Archive for the Yuri Manga Category


Kyou mo Hitotsu Yane no Shita, Volume 1 (今日もひとつ屋根の下)

January 5th, 2022

Starting in 2020, Yuri manga artist Inui Ayu began an autobiographical comic essay column in the pages of Monthly Comic Yuri Hime. For almost two years, she had about a couple of pages every month to talk about her life with her girlfriend. It is absolutely adorable, and apparently garnered enough support that it was expanded into a full page series in 2021. Now it has been collected into a volume and I, for one, am really happy to be able to read it in one place!

Inui-sensei portrays herself as a bit silly, but primarily to show us how her partner, here known as Kon-san, is so solicitous and intuitive about her needs. We are assured they both love a lot of the same things, they are both into Yuri, and idols. In one particular chapter, something that made me laugh was, as they both watch some media with a lot of female characters, they are both like, “Oh yeah, this so Yuri.” Wifey and I have been known to say that very thing, so…yeah. ^_^

We learn how they met, and started dating and eventually move in, about their daily lives, and mostly, it’s all a giant love letter from Inui-sensei to Kon-san. Chapters are split up by short Q&A pages where Inui-sensei and Kon-san answer questions about their lives together; how they deal with social issues, whether they plan on getting married, and what kinds of foods they like – a whole gamut of questions, very personal and less so. Inui-sensei’s art style is cute, with broad, blushing faces, but her characters are not infantilized. These are adult women, with fashion choices and hairstyles. I love the looseness of the art.

It’s real life, but only a small slice, of course. Nonetheless, as I am very appreciative when Yuri artists are out, this kind of comic essay makes me extremely happy. This is a pretty openly queer story, too, which gives me hope for the future. It took Comic Yuri Hime a long time to be home to queer manga, and the more we, get the better it is for Yuri, I think. I’m so proud of the younger generation of manga artists who are much more open about themselves and their lives. Yay for them and yay for us! ^_^ This is, again, the future I want to see for Yuri manga.

Ratings:

Art – Inui-sensei’s signature style. Lots of blushy cheeks.
Story – Small slices of real life
Characters – Real people, but presented in a way to make them seem extra adorable. ^_^
Service – No, this is about the love-love of daily life
Yuri/LGBTQ+ – 10/10

Overall – 9

A cutely conceived and executed look at a real-world relationship turned into a manga about life and love. Sign me up for more of this!





Fuzoroi no Renri, Volume 5 (不揃いの連理)

January 4th, 2022

Mikanuji’s Fuzoroi no Renri, Volume 5 (不揃いの連理) continues as a  smorgasbord of miscellaneous relationships between various couples.

In this volume, we take time to expand on a few previously established couples. A mangaka and her editor who bond in their game world, take their relationship into the real world, and it turns out it works rather well.

Two women meet in university and everything just works beautifully.

Minami has Iori now, but Shizuka remembers when they had no one else to rely on but each other. She’s not ready to move on, but Minami seems so happy now, Shizuka finds it hard to not be jealous…and she’s maybe not winning that war. The epilogue spends time with Minami and Iori and their happy life together and, finally, we see Saori reminding Shizuka that there is someone there waiting, if she cares to look.

The art here is primarily cute, emotional and sweet. The couples are living in that world where expressing one’s feelings is fraught, but the real world considerations that make that true, are absent.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 8
Characters – 9
Service – 3
Yuri – 10

Overall – 8

As a light snack of happy Yuri couples in Mikanuji’s cute art style, this volume is sweet treat.

No author’s note this time, but the book came with a comic on cardstock as Shizuka has a smoke while chatting with Minami.





Tsukuritai Onna to Tabetai Onna, Volume 1 (作りたい女と食べたい女)

January 2nd, 2022

I am so excited to be able to review this particular book as my first review of 2022! Since I first read this on Comic Walker, I’ve been super excited to get it as a collected volume.

Tsukuritai Onna to Tabetai Onna, Volume 1 (作りたい女と食べたい女) is what I’d like to think is the future of Yuri. Nomoto-san is a office worker who is stressed. As she sits down to eat lunch a male coworker “compliments” her lunch by commenting that she’ll make a great wife. Nomoto understandably resents the implication that her life is nothing more than practice to be useful to a man.  Angry, she goes home and cooks a massive meal, far more than she can eat.

Just the day before she had seen her next door neighbor, Kasuga-san, a large women, who had come home with multiple buckets of KFC for herself. In a moment of courage, Nomoto offers some of her too-large-for-one meal to Kasuga. And so, a friendship is born.

