LGBTQ Manga: Wandering Son, Volume 6 (English)

June 18th, 2015

511cg24nZpLIn Takako Shimura’s series Wandering Son, Volume 6, the school festival rolls around again and again Shuu-chan’s class has chosen to do a gender-switched play. Not just a gender-switched play, this one will be an original work. But as the festival nears, it is morphed back into a typical Romeo and Juliet. Chiba-san objects and with her steamrolling the class, she and Shuu-chan rewrite the play again to reflect the more realistic concerns of trans people…and add some random violence.

I feel I understand Shuu-chan and Yoshino, Mako and the rest, but still find them rather on the prickly side. Hormones and alliances and identity all mixing up, as Shuu-chan worries how hairy his legs will be, or as Yoshino suggests switching names…or as Chiba-san stays angry with almost everyone.

I was discomfited by Yuki-san appearing  – again – in a suit.With this series, I constantly feel like we’re do-si-do-ing back and forth every volume over the same three of four steps.  I understand this in regards to Shuu and the others, but am much less forgiving in regards to Yuki-san, whom we are meant to believe is living her life truthfully.

Finally, as the pages of the book come to a close, I cannot stop thinking that Shuu-chan is going to have to talk to Maho sooner or later.  There is also one serious flaw with the entire narrative in this volume – no school would have allowed a play like that to be performed. Educational administration in both Japan and America are notoriously conservative. Combined with the feeling of going over the same territory again and again, I’m starting to feel the narrative grind down to a halt.

Still, I’m rooting for the kids in Shuu-chan’s class to find themselves and grow up with a chance at happiness, so I’m still reading.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 7
Characters – 8
LGBTQ – 8

Overall – 7

Seya is the only character that seems to have actually matured so far, and he’s done a good job of it.



Yuri Manga: Seijun Shoujo Paradigm (聖純少女パラダイム)

June 16th, 2015

downloadIn Seijun Shoujo Paradigm (聖純少女パラダイム), Morishima Akiko gave Pure Yuri Anthology Hirari readers her take on the most common private Catholic girl’s school tropes. And typically, she has a lot of fun with it. ^_^

At Saint Paradigm Girl’s School (one of a long line of nonsense Saint names in Yuri literature, but sometimes it’s hard to tell, I’m looking at you Saint Scholastica,) Aoi is all excited to get her elite high school experience started. Even the sight of a girl confessing to an upperclassman (and being rejected) makes her feel like she’s in the middle of a novel. And when the teacher leaves the room and the girls all drop their proper facades to pick up their phones and play games, or text their boyfriends, it depresses her.

Depressed as she is, she’s still more cheerful than Lily, the girl who had been rejected.  Lily actually likes girls, but is rejected regularly. Aoi, who has no interest in a boyfriend, agrees to be Lily’s best friend. Until Lily gets a girlfriend, she and Lily will love each other best.

The story splits off a bit to deal with some other couples among the student body – the president of the literature club and a member who have been lovers for years, but still have some issues. and the President and Vice President of the Student Council who are a perfect Takarazuka couple and, despite the fact that they live together and know they love each other, have not gone beyond a kiss on the cheek. Lily’s lack of tact is the key development that allows them to close that final gap between them.

After the school festival, Lily confesses seriously once more…to Aoi. Aoi knows they’ve agreed to love each other best, but this seemed different. As their second term begins, Aoi comes to realize she has deeper feelings for Lily, and the book and the story draw to a close with an “awww.”

Ratings:

Art – 8 Morishima’s usual cute faces and cheerful style
Story – 8 A sweet series for a Yuri-themed magazine
Characters – I liked them all, but sympathized with the literature club’s Midori most, who just wanted to hear “I love you” more often
Yuri – 9
Service – 3 Some underwear scenes, Morishima does underwear nicely

Overall – 8

Morishima-sensei says that this is her first Yuri set “among the sakura” and I immediately thought of a tagline for this kind of Yuri. Not “strawberry” at all – they had the wrong fruit. This is Yuri with “The scent of lilies and the flavor of cherries.”



Event Report: FLAMECON 2015

June 14th, 2015

FlameconIt was my sincere pleasure to be able to attend FLAMECON 2015, the inaugural year for another queer Comics-focused event in New York City, after Queer & Comics last month. (West Coast folks, you’re not being left out – The Queer Comics Expo is being held on June 20 in San Francisco! Let me know how that goes.)

