Archive for the Yuri Manga Category


Futari ha Daitai Konna Kanji, Volume 3 (ふたりはだいたいこんなかんじ)

December 2nd, 2021

One of the defining characteristics of an adult life is facing setbacks. You can work really hard, gambare with all you have and still not achieve the goal. Sometimes it’s hard and sometimes it’s just life. In Futari ha Daitai Konna Kanji, Volume 3 (ふたりはだいたいこんなかんじ), its both.

Sakuma and Wako work very hard to achieve goals and sometimes is just doesn’t work out. But that is not the point of Volume 3. Of course, it is part of the plot, but what makes this, like the previous two volumes, work is not what Sakuma and Wako do…but how they do it. And how they very much do it together. This is not a happily-ever-after type story. This is a two people who love each other very much, live lives and eat meals and sometimes life is a step forward and sometimes it’s a step back.

I would gladly read this series for decades and watch these two look at each other like that and be there for one another. ^_^ This series is not about Yuri tropes, like Ikeda’s Whispered Words, it is not about office romance, or relationship melodrama…it’s a wonderfully told and drawn story about two decent people making their way through the world and us rooting for them rooting for each other. ^_^

Oh, and their friend gets some sex, finally.

Ratings:

Art – 9
Characters – 9
Story – 8
Service – 5 Light nudity
Lesbian – 10

You’ll get to read this series in April 2022, when Seven Seas releases Volume 1 of The Two Of Them Pretty Much Like This, which is already available for pre-order through this convenient Amazon affiliate link.

In the meantime, get yourself someone who looks at you the way Sakuma looks at Wako.  ^_^





Whisper Me a Love Song, Volume 4

November 30th, 2021

When we left Himari and Yori-sempai at the end of Volume 3, they had finally, officially begun to date. I don’t know why this series was graced with continuation after the conclusion of Story A, but I am deeply thankful.

So here we are, in Whisper Me a Love Song, Volume 4, in which Yori and Himari negotiate the shape of their relationship, and we get a whole new plot! How exciting! Seriously.

First, though, Himari and Yori need to figure out how they want to be with one another and for one another. There are a few missteps, but they work it out pretty clearly by, wait for it, talking with one another. Crazy, right? Like that ever happens in a manga. When that happened and we were only halfway through the volume, I figured something was up. Any other manga, them not talking would have been the whole story.

So, when Yori admits to trying to be a “cool” date partner and Himari belly laughs and thinks that’s adorable, I knew we could sit back and relax. And, so the story heads into the tension filled Battle of the Bands arc that is still developing in monthly issues of Comic Yuri Hime, the January issue of which is waiting for me in the bookstore.

The first thing Takeshima-sensei does for this arc is give SSGirls a rival band. Woooo~~~ It’s great, too, because as the story plays out, there are a LOT of complicated personal relationships involved that criss-cross these two group and make for a fun story. Except for one thing. One person. Shiho. We finally meet Shiho and the more I spend time with her, the more I want to sit that girl down and give her a stern talking to. However, so far Takeshima-sensei hasn’t let me down and I trust that the story is going in the right direction.

The art has firmed up into an absurdly cute and wholesome style that really works for this series. Kodansha’s team continues to provide me with translation and character voice that sounds so real, I can *hear* the characters as I read. Terrific work, especially by Jennifer Skarupa for doing excellent retouch and lettering (I see you working on those word balloons behind the characters heads) and Kevin Steinbach for an approachable translation.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 8
Characters – 9
Service – 0
Yuri – 8

Overall – 8

Whisper Me a Love Song continues to charm and delight…and now the Battle of the Bands is heading our way. Is there anything more high school than that? (Well, yeah, there’s the school musical and prom, and finals and whatever, but you know what I mean. ^_^)





Whisper Me a Love Song, Volume 3

November 26th, 2021

I’ve said this repeatedly, but it bears repeating once again. When I began reading Eku Takeshima’s school romance Whisper Me a Love Song, I was fully prepared to not like it, because really do we need another school life romance? The answer to that question is…YES, yes, we need this school life romance. We need it like we need air and water. Our lives would be less fun and colorful and shiny without it. ^_^

Whisper Me a Love Song, Volume 3 is effervescent with joy and friendship and sympathy and love.  The air sparkles around it, while guitar riffs of catchy pop tunes play in the background. Everything about this series is so honest, it ought to hurt, but instead it’s just darling beyond my ability to describe.

In Volume 3, Himari is faced with a decision. On her own, she thought she might just one day realize she was in love with Yori-sempai, but that doesn’t seen to be happening. When Aki tells Himari about her feelings for her best friend, Himari realizes that she’s using up Yori’s precious time. Then Momoka-sempai shakes up Himari’s world by explaining that people’s shapes of love aren’t always the same.

