Yuri Network News (百合ネットワークニュース) – May 16, 2015

May 16th, 2015

YNN_LissaYuri Manga

Hayashiya Shizuru-sensei’s new release of Strawberry Shake. (ストロベリーシェイク) hits the streets this coming week from Young Jump Comics!!!!!1111

Also with a May 18 release date is Love Desu. Short Story Collection (ラブデス。~短期集中連載集~) by Kuzushiro. I love this series and can’t wait to get this. ^_^

Ohzawa Yayoi’s charmingly named 2DK, GPen, Mezamashidokei. (2DK、Gペン、目覚まし時計。) is awaiting a June release from Yuri Hime Comics.

The Hirari Comics release of Morinaga Milk’s Ohime-sama no Himitsu (お姫様のひみつ) is due out at the end of this month.

Now that it has a cover image, I just want to remind you that Akuma no Riddle, Volume 1 in English is up for pre-order.

 

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Okazu News

I’m going to bang the drum again, as we’re getting into crisis mode here, with a full summer and a lot to do before August when we relaunch the Yuricon Store with a big blow out party. No promises on cake and balloons, but we will have contests and prizes and Patrons will get special contests of their very own, plus early access to Yuri research and all the other great stuff all Okazu readers get, like news, reviews and interviews! So, if you read Okazu regularly and like all of the stuff you see here, and on Yuricon, please consider contributing to the upkeep of the sites. Thank you so much for all your support!

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Support Yuri News and Reviews –  Subscribe to Okazu withSubcribe with Patreon

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Yuri Webcomics and Kickstarters

Comic Natalie reports on a new Yuri love comedy webcomic debuting on Japanese webcomic site Comic Walker called Only You~ The Plan to Get You and Me Alone Together  (オンリー☆ユー ~あなたと私の二人ぼっち計画~). You can read the first chapter (in Japanese) for free on the Comic Walker reader.(The big red button with the yellow arrow launches the reader. )

A few weeks ago, we mentioned a Korean Yuri webcomic, Fluttering Feelings. YNN Correspondent TN has discovered that it is being translated into Japanese here. I hope this is a legit translation!

We found this cool Kickstarter from DieGo Comics Publishing: European Comics Journal #02 – LGBT characters in comics, with some nice, affordable perks. They are super close to funding, and are down to the final few days. I’ll be throwing a few bucks into the hat.

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Event News

After last week’s amazing Queer & Comics conference, there have been any number of reports. Here are three that you should definitely take a look at:

Elizabeth Beier sketched panels as they were happening and created these conference notes .

Sara Lautman has created an illustrated report of the event.

Soizick Farre created this entertaining video journal of the event.

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Other News

NPR has an article covering the Shibuya same-sex marriage law in this article on The First Place in East Asia to Welcome Same-Sex Marriage.

Via YNN Correspondent Elizabeth F and ANN, we now have confirmation that the Sailor Moon musicals (which have been pretty decent, I think) have reached the third “season” and will now add the remaining Outer Senshi. :-D

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Know some cool Yuri News you want people to know about? Become a Yuri Network Correspondent by sending me any Yuri-related news you find. Emails go to anilesbocon01 at hotmail dot com. Not to the comments here, please, or they might be forgotten or missed. There’s a reason for this madness. This way I know you are a real human, not Anonymous (which I do not encourage – stand by your words with your name!) and I can send you a YNN correspondent’s badge.

Thanks to all of you – you make this a great Yuri Network!



Yuri Manga: Renai Manga (レンアイマンガ)

May 15th, 2015

51Iqpki8CmLOne last book for “low expectations” week but, in this case, to show that having low expectations isn’t always the same as expecting something to be bad.

In 2011, I reviewed a book called Renai Manga, by Kodama Naoko, that had been published by Tsubomi Comics. I gave it “a warm fuzzy, comfortable 8” as a score.

Now, Yuri Hime Comics has re-released Renai Manga (レンアイマンガ). And it is the same, all the way to the very end, where a new chapter is new, but not any different.

Haruka is a new editor at Sweets Magazine, where she is assigned to manage her favorite author – the one who inspired her to become an editor in the first place. Only, Kuroi-sensei is not the fashionable woman she imagined, but a hoody-wearing recluse. Haruka pulls Kuroi-sensei out of her shell just a bit and Kuroi-sensei gives Haruka the courage to stick to her guns and stay in Tokyo as an editor when her mother pressures her to marry.

The end of the book ends up eating it’s own tail as it turns out that Haruka’s fan letter to Kuroi-sensei was her first, ever, and a charm she’s kept all these years to keep her going.

Now, since I knew exactly what to expect from this manga, I was able to pay attention a little more to small details; how Haruka is manipulated by the editor-in-chief, who obviously knows both parts of the story, how Kuroi-sensei finds herself after a long slump because of Haruka. I was also able to enjoy the now almost-silly climax scene as Haruka runs around town looking for screentone. In a mere few years that has become significantly less of  crisis, as so much more of manga is done digitally, it’s almost hard to imagine that this might have been a thing.