FLAMECON was the brain child of Geeks OUT! an LGBTQ comics group based in New York City, which has been expanding it scope and reach since it’s early days as a group of folks banding together to get a table at New York Comic-Con. ^_^

I met this delightful woman upon coming out of the subway. She said to someone else that it wasn’t really cosplay.

notcosplay

The event was held in the Grand Prospect Hall, which was amazing in its own right.

hall

When I came in, the ballroom was to my left, and the greenhouse to the right. Flamey, the con mascot greeted us as we entered.

flamey

The greenhouse held some of the larger press companies, including sponsor Northwest Press, Riptide Publishing, which was recommended to me, and I hope to take a look at their work in the future. Right from the first, I could see this con was going to be special. Everyone’s energy was high, and the level of social skills was, also. Most vendors were quite chatty and I was able to  have actual conversations with most folks, rather than just the “hi, howya doing?” vendor speak or the no-looking-up-artist-non-speak.

green

There were corporate vendors, among the tables.

edison

Philadelphia’s LGBTQ anime/manga con, Nijicon, had a booth. I’m hoping I can help with adding some Yuri to their programming. ^_^ October, 24-25, 2015, Greater Philadelphia Expo Center – Oaks,PA.

And Bara manga was represented by Tagame Gengoroh’s Massive! Collection.

massive

 

Then, back into the hallway, where they had set up a cafe.

hall

But it was when I entered the ballroom that I realized how *amazing* the building was.

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Once I recovered from the gilded-lily-ness of it all, I finally started walking around. First up, the stunning Jennifer Camper (co-founder of Queer & Comics) and Texta Queen, one of the folks on my “Wet and Sticky” panel at Queer & Comics. Jennifer is upbeat about the success of Q&C and hopes to do another in 2017 in San Francisco. I managed to incorporate some of the utterly fab watercolors on the wall behind them.

jct

 

Next up, it was my pleasure to meet Jill Pantozzi, editor-in-chief of The Mary Sue.

JP

We had a terrific conversation. When speaking of TMS’s decision to not promote HBO’s Game of Thrones anymore, Jill said something like, it suddenly came to them that they could do that thing. And I was completely understanding, because when you work in a niche, you want to be comprehensive for that niche, but sometimes it’s just not worth the emotional toll. (Not unlike my reasoning for not buying or reviewing hentai Yuri collections. They aren’t good and no one cares, and it makes me sad to have to read them at all.) Jill and the rest of the crew at TMS are heroes of mine. I’m hoping to have an interview with them in days to come. ^_^

My first purchase was this one-shot side story from ongoing series Node, by David Rondellini. It was excellent, and I’ll be looking for more.

Node

I spent a lot of time talking to the creators – everyone was, as I say, extremely friendly – and there weren’t that many folks I knew already, which was amazing. Lots of new faces. I did run into old friends like Hiroki Otsuka and Carlo Quispe, and was able to meet the artist for my friend Alex Woolfson’s series The Young Protectors, Adam DeKraker – who was fantastic, and delightful.  Molly Ostertag and I kvelled about Feral from Strong Female Protagonist, and I bought a totally NSFW lesbian short from her, based in the same historical period as her Khutulun, the Wrestler Princess called Queens of the Steppe.

And then I got to meet an old friend for the first time! Elizabeth F. is a long-time Okazu commenter, YNN Correspondent and, I like to think, a friend. ^_^ I got hugs! I love meeting you folks in person.

mal

PFestThen it was about time to do something that for me is unheard of…talk to a gaming company. I had an invitation from Atari to see a prototype of their upcoming release Pridefest. Like everyone my age, I grew up with Atari, so was very interested in what they had to say. I carefully disclaimed that I don’t game (although even I played Pong back in the day,) but the guys at the Atari booth were incredibly cheerful and upbeat as they talked about Pridefest. Since it hasn’t released yet, I don’t know what I’m allowed to say about it, except I will say this – it’s a “social game” (like Farmville) and it’ll be as diverse and inclusive in as many ways as possible. The actual game is a sim world situation, which allows you to launch pride parades in your city as you build it. The game itself is charming and I’m hoping to have more for you as it gets closer to launch. After the demo, they asked me a bunch of questions on camera and I pulled out the stops with advice about diversity, and social gaming, the market, community management, virality and sustainability. I don’t game, but I know gamers and community management. ^_^ Thanks to Atari and I’m glad to see you back in the game…as it were. ^_^

The room we were in was hosting GaymerX2, the second LGBTQ gaming convention. GX3 is being held in San Jose in December.

gaymer

Another game designer I spoke with was Choice of Games, which are customizable text stories where your choices will actually alter the narrative. I’m thinking some of you VN fans might find this interesting.

Here is more ballroom porn. Because it was lovely and crazy.

Ball4

Ball5

Ball4
I loved this room.

