Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – July 13, 2024

July 13th, 2024

A blue silhouette of a girl with a white flower in her hair, embracing the earth. Blue block letters read YNN Yuri Network News. Art by Lissa P. For Okazu.Yuri Manga

Good news from Dark Horse, who has announced a new omnibus edition of Sonoda Kenichi’s Gunsmith Cats. Crystalyn Hodgkins has the news on ANN. If you’re a recent fan of Yuri, you should pick this up to understand the kind of material we had to work with in the early years. ^_^ I am both joking and being quite serious. (I also wrote some GSC fanfic back in the day that I still like, so there’s that.)

 

We have some items up on the Yuricon Store for you!

The Summer You Were There, Volume 5 is the penultimate volume of this series. Kaori and Shizuku have been through so much, will they get the book done before the inevitable?

Class S tale of vampires at school, Kiss the Scars of the Girls, Volume 2  continues the story, such as it is Christian LeBlanc will be reviewing it for us shortly, as he has already reviewed Volume 1.

Also coming up in a review from Luce, My Idol Sits the Next Seat Over, Volume 7 is on the Store for you all to enjoy.

Sasayakuyou no Koi wo Utau, Volume 9 (ささやくように恋を唄う) brings us through Shiho’s arc, at last. Now we can all move on.

Twinstar Cyclone Runaway, Volume 1 (ツインスター・サイクロン・ランナウェイ) is a Yuri short story contest-winning science fiction story turned into a manga. Can our protagonist find someone to fish with, when fishing is only allowed for husbands and wives?

Inui Ayu manga Matou Kimi, Hokorubu Watashi (まとう君、ほころぶ私) is being released on eBook Renta manga service in English from Shodenhsa! Fan of Inui-sensei’s gentle slice-of-adult-life manga should jump on that.

Yorita Miyuki is running a Kickstarter of her collection  Her Kiss, My Libido Twinkles (彼女のくちづけ感染するリビドー). Click the appropriate link on the page to get the news when it launches!

 

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Yuri Literature

Lee Sanhwa’s cyborg science fiction, An Error Occured (오류가 발생했습니다) is now up on the Yuricon Store. It is in Korean and, as I said in my review, it was a great read.

Kanojo. Yuri Short Story Anthology  (彼女。百合小説アンソロジー) is, as it says, a short story collection, that has the distinction of being available to Japanese Amazon users as an audiobook as well as in print.

I’m in Love with the Villainess: She’s so Cheeky for a Commoner (Light Novel), Volume 3 is up for pre-order. This concludes the Claire P.O.V. spin-off that is absolutely worth reading for the extra content.

I’m in Love with the Villainess: She’s so Cheeky for a Commoner Audiobook, Volume 2 – For those of use who want to experience the story as read and acted by Courtney Shaw, this volume – which I reviewed in print last week – is hitting devices next month.

 

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Anime News

Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha is a series that almost always fails to do anything I want it to do. For a 10th anniversary, it turned the first two seasons of the TV anime into films which have been reviewed here (Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha The Movie 1st and Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha The Movie 2nd A’s)

For the 20th anniversary the films are being turned back into TV series.

… Okay, I guess. I just think it might have been cool to do something new. Movie up StrikerS, or animate Force…or hey, how about a new series? Nope. Okay. Anyway, Rafael Antonio Pineda has the news on ANN.

 

Yuri VN

Via their account on Twitter, check out Saku Takeno/Sakaki Yoshioka’s Visual Novel The Vampire Bride: The Novel Game English Version Sample.

 

Other News

From their official account on X, Sasayaku Koi wo Uta Soundtrack album, Sing a SonG, will be released this month!  Best part of the anime which otherwise has been a frustrating experience.

Via YNN Correspondent Cryssoberyl, “Machikado Mazoku will receive dual wedding dress figurines as part of the 5th anniversary celebration of the anime.”

Anita Tai has the news that “Kunihiko Ikuhara announced on X… that he will write and direct a Rodoku-geki (Reading Theater) play titled “Ikuni Produce Reading in the Dark Shunkin no Sasuke” with the main illustration by Classmates artist Asumiko Nakamura.” Check out the full article by Anita for details and a lovely illustration.

 

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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 Moon on A Rainy Night, Volume 5

July 12th, 2024

Two girls ride a bus, one with short orange hair, the other withe long black hair. They are conversing on their phones in text, smiling and laughing together.In Volume 4, a number of loose ends are suddenly untangled. Kanon decides to participate in her school festival fully, and Saki helps Ayano see that her behavior was not as awful as she had told herself it was. Now, in The Moon On A Rainy Night, Volume 5, the stage is set…mostly…for Kanon to release herself from the chrysalis she had built around herself as a protective measure.