The original manga ends with Kuroi-sensei being honored at a party for the new TV Drama of her series. A new chapter turns away from the tale of professional persistence to – for the first time, really – the couple of Haruka and Sensei, who I now think deserves to be referred to by her given name, Ritsu. Haruka and Ritsu are, clearly, already important to each other, but Ritsu takes a big step and asks Haruka to move in with her so they can be together all the time. Haruka agrees happily. In the final panels, we see the editor-in-chief being not at all surprised and thinking that the two of them ought to get married already. (Ironically, since, as we know, they still can not legally marry anywhere in Japan except Shibuya.)

My expectations were low, but not because I expected this to be bad, but I expected nothing significant to have changed. And so it hasn’t. This manga remains a warm, fuzzy slipper of a story – nothing surprising, nothing alarming. Just a nice story told nicely.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 8
Characters – 8
Yuri – 8
Service – 2 Kuroi-sensei still needs a better bra

Overall – Still an 8



Yuri Manga: Citrus, Volume 2 (English) Guest Review by Day

May 14th, 2015

cirtrus2This was going to post yesterday but, reasons, and so today is Guest Review Thursday instead. ^_^  It is my very genuine pleasure to welcome long-time reader and Superhero, but first-time Guest Reviewer Day! It’s such a genuine pleasure to have you here above the comments, reviewing. This review is very much in keeping with this week’s unintended theme of “low expectations,” so, take it away, Day! ^_^

I would like to start off by stating that I really hate the cover of this volume of Citrus, Volume 2; on a gut level, I feel repulsed by it. Gazing at it and feeling this, I tried to puzzle my way through exactly why I felt so strongly negative about it. Yeah, sure, you’ve got a pair of underaged girls depicted in a sleazy manner, but covers like that are a dime a dozen in manga. Staring at it some more, it became clear to me that my true problem with it is that it’s centered around a third-party view – neither of the heroines look at one other, they gaze out at the viewer. Maybe it is that they’ve been “caught in the act”, but, whatever the reason, it still privileges the audience above the characters themselves. Sure, this is a piece of entertainment, so of course the audience is fairly important, but there’s something distasteful in making the sexuality of the characters so clearly performative.

After the impulsive kiss in the chairman’s office that closed out last volume, our primary lead Yuzu is twisting herself in knots, something that is cut short, then re-introduced at a higher volume, when student council vice-president, and self-proclaimed best friend of Mei, Momokino, calls her out. It becomes quickly obvious that Momokino, too, has a crush on Mei, and she’s perfectly happy to lie and interfere however she sees fit to preserve her chance of romance with the cold girl. Misunderstandings ensue and are partially cleared up, only to make way for some father-daughter drama that was hinted at in the first volume, as Mei’s prodigal father makes a sudden re-appearance. Yuzu, naïve, eager fool that she is, tries to help the two work things out, but even when partial success is attained, the cliffhanger is always there in the wings to chuck everything into disarray once again – and, yes, it’s another kiss, with an abrupt and disorienting swap-out to a bunch of panels of an unknown girl indicating her own entrance to the story.

I really must make note of Mei’s father before I can touch on anything else since he’s so awful. Dear old dad pops back into Mei’s life unannounced, drops a bombshell that he is well-aware will upset her, and then spends the rest of his time in Japan making no effort whatsoever to patch things up with the girl. He even more or less pushes his own responsibilities as Mei’s father off onto poor Yuzu; this is done right after he’s acknowledged that he hasn’t been a good father, as if someone can get a gold star simply for admitting to one’s own poor behavior.

Not that dad alone is the only character behaving badly. Mei continues to treat the people around her abusively, from being verbally so to Momokino, and physically/sexually so to Yuzu. Mind you, Momokino herself displays issues with consent, with an unwanted attempt at seduction in the student council room fueled by her own jealousy toward Yuzu. It is quite clear that Mei has a lot of issues (and, really, her acting out reads like that of victim of childhood sexual abuse, although I remain firmly convinced that that wasn’t the intent, but was instead meant to indicate that vague catch-all of “issues”), but that doesn’t fly as an excuse in the way she tortures Yuzu with her sudden come-ons alternated with cold shoulders and harsh words.

But my primary complaint is that Citrus doesn’t read as a fully cohesive narrative. In volume one, the wild lurches from one crisis to the next were funny in their absurdity, but here the tendency for the story to leap around is tiresome and stale. Mei clearly has lots of baggage that the story could be working through if it had more patience and wasn’t so slavishly bound to what seems to be a quota for percentage of pages per twenty that must be taken up by sloppy, saliva-drenched scenes of sexuality (often unwanted!). The arc of the story also demands that each time we have these girls kiss and squirm against each other, Mei must behave as if nothing ever happened while Yuzu agonizes endlessly, nothing ever advancing. While I am capable of grudgingly letting this slide in some stories, the complicating factor of the two being stepsisters stretches me past the breaking point, especially given that they share a bed as siblings; I quite literally cannot believe that something wouldn’t’ve given by now with such a set-up.