In this first volume, Nomoto will make meal after meal, while she enjoys Kasuga’s enjoyment of the food. When Nomoto gets her period and is down with bad cramps, Kasuga realizes something is up immediately because she can’t smell any food cooking – and so she texts to see if she can do something for Nomoto. I was all in, but that simple act of kindness pinged all my *THIS IS GOOD* alarms.  And indeed, Kasuga understands Nomoto’s issue, buys her pads, pain killers and they make comfort food together. It was perfect.

Kasuga offers money to Nomoto, because she rightly understands that Nomoto is spending a lot more on meals than normal. Nomoto tries to refuse, but Kasuga’s reasoning and sincerity would be too much for anyone. ^_^ At this point, Nomoto is starting to realize how much she enjoys her time with Kasuga and we can see that Kasuga agrees, when she invites Nomoto on a drive out to a farmer’s market. They shop for fresh veggies, eat ice cream and generally have a lovely time. They continue to have fun together, including making a 5 liter giant flan in a rice cooker. ^_^

The volume ends with Nomoto asking Kasuga to spend Christmas and New Year making and eating food. In an omake, Nomoto buys a brand new platter just because it would be pretty to serve something for Kasuga in. And indeed, when she serves her fried rice, it is a perfect platter. As Kasuga finishes every last grain of rice, Nomoto thinks that she is so very glad she had some courage that day.

Okay, in case you can’t tell, I LOVE this manga. Everything about it is just right. It has a woman who is not the same slim, small, fashionable working woman we keep seeing. I’ve just flipped through and I don’t think we see Kasuga working, but her work jacket has a logo is similar to that a large distributor of alcoholic beverages and she drives, so I’m going to take a leap and assume she does delivery for an alcoholic beverage distributor.

Here we get to watch adult women loving food and eating to their heart’s content without any tiresome thoughts on /insert something stupid about what women should or should not do./ This will always appeal to me. The way to my heart is through food and food manga. ^_^

I know from reading further on Comic Walker, that Nomoto’s thoughts about Kasuga will change and she will realize that she likes her, which you too can read if you pick up Volume 2. (That’s next on my to-read list.) In a Twitter conversation some months ago, it was also noted that this manga comes with a content warning for workplace sexual harassment, but unless I am missing it, I don’t see it on the book or site anymore. It’s pretty plain by Nomoto’s reaction, that she’s very uncomfortable with the man who approached her at work. Nomoto’s feeling are implicit in that one scene. I like that the story focuses on the two of them, without an external “reason” Nomoto doesn’t like men. The scene where she realizes she likes Kasuga is charming. It doesn’t need a reason, other than her affection. Update: CW has reminded me that the content warning was for Chapter 16, so I had forgotten something. My mistake.

Kasuga is a character marked with very subtle expressions. For this alone, I’d call this art amazing. Her face changes very little, but even slight shifts carry a lot of weight. Especially compared to excitable Nomoto, Kasuga almost seems to have no affect, but that’s not at all true. Nomoto and we can tell exactly what Kasuga feels with subtle, but telling shifts in her expression.

The focus on eating and mouths here is not gross, completely unlike a similar obsession in Blue is the Warmest Color movie, which I found creepy and intrusive.

In a lot of ways, I think this story is emblematic of a shift in queer story-telling overall. So much of queer work in the last century was rooted in trauma (isolation, rejection, ostracization, etc.). Now we’re seeing more positivity in our fiction and I’m all for it.  I would like to see much more Yuri sitting in a place that isn’t a closed-off fantasy world but also gives no or little room to intolerance.  Yes, of course, harassment and violence exist in the real world and yes, definitely there needs to be some manga that addresses that. And…there are some now and there will be more. I’m glad to see this one that is about something else entirely – two women bonding over food.

Ratings:

Art – 9
Story – 9
Characters – 9 We don’t know much about them, but what we know is sufficient to know them
Service – Does massive platters of food count? No? Then…no.
Yuri – 2 in this volume, more to come.

Overall – 9 but only so there is somewhere to go up.

And so I start this new year with a “best of breed” and declare Tsukuritai Onna to Tabetai Onna as a harbinger of great work to come in the new year!

If you get the book, there is a QR code to download the cover art as a digital poster…and so I have. ^_^





Matching App Yuri Anthology (マッチングアプリ百合アンソロジー)

December 22nd, 2021

Ichijinsha has a whole pile of new anthologies these days, almost all of which fall so far out of my interest zone, I’ve picked up only one of them. This one, Matching App Yuri Anthology (マッチングアプリ百合アンソロジー) or, as we’d say Dating App Anthology, I got purely to round out an order with Amazon JP.  ^_^ I was pleasantly surprised by the collection, but also have some thoughts about how collections are built.