Kanon hasn’t had a fun summer since she became hard of hearing, finding herself equally isolated in crowds and by herself. Having decided to participate in both the class’s school festival events, Kanon finds herself shocked that she hasn’t had time to feel isolated this summer – and of course…there’s Saki. Saki always holds a hand out so they can do things together. As a result, Kanon is feeling more confident and less afraid to try new things. It’s a whole new world. Literally, as Tanabe-san introduces them to cosplay for their class maid cafe.

This volume also takes time to give us Kanon’s mother’s perspective, and a foil in their teacher, who brings his daughter over to ask about piano lessons. These pages are an emotional reminder that the family of a person with a disability, or that has suffered the loss of a family member, also have their own stories and burdens. I’ll spoil a little here – this does come back again in later volumes, because every character is given some time to grow. Including Tomita, the girl I referred to as a bully in early volumes. It turns out that Tomita has a story of her own, as well. And her situation offers Kanon another chance to grow.

And then there is Saki,who has complicated feelings that have been seen and recognized by an adult,  and has been an incredible friend but doesn’t ask much for herself, except to be able to spend time with Kanon. What is Kanon to her? That will definitely need to be addressed.

Twice now this story has provided an antagonist with…not redemption, so much as humanity. That is just one of the many wonderful things about this series. Characters learning to rely on each other, working within their limitations but learning to expand those limits, friends supporting each other, and reaching past misunderstandings. What an extraordinary series. I feel like I’m learning when I read it not just about accommodations for the people around me – and myself – but also how to just provide useful support, rather than prioritizing what I think they need.

This is absolutely a masterwork by Kuzushiro-sensei, and a must-read manga for everyone.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 9 (But wait…there’s more!)
Characters – 9
Service – 0
Yuri – 4

Overall – 9

 I’ve started to need a wheelchair at times and I’m so thankful for them when I do, but it is always apparent to me, even when I am fully mobile, how many barriers there are in public places. So – especially when I am fully mobile – I will comment to event runners about the inequities they allow in their set-up. It’s important for able and healthy people to advocate for people who need accommodation, because, in the best of scenarios, we will all become old and need accommodations ourselves.

 



Love Bully

July 10th, 2024

The promotional poster for the Thai yuri series Love Bully, showing Charlotte Austin (left) and Engfa Waraha leaning in for a kiss.By Frank Hecker, Staff Writer

Two of the most impactful scenes of season 2 of Blank: The Series featured a fictional version of the real-life Thai show Club Friday, in which people call in to tell the hosts and audience their relationship problems. Club Friday is so popular that it spawned a long-running live-action spinoff Club Friday The Series, with plots based on those calls. Its current season (titled Hot Love Issue) includes the four-episode yuri series Love Bully, now streaming on YouTube.

CW for this series: homophobia, transphobia, and sexual assault.

Love Bully stars Engfa Waraha and Charlotte Austin, both former beauty pageant contestants turned actors, who previously starred in the beauty pageant yuri series Show Me Love. The first thing to say about Love Bully is that it is literally a soap opera: one of its sponsors is a maker of detergent (featured in one of the most hilariously out-of-nowhere instances of product placement I’ve ever seen). Love Bully lives up to that description, its plot featuring family secrets and corporate intrigues, with characters dressed to the nines.

Charlotte plays rich party girl and lipstick lesbian Irene, who befriends Night (played by Engfa), the bartender at Club Joanne, a bar owned by “Auntie Jo” (Uan Return), a trans woman who has a hidden connection to Night. Irene is being groomed to assume the CEO role at the real estate firm headed by her imperious mother CJ (Meenay Jutai), who is most displeased at the possibility of her daughter having a lesbian relationship, especially with someone of Night’s class and family background.

Complicating matters further are Fey (Gift Sirinart Sugandharat), Irene’s conniving corporate rival, and her lover Thul (Namo Thanapat Phiukham), who also happens to be Irene’s executive assistant and Night’s ex-boyfriend. Fey is a delightful example of an evil mastermind whose plans for world (or at least corporate) domination are continually ruined by an incompetent minion. As played by Gift she’s the best thing about this series — I found myself counting the minutes impatiently waiting for Fey to have another scene.