After spilling so much ink, despite prior statement otherwise, I realize that my true, ultimate issue with Citrus is that it is profoundly unsexy. Our would-be couple is unsexy because Mei is abusive, and the implication that half-sister romance will be the cure for all her ills is discomfiting at best. The moments of “intimacy” are unsexy since they are, with one exception, nonconsensual. And it does not make for a sexy reading experience when one feels the entire time that they wish they could reach into the story, pluck loose one of the characters (Yuzu), and give her a pep talk about healthy relationships and sexuality.

Even as the release by Seven Seas is fairly good (although the lack of an index bugs me a bit) and I truly want Yuri to be a viable genre for manga releases in North America, Citrus Vol. 2 completely wore out my willingness to give this particular story a go. Too bad.

Ratings:
Art – 7
Story – 4
Characters – 5 (I like Yuzu and her friend Harumin, but everyone else should be hit by a bus)
Service – 5
Yuri – 7
Overall – 4

Erica here: Well…yes. I agree completely. Especially in regards to Mei’s behavior. In addition to your notes about the perfomative nature of the cover, they also both look miserable. They clearly do not wish to be doing this thing. In fact, they both look close to tears. And I don’t much want to see anything that miserable-making.

As I keep noting, I do at least attempt to read each new chapter as it comes out in the magazine, but find, more and more that I’m just turning pages. I am not a fan of torturing characters as the plot and this has little else to recommend it.

Clearly we’re going to need to get a third voice to cover Volume 3 – someone who loves this series for itself, unconditionally.  Applicants can contact me at any time. ^_^

 



MURCIÉLAGO Manga, Volume 2 (ムルシエラゴ)

May 13th, 2015

MURCIELAGOSince we seem to have started off this week on a note of low expectations, let’s talk MURCIELAGO.  Volume 1 was an introduction to the story of Koumori Kuroko, a psychotic lesbian who uses her powers for the police, sort of, ish, and is allowed freedom to operate sort of, ish. In any case, she gets to kill people and boink women and be weird and creepy and awful and still be the good guy. Ish.

In MURCIELAGO, Volume 2 (ムルシエラゴ), we pick up in a creepy mansion on top of a creepy hill, where a seriously creepy old guy has invited a lot of assassins and is killing them off in creepy ways.  Kuroko had taken fancy to an apparently nice girl who somehow got mixed up in all this and, in attempt to sleep with her, is saving her from any number of horrible deaths. How horrible? Arms and legs everywhere…are the not-gross bits.

The creepy old dude sends his assassin maid (duh, everyone has one of those) after Kuroko’s group, because they stubbornly refuse to be killed horribly. So the creepy maid is super horrible and creepy and managed to kill the Yakuza dude, but who really cared about him? We were busy watching Kuroko take out the cameras in a room wielding a dildo that she just happens to keep in her bra. Yes, this manga is that kind of classy.

Things you never expect to read in a manga: “Congenital Insensitivity to Pain and Anhydrosis” Kuroko says (in English) when fighting Yukari, the killer maid, to which Yukari replies, “Not congenital, learned.” I found this to be hilarious, but that may be me.

Kuroko manages to cut both of Yukari’s arms off and save her anyway, and the cute girl, and the other assassins, then the creepy old guy dies a horrible death. End of arc.

While a lot of police discuss Kuroko in a locked room with conspiracy faces on, Kuroko gets some sex, which is good, because then we launch into a weird arc bout a little girl who, oddly, Kuroko seems actually protective of and only ever so slightly inappropriate with.

The art is intentionally messy, the stories are more vague guidelines to squeeze in scenes of violence and sex.

Ratings:

Art – 6 Still very ugly
Story – 7 Still Violence and sex, but mostly horrible violence
Characters – 8 Double the amount of psychotic women means it was twice as good.
Service – 10 Creative, awful and pervasive
Yuri – 9 Did I mention the sex? Not enough to consider this volume a “Yuri manga” But, still.

Overall – 9

This series is reprehensible crap. I think I like it. I can’t wait to read Volume 3.



Kampfer Manga, Volume 3 (English)

May 12th, 2015

kampfer3You know, I kind of had high hopes for Volume 3 of Kampfer.

Hahahahahahaha, just kidding, of course I didn’t have any hopes at all for Volume 3, because I’m a realist and I’d seen the anime.  I knew perfectly well that nothing of importance would happen and nothing would be explained.

Instead, Volume 3 is a lengthy diversion into the workings of Japanese “fan clubs” in which several self-appointed “fans” assign themselves the role of extorting other fans for the chance to spend a moment with the celebrity du jour.

Also so new characters are added, but as none of the old ones have any real purpose in the story, it’s meaningless plot complications all the way down. ^_^

It still doesn’t make any sense, but hey, if you’re this far in and still reading, you might as well keep on, only there is no more in English to read. DMP apparently has given up on this series and who can truly blame them?

Ratings:

Art – 7
Story – 2 Not even an attempt at one
Characters – 3
Service – 8
Yuri – 4 Girl Natsuru is the school idol.

Overall – 4

I would like to very much thank Okazu Superhero Day for contributing to my sleeping well. This was the book I was reading last at night so that my eyes would just sort of naturally close and I’d drift off. ^_^

I was going to write “I wish someone had made entrails animal plushies” then realized that no, no I didn’t.