I know I’ve told you all a million times about my experiences with anthologies over the years. Generally speaking, in western anthologies (other than those that are chronologically or alphabetically arranged, they go along a loose-ly defined pattern of arrangement: You start with a strong/popular story or a famous/popular person up front, then have increasingly imperfect/less popular series in the middle, put the weakest story/newest creators in the middle to 3/4 through and finish with a strong/popular story. Manga magazines regularly do this. You’ll see new creators’ one-shots in the middle of the second half of the magazine and really popular (so popular that they only publish a few pages once in a blue moon) in the back to anchor the super-popular stuff up front. It’s not a hard or fast rule, things shift around all the time, and “strong,” “weak” and “popular” are all subject to any number of interpretations but, generally, this is how it is done.

Except, for some reason, Yuri anthologies. Okay, okay, I’m being hyperbolic, but I can certainly think of other anthologies and collected volumes that open with the weakest story; something just so bleah that I’m hard pressed to keep going.

Yeah, this anthology does that. Pretty much every story was nice. The first one was a siscon story and….no. It worked on zero levels. Well, the art was okay. I read it, made a “bleah” face, remembered it had been in Comic Yuri Hime magazine and I had “bleahed it there, too” and forgot to pick the book up again for a few weeks.

Thankfully, the very next story redeemed the volume completely.”Cinderella Night” by Akatsuki Kazu, follows an uber ikemen-cool band member and an employee at the venue who end up bonding over cute mascot items. I loved the art style, the characters and the plot, which motivated me to keep reading.

The remainder of the stories cover a number of possible and  improbable situations; best friends who turn out to be perfect for one another, a match that just works out really well, a gal and an introvert, and an idol who just wants to be liked for herself. You might assume I’d also nope out of this one, but I thought it was quite nice.

The last one is an honest-to-goodness magical girl story, which was also quite excellent. Poignant and triumphant as well, somehow… .

Ratings:

Overall – a strong 8.

Other than that first bleah story, this was, honestly, one of the best themed Yuri anthologies from Ichijinsha. And, of course, the bleah is in they eyes of the beholder. You might love it. ^_^





Comic Yuri Hime, January 2022 (コミック百合姫2022年1月号)

December 21st, 2021

After the text-heavy cover story for 2021, Comic Yuri Hime, January 2022 (コミック百合姫2022年1月号) treats us to a new image-heavy, story, this one by, I believe the characters are pronounced Isshiki (一色). The cover has an underlying texture with image and lettering as a spot gloss over, which makes for a really interesting feel that aligns with the collage look of the layered art. The title lettering has returning to a a funky font. I’m mentioning all of this because I really like this. A lot. I love that they are coming up with wholly new design aesthetics every year and using the cover as art and story as well as basic information. Remind me to tell them this next time I fill out the monthly questionnaire.

Following this is information about the Comic Yuri Hime Pop-Up Shop that opened in Akihabara, and has now moved to Nagoya. You can absolutely buy goods on the online shop, if you have either a buying service or shipping service, like Buyee or Tenso. Of course I bought some stuff. ^_^

The manga gets off to a fantastic start with “Watashi no Yuri ha Oshigoto desu!” by Miman. We step right into Nene’s backstory and…wow. First of all, Nene is the first lesbian character in the story and she’s not shy about it. Secondly, we are quickly approaching a reckoning with the woman who broke her heart and I’ve got my popcorn ready. This issue was great – Nene’s long been my favorite character – but yeah, cannot *wait* for the February issue!

In  Takeshima Eku’s “Sasayakuyouni Koi wo Utau,” Yori is trying to understand her own feelings about Himari, including the jealousy she’s now experiencing. Part of what makes this story so good is Yori is very honest with herself and Himari.

“Kimi to Shiranai Natsu ni Naru” finally has caught up to itself. Bike returned, Megumi and Haru get dinner (at last!) and a new friend to help the celebrate their summer of freedom.

You know I don’t usually talk about Citrus, but this issue someone actually smiled!

“Kaketa Tsuki to Donuts” is heading for a climax, and so, inevitably, both Asahi and Hinako doubt themselves. Which makes  a perfect double header with Usui Shio’s other series, “Onna Tomodachi Kekkonshitemita.” Hopefully that one only has a 2-chapter funk to deal with.

I also don’t usually bother to talk about “semelparous,” but this page had me howling with laughter. I know some folks like this, but I just cannot take it at all seriously. This is comedy, surely?

And finally (for me), Inui Ayu continues her tale of how amazing her girlfriend is in “Kyou mo Hitotsu Yane no Shita.” ^_^

CW reminds me (thank you!) that this issue also has the beginning of an essay by Pikachi-sensei about life with her girlfriend.  ^_^ It really feels like a tipping point has been passed. 

As always this is merely a selection I particularly enjoy. There are other stories I like and others I don’t, but I am confident you’ll find something you like.

Ratings:

Overall – 8

Lesbians in two issues in a row. Smiling faces in Citrus. It’s already a great new year for Comic Yuri Hime!