But, wait, you say, wasn’t there supposed to be a hot lesbian romance? And what about the quest to make “Englot” a top-tier “love team” to rival “Milklove” of 23.5, “Fayeyoko” of Blank, or perhaps even “Freenbecky” of GAP? Well, about that . . . Charlotte and Engfa’s characters’ interactions in Show Me Love were brought down by Charlotte’s relatively flat acting opposite Engfa. She’s improved a great deal since then, and to her credit gives an expressive performance in Love Bully. However, I still found the central love story to be unconvincing.

That may be because the four-episode runtime leaves little space for Irene and Night’s relationship to develop naturally: from Irene’s point of view the first scene in episode 1 is almost literally “Hi, I just got off the plane from LA, I need a drink! I love the drink! I love you! Please be my girlfriend!” Or it may simply be that the actors lack that most elusive and hard-to-describe factor, on-screen chemistry. Charlotte and Engfa will no doubt get another chance to star in a Thai yuri series, and perhaps third time’s the charm. But at this point I’m not that motivated to find out.

Story – 6
Characters – 7 (Fey ups the score)
Production – 7
Service – 5 (short skirts, bunny suits, and for BL fans a shirtless Thul)
Yuri – 10
LGBTQ — 7
Overall – 5

Love Bully is a competently produced and acted high-gloss soap opera with some fun moments (especially those featuring Fey). However, it’s not a “must see” for anyone but diehard Englot fans.



I’m in Love with the Villainess: She’s so Cheeky for a Commoner, Volume 2

July 8th, 2024

A girl with long blonde hair with a red bow and a girl with medium-length brown hair with a baby water slime on her shoulder walk under a parasol,. Both wear red school uniforms jackets and blue skirts. In Volume 1, we once again find ourselves in Bauer’s Royal Academy, where one Rae Taylor upends the school and eventually the entire country in her pursuit of  Claire François. Only this time, we’re seeing it all from Claire’s perspective. That first volume added a ton of new content to the story including a character that was influential, but never seen in the initial series.

In I’m in Love with the Villainess: She’s so Cheeky for a Commoner, Volume 2 of the spin-off light novel series, we once again see things from perspectives other than Rae’s. Claire, Misha’s… even Pepi and Loretta’s,  Claire’s close friends and hench chicks, turn out to have a story all their own. It turns out that their story is – and will continue to be very worth reading. I find I never reviewed it when I read the Japanese edition, d’oh. It was my favorite of the three volumes. How annoying.

I refuse to spoil the why, so you will have to trust me on this. ^_^

In the meantime, this volume does something I find fascinating. By taking two side characters and putting then in the limelight, we’re forced to rethink their motives and actions completely. And this leads to my absolutely favorite scene in the entire series. One I liked so much, I referenced it in my interview with inori-sensei for Yuricon 2023. It is in this novel we truly come to understand Pepi Barlier and her bosom friend, Loretta Kugret. When they follow Claire to Rae and Misha’s hometown of Euclid, their lives change forever. I promise that their story does not just end there, either. Despite the fact that the Revolution arc basically shelves them, here more will happen that will include them…and it will have repercussions.

Once again this book forced me to confront my weakness at stories about the twins, Mei and Aleah. Any time spent with their trauma will always hit me hard. I’ve said that this book is worth reading if you liked the original I’m In Love With The Villainess light novels. I stand by that. It is not mere a “other person’s perspective,” it is a reminder that one person cannot know everything, no matter how much knowledge she has. ^_^

Ratings:

Art – 7
Story – 9
Characters – 9
Service – 3? 4?
Yuri/LGBTQ+ – We see their relationship from Claire’s side

Overall – 9

 Volume 3, the final volume of the series, (until/unless inori-sensei completes her sequel) will hit our bookshelves in October.

Volume 1 is already available as an audiobook, and Volume 2 is headed our way in that format in August.



An Error Occurred ( 오류가 발생했습니다), by Lee Sanhwa

July 7th, 2024

A girl in a white blouse, with a prosthetic left arm and right eye, long messily flowing brown hair, stares over a parfait made of fruit, ice cream and an eyeball. She is surrounded by a landscape of desserts.A few months ago, I was contacted by Lee Sanhwa, a Korean author, to do a review of a Yuri board game, Yuri Ranbou (百合乱慕), which was followed by another fun review of the Yuri-themed board game Sisters of Dangerous Yuri Council (ヤバ百合会の妹たち). As we corresponded, Lee-nim described his most recent book as being about cyborgs, Yuri and dessert, which…okay, I’m in. ^_^

An Error Occurred ( 오류가 발생했습니다) is available only in Korean at this time, I purchased it through Booksonkorea.com, which was a pretty painless process and the book was shipped very quickly. Right from the first pages, I was gripped by a smart, fun, ever-so-slightly-gross, and engaging science fiction story.