And then Yori gets on stage and sings a love song she wrote for Himari…and Himari realizes what she feels, that thing she couldn’t define, looks awfully like love after all. I mean…who wouldn’t fall for an incandescently cool sempai singling a love song that she wrote special for you?

Once again, I think the translation by Kevin Steinbach is outstanding. Characters sound like people the age they are supposed to be (with exceptions, Kaori is just kinda weird. Her cute thing is not going to age well…and Shiho. What the heck are we going to do with this cartoon villain of a character? Make her sound like a cartoon villain!) Kudos to Kevin and TJ, Jennifer and the entire Kodansha team.

Ratings:

Art – 7
Story – 8 Two girls who are having a great time as they learn to love one another
Characters – 9
Service – 10000 where the “service” is two girls who are having a great time as they learn to love one another
Yuri – 8

Overall – 8

This volume is 100% pure, unadulterated squee. Any other series might end here, but…no, the story develops a plot and it’s just as wonderful as when it really didn’t have one. ^_^

Tune in for Whisper Me a Love Song, Volume 4, out now from Kodansha!





Watashi o Tabetai, Hito de Nashi, Volume 2 (私を喰べたい、ひとでなし)

November 25th, 2021

Surrounded by the dark, with only festival lights strung above them, a girl with light hair wearing a long-sleeved dress over a white blouse, turns to look at us over her shoulder, while a girl with long black hair and barrettes, in a pale shirtwaist frock looks at us directly, as they hold hands.Watashi o Tabetai, Hito de Nashi, Volume 2 (私を喰べたい、ひとでなし) is a freakin’ brillant volume of a manga and I really hope someone (cough/Yen Press/cough) licenses it so you can read it. ^_^

In Volume 1, we met Hinako, a young woman crushed by PTSD from losing her family in a horrific car accident at a young age. Hinako meets, and is saved from a sea monster, by Shiori. Shiori, who is definitely not human, claims to be a mermaid and is here to eat Hinako when she, Hinako, matures.

In Volume 2, we learn that Hinako has one close friend who is always there for her, Miko. Miko appears to be jealous of Shiori, and in turn, Shiori appears to sense something from Miko. They warn each other away from Hinako, but a fight is brewing.

When the fight comes, it’s nothing we could have expected. Everything Hinako believes is thrown into question and the truth is far more complicated that she could have possibly imagined. What she will do with that truth is subject for the next volume.

The execution on this volume is outstanding. Timing, art, narrative, tension building…it all works to make one of the best final chapters in a single volume that I have read in years. We’ve all seen so many new friend/old friend jealousy scenarios in manga – and, probably, life – that it was easy to dismiss this as a slightly darker Usagi leaves Naru behind to hang with the Senshi, but….it it wasn’t. And what it was took me so completely by surprise that I had to back up and re-read the volume, to make sure I wasn’t missing any of the interactions.

Hinako now sees at least a part of the world around her much more clearly. What she will do with this knowledge compels me to get Volume 3, which hits shelves in Japan this weekend! The cover is giving nothing away. ^_^

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 8 Ominous and compelling
Characters – 8 The more we know, the less we know
Service – Blood. Violence. Monsters From the Deep. Secrets. More Monsters.
Yuri – Hinako’s BFF is possessive, Shiori is infatuating

Overall – 8

I cannot wait to read the next volume.

 





Double Your Pleasure Yuri Anthology, Guest Review by Luce

November 24th, 2021

A cropped header of the cover of Double Your Pleasure Yuri Anthology. (I have used the cropped one as the full image whilst not explicit, is not really safe for work)

I’m Luce and often my curiosity gets the better of me. See also: I read and reviewed it so you don’t have to! Gave Erica a break, anyhow. You can find me on the Okazu discord as farfetched, and on tumblr as silverliningslurk. Onward, at your own peril.

Double Your Pleasure is an erotic yuri anthology based around twins, from authors such as Naoko Kodama who has done Days of Love at Seagull Villa. I think this is what they call ‘Dead Dove content’, also known as ‘does what it says on the tin’. I don’t know if I was expecting anything different from what I got, to be honest.

This review could be as short as: a series of twins having sex in various places. That’s pretty much all this is. If that’s your thing, then it’s great. I do find twins interesting… but not so much in this context. As far as I’m aware, sibling relationships are much more common in Japanese media than they are in English media, as are teacher-student relationships. I don’t know why – someone more versed in Japanese culture might be able to comment more thoroughly on it – but for some reason, they seem to go down a treat, at least with enough people to get published. I somehow can’t imagine something like this being published in the western world, but this made it here, so presumably there is some demand. I could possibly guess the type.

To be honest, where a third party was included it was a bit more interesting to me, but the focus on twins being so obsessed with their differences felt quite odd. Maybe it was low-hanging fruit, