists are until the final crisis, in fact,), as she pulls herself back from making a terrible mistake with Gotoh, and addresses the gorilla in the room, finally – why did Gotoh run away from her husband? Gotoh’s response is understandable and also still frustrating.

In ā€œKoharu to Minatoā€ Minato has been working hard, so Koharu takes her out for a professional massage.

Yakan starts a new series, “Lolita to Ane” which will give us all a chance to once again learn about the freedom in wearing gothic lolita along with elementary schooler Miyuki.

And, of course, there are plenty of comics I did not read or did not mention in this chock-full volume. It’s still a whole lot of Yuri for the price!

Ratings:

Overall – 9

The September issue is in and I’m reading it now. ^_^ Always playing catch up with this magazine.



Summer Lucky Boxes! – All Claimed

July 28th, 2024

I am *still* cleaning out stuff that I picked up in Japan last year! As a result, I have 3 Lucky Boxes this round.

All are premium boxes with media, manga, candy, toys and goods from Japan. They also include other flat fun things like artbooks, stickers, bookmarks or postcards which are equally random and frequently bizarre (and often not at all Yuri.) As always, there are random pieces of paper like memo pad sheets and individual flake stickers of random things like PreCure or cute food.

My promise to you is that you’ll get random things, sometimes in other in random things. ^_^ I assure you that this is all 100%, unadulterated stuff.

This round we have:
1 Large USPS Flat Rate, 1 Priority Mail Box and 1 Medium USPS flat rate box.

Large Box 1 – $60 – Claimed
Priority Box -$45 – Claimed
Medium Box 1 – $50 – Claimed

***

To be eligible to buy a Lucky Box, follow these instructions carefully. Please. Thank you. Failure to follow all of these instructions will disqualify you. It’s not personal, they are all claimed pretty quickly and I don’t have time to track you down for a piece of information.

1. You must live in the Continental USA (contiguous 48) only, no APO/FPOs. This is disappointing for me too, so I apologize.

2. You must be over 18, I am not policing books or recipients.

3. Email me with the Yuricon Contact Form with the subject ā€œLucky Box.ā€ Use an email you check regularly, because I will reply asap. The first person who responds to my email gets the box.

4. *****Please include your name, age, mailing address. ***** Tell me which box you want. Even if you’ve given me your address previously, please include it, I am very lazy.

5. I will contact you at that point and give you details about payment by Paypal. Please be prepared to check your email and get payment out so this post doesn’t linger. Thanks in advance. These will be shipped out asap, as well; the whole point of this is to get these out of my house. ^_^

Thank you and enjoy!



Yuri Network News – (ē™¾åˆćƒćƒƒćƒˆćƒÆćƒ¼ć‚Æćƒ‹ćƒ„ćƒ¼ć‚¹) – July 27, 2024

July 27th, 2024

In blue silhouette, two women face each other. One wears a fedora and male-styled attire, one is in a dress and heels. Their body language is obscure - they may be dancing, or laughing or fighting. Art by Mari Kurisato for Okazu

Yuri Manga

Huge news this week, as the folks behind quarterly, crowd-funded Yuri manga magazine Galette have announced an upcoming Kickstarter for an English language edition! Sign up now on Kickstarter to get updates and be informed when the Kickstarter launches. This is big news, as the magazine features some veteran creators, like Yorita Miyuki, Morinaga Milk and Hakamada Mera.

Galette is currently crowdfunded in Japanese on Pixiv Fanbox, I hope they open an English-language ongoing option for support. Fanbox is available in English as well. (Although Pixiv is a morally questionable company, management having been accused of sexually harassing employees.)

Sheep Princess in Wolf’s Clothing, Volume 3 is on shelves now. Grab the next volume of this furry, Yuri, fairytale from a link on the Yuricon Store!

Looking for something a little less cute? Otherside Picnic manga, Volume 11 might scratch that itch, with the Mountain Ranch and cult of Satsuki Uruma followers. Guest reviewer Sandy Ferguson caught us up to date in his review of Volume 10.

Adult Life can be complicated, as Haru and Hina learn in Throw Away the Suit Together, Volume 1, which hit shelves this month.

 

Help us give raises to our Staff and Guest writers!
Become an Okazu Patron today!

 

Muromaki-sensei has begun a 101 Yuri Situations challenge on X. Check out the hashtag #ē™¾åˆć‚·ćƒćƒ„101 for updates.

Sasayakuyou no Koi wo Utau, Volume  10 (ć•ć•ć‚„ćć‚ˆć†ć«ę‹ć‚’å”„ć†) is on the Store and so is the Sasayakuyou no Koi wo Utau Comic Anthology (ć•ć•ć‚„ćć‚ˆć†ć«ę‹ć‚’å”„ć† å…¬å¼ć‚³ćƒŸćƒƒć‚Æć‚¢ćƒ³ć‚½ćƒ­ć‚øćƒ¼) with stories by Utatane Yu, Yukiko and Yuama!

Koharu to Minato: Watashi No Partner Ha Onna No Ko, Volume 2 (å°ę˜„ćØę¹Š ć‚ćŸć—ć®ćƒ‘ćƒ¼ćƒˆćƒŠćƒ¼ćÆå„³ć®å­) continues the love-love story I reviewed this week here on Okazu.

 

 

Support Yuri journalism on Ko-fi!