Last, but in no way least, I was able to meet up with another old friend, Niki Smith, whose story Your Hair, is still one of my favorite piece in any of our Yuri Monogatari series (and which is now available on Comixology!) Niki’s been moving from success to success and I’m so pleased for her.

nandk

I walked around once more, picked up a few things, spoke to a lot of folks and suddenly realized the one thing that was missing – lesbian comics. There were a fair number of female attendees and sellers, but it seemed that the majority of the female comic artists were drawing queer-gender-fluid or just gay guy stuff. There was a post-Yaoi anthology, (a surprisingly clever concept, worth a look!) and girls dressing as guys and having sex, comics on transfolks, drag and crossplay. So there was quite a variety overall. But when I got home and emptied my bag, I had bought 1 lesbian comic. Next Flamecon, we need more lesbian comics, ‘kay? On the plus side there was almost all original work, very little parody and most of that erred on the smart side. ^_^

Overall, FLAMECON was a lot of fun and is a great initial event. I think there is a lot of room to grow the LGBTQ comics market and you’ll excuse me for playing favorites, but I can’t think of a better city on earth to do that in than New York City. Here’s to FLAMECON 2 and more lesbian comics. ^_^



Event News: Flame-Con, AnimeNEXT and Girls Love Fest

June 13th, 2015

FlameconFlame-Con, NYC’s First Queer Comic Con is happening today at the Grand Prospect Ballroom in Brooklyn, (which itself is an old drag queen of a building.)

It appears at a glance that Flame-Con has done a reasonable job of encouraging diversity in it’s guest lineup and I hope that I’m not wrong about that. But I’m not really there for the guests. I’m there for the exhibitors. I’m hoping like hell this will be the LGBTQ small press and self-published comic fest I’ve wanted to attend my whole adult life. A quick glance at the exhibitor list tells me I may very well get my wish. ^_^

The most exciting thing about today is that this will be the second Queer-focused comic events I’ll have attended in 2015. How amazing is that!?

 

ANext2015On Sunday, I will be visiting AnimeNEXT, which is being held  in Somerset, NJ at the Garden State Exhibit Center. I was on the board of directors a while back for AnimeNEXT, and have seen it be run by many different chairs and I think the current set of organizers and senior staff is the best they have ever had.

2015 will be the last time AnimeNEXT is held in central New Jersey. They”ll be moving to Atlantic City for 2016, which is very exciting. Sucks for me, as Somerset is short ride from here, but yay for them. This means they’ll be growing into a space that will allow for 30K or more, putting them among the top tier cons in the country.

I’ll be presenting a workshop “Crowdfunding For Fun and Profit” on Sunday, June 14, at 12:30 in Panel Rm 4. We’ll talk about what works, what doesn’t, what you can expect and what you might not expect! I hope you can join me.

As an aside, I went to post the logo here and went “D’oh”! Dear Anime Cons, clubs, groups, fans – do not use the “rising sun” Japanese flag. It is emblematic of terrible things, and it may engender bad feelings especially among non-Japanese Asian guests…and anyone who knows history. (Kind of like trying to incorporate a swastika…it may look striking, but gives off bad signals.)

 

glfAlso on Sunday, June 14, on the other side of the planet (so this evening my time,) Girls Love Fest returns to the Tokyo area, twinned with Ai Fest, once more.

You can find the Participating Circle List here. I’m kind of impressed, that among the Love Live!, and KanColle doujinshi, so many of the circles are listing themselves as doing original work. And there’s at least one each of  Yuri Kuma Arashi and Akuma no Riddle listed, so those might be fun.

Also fun, Takemiya Jin-sensei announces that she’ll be at GLF, and will also be doing a special autograph signing session…not in the circle space, but in a special guest booth. That’s fantastic! You go Takemiya-sensei!

So grab up your business cards and put on your walking shoes…we have a busy weekend ahead.



Yuri Manga: Watashi no Kiraina Otomodachi (私の嫌いなおともだち)

June 12th, 2015

kiranaotomodachiAlthough I just finished reading Sumako Kari’s Watashi no Kiraina Otomodachi: Fatal Lies (私の嫌いなおともだち):  last night, it is already back on the to-read pile. It deserves another, slower, more attentive reading.

The collection follows several couples in short vignettes, in which they might be either schoolgirls, or adults, but are always not the insipid “Story A” tropes we see time and time again. Women with fears, and hopes, with angry faces, and crushed dreams; these stories are short, but richly developed, looks at three-dimensional beings who happen to be in a Yuri narrative.

There is more than just “like” here. Not everyone is kind, or truthful or sincere. There are lies spoken and accepted, there is mystery, in the way we can never truly know someone fully.

If you are looking for cute, slight tales of “like” this is absolutely not the book for you. If, however, you wish to god that sometimes Yuri didn’t tread the same path every freaking time, I’ll recommend this strongly.

Ratings:

Art – 7 Felt a bit old school, without the polish
Characters – 8 Good, bad, and indifferent, but all different.
Story – 7 It is not one story repeated several ways
Yuri – 7 From first moments of interest to heartbreak, very real.
Service – 2 A single panel on a single page.

Overall – 7

Some of the stories end happily, but more end with possibilities and complexities. And those are the ones I liked best. Keep it coming, Hirari!