We are introduced to a world that has been split into two cities, the upper city, thought to be a paradise, Red Velvet and the undercity where we are, Black Forest. We meet our protagonist Donauwelle and her mysterious roommate Haluholo. The society presented has two notable features – it is the kind of  late capitalism we are used to in much of our science fiction and, slowly but surely, our reality, in which advertising is attached to literally everything. (Would you like to read this  message ad-free? Pay 10 drops) And everything – people, places, companies, currency, are named after sweets. I wondered right away if the drops mentioned were named after Japanese Sakuma fruit drops candy and, yup, sure enough, the glossary assured me they were.

In Black Forest most people upgrade their bodies with prosthetics, and Haluholo is a full-body prosthetic person with no “meat.” One of Donauwelle’s colleagues at investigation company, Petit-4, Sachertorte is obsessed with getting the latest and greatest parts, much as people in our world rush to grab the new iPhone.

Initially we are thrown into a mystery in which someone seems to be committing gruesome murders and taking the human flesh from people. Petit-4’s job is to live-stream as they investigate. They are pretty good at their job and with some help from Donauwelle’s mysterious roommate Haluholo, they conclude the investigation quickly. Following that are several short, snappy adventures in corrupt systems, the gangs of the Black Forest , a scam being run on prosthetics and a systemic issue that seems to be affecting all the companies that run Black Forest.

With each subsequent mystery, we learn more about Donauwelle’s coworkers, Sata Andagi, Petit-4 group leader Ladyfingers (who has an on-again off-again thing going on with Sachertorte) and the world, which is, apparently run by Divinity…only something, somewhere, is broken. Companies are not functioning, projections are off…what is going on? And who the heck is Haluholo, who always seems to have too much drops and information?

All of these questions are answered in a very satisfying second half of the book, in which we have three reveals, one I expected, one I did not and one that was just fantastic writing. I’d love to talk about the book ending with you, but it will be a huge spoiler, so you are just gonna have to read it, and drop by the Okazu Discord to chat. ^_^

I read the book using Google Lens as a translation tool and I assumed I missed some of the subtleties of language and intent, but overall, I felt that I got the gist of everything. The use of sweets for names was never tiring. For instance one of the gangs was cleverly named Pan de Muerto, Divinity was as the ruling body. The names are drawn from all over the world, making the glossary worth reading  – especially for some of the snarky comments about British sweets. ^_^

This reprint edition from 2023 includes an extra new epilogue post the 2018 first printing and an additional author’s note. The first author’s note is one of the very best I have ever read honestly, as it discusses how authors’ notes are ubiquitous in books, but no one has ever won an award for one, no guides are written on how to write one and no one ever reads them. ^_^ Well, I do read them and this one was outstanding.

At this point, you may be wondering if the story is Yuri. And to answer that, you must understand that machine translation tools all default to “he” and “him” unless forced to use a different word. So almost regardless of what was written on the page, I was getting a story about mostly men, when Lee-nim mentions that he wrote the book with the assumption that everyone was a woman and that gender wasn’t an issue. That complicated the story, but also set up the thing I was expecting in a more obvious way. Oh, and, yes, it is Yuri.

Ratings:

Story – 9
Characters – 9 (I’d kind of like a spin-off about Ladyfingers and/or Momochacha)
Service – Yes, surprisingly
Yuri – 8

Overall – 10

This gets a 10 because of one final thing that I did not even know I liked. The structure of the novel – short stories that build up to one major arc – apparently is my favorite structure! Who knew?

I don’t know how comfortable people are reading with translation tools. I’m pretty comfortable with it, as I have been doing it for years in any number of languages, Thai, Tagalog, Korean, Chinese,Vietnamese (and still Japanese) in my pursuit of Yuri. So, if the idea of reading a book while staring at a page through your phone does not intimidate you – or if you are learning, or can read, Korean –  I highly recommend An Error Occurred by Lee Sanhwa, from Safe House Publishing.

I have already begun to write English-language publishers to suggest this book be licensed. I think folks would really like it.

Speaking of English, cover artist Kim Sanho’s work can also be see on a Korean novel that has been translated into English, that might be of interest here, A Magical Girl Retires, which is on my to-read list. ^_^