Yuri Light Novel

It was my genuine pleasure to read and review The Magical Revolution of the Reincarnated Princess and the Genius Young Lady, Vol. 7

 

Yuri Games

Via zhufree on X, Steam has a “ new #baihe game which lesbians made for lesbians“! ę°øę—„ēš„å‡č§†-The Gaze of The Eternal Sun is currently in Chinese only, although zhufree says the creators would like to do an EN translation, but do not have the money to do so.

 

Other News

Unseen Japan ( a recommended site to follow on the social platform of your choice) has the news that Netflix is launching the very first same-sex dating show in Japan, called The Boyfriend.

And in a completely bonkers decision, the folks behind Lycoris Recoil are dragging NFTs from their grave to auction off. According to the announcement, a “portion of the money will go to the creators in charge.” The auction site is pretty slow to load. A quick summation of the response was captured beautifully by this poster, who said, “I’d rather have a second season than an art auction.”

 

Overseas response seemed to be pretty negative, while Japanese response was split a little more evenly.

On a happier note, Netflix has posted the Sailor Moon Cosmos trailer to Youtube and Kodansha has announced a box set for the first 6 volumes of anniversary manga of Sailor Moon. Rafael Antonio Pineda has the details on ANN about that.

Kenichi Sonoda (Gunsmith Cats, Riding Bean) was awarded an Inkpot Award at San Diego Comic- Con to recognize the impact he has had on his industry. Joseph Luster has the news on Crunchyroll.

Via Yuri Navi, the manga series Hana wa Saku, Shura no Gotoku (čŠ±ćÆå’²ćć€äæ®ē¾…ć®å¦‚ć) by Takeda Ayano and manga artist Mushu, currently being serialized in Ultra Jump magazine, will be made into a TV anime. This is about a girl whose love of reading brings in friends as she helps out with her school’s broadcasting club. Looks to be a nice everyday slice-of-life, cute girls doing cute things cutely, anime. I’m all for that.

 

If you’d like to support Yuri journalism and research, Patreon and Ko-Fi are where we currently accept subscriptions and tips.  Our goal now, into 2024, is to raise our guest writers’ wages to above industry standard, which are too low!

Your support goes straight to paying for Guest Reviews, folks helping with videos, site maintenance, managing the Yuricon Store and directly supporting other Yuri creators. Just $5/month makes a huge impact! Become part of the Okazu family!

Become a part of the Yuri Network, by being a YNN Correspondent: Contact Us with any Yuri-related news you want to share with us.

 



The Magical Revolution of the Reincarnated Princess and the Genius Young Lady, Volume 7

July 26th, 2024

A young woman in a pink dress, and red cape, her blonde hair tied on both sides with ribbons faces us, her palm outstretched, other arm akimbo. Behind her, a silver-haired girl in blue, a yellow bow in her hair, holds one fist up to her chin. A palace can be seen in the distant background above a city.So, you’re a Princess with memories of another world where “magic” tools existed, an obsessive interest in research on magic that is opposed by a lot of the nobles and the academia of your country and you’re always getting in trouble for pursuing that research, and your brother does something so gob-smackingly stupid that the country will have to turn to you for leadership, only you fall in love with your brother’s ex-fiancee and she with you and in the course of remaking the monarchy, you become a dragon and she becomes an immortal spirit. And the two of you do remake the monarchy with her as Queen and you as her consort, and save the country, reconcile with the nobility and academics and your brother and gather around you a team that includes a vampire, and humans from all the classes….

…where do you go from here?

This is the question that is front and center of The Magical Revolution of the Reincarnated Princess and the Genius Young Lady, Volume 7.

In most fairy tales, “happily-ever-after” marks the end of the story. So what if the princess (and prince and country) suffered trauma and loss to get to the wedding? So what if the prince had been a frog or the princess a swan, they get on with their lives. I’ve long looked for stories that stop and take a sober look at the after happily-ever-after. I love epilogues for that reason and sequels that take place 10 years later.  So what did the Heroes of the Revolution do when they got home? They could hardly pretend to be ordinary people anymore.

Piero Karasu has, to my immense joy, actually taken up the mantle of what happens next and presents a grander tale than I could have imagined. As ruling Queen, Euphylia has a vision…for Anisphia…to make their country a center of magicology research. But the capital is simply not the appropriate place to create this. So she conceives of a plan so grand it will require a new city, with Anisphia as it’s architect.

Anis, having embraced her inhumanity, now has to dig deep back into it to learn how to lead the people she has gathered around her.

Sure this series has its fill of dragons and vampires and werewolves, of magic swords and flying cars, but it is centered around the idea of answering the question, “what if someone wanted all those magic things to matter?” And when those someones are two women who are deeply in love, who have sacrificed their human lives to make their country a better place, they do matter.

Don’t think for one second that this is a profound book, though. This volume is full of small, human conversations, about dreams and hopes and fears, about a shared vision for a better future and the understandably selfish desire Anis and Euphie have to just stay together and ignore the world.  It’s not brilliantly written, but the love Anis and Euphie have for one another is explicitly stated – I believe this may be the first time they say they love each other openly – and their vision for their country is, well, vast. There’ll be plenty of room for them to grow into it and more stories to tell.

Ratings:

Art – I just cannot with this art. It needs to be epic and they look 6.
Story – 8
Characters – 9
Service – Rather less than any previous volume
Yuri – 10

Overall – 8

Do I want to read a series about two magical women building a city of magical research? Hell yes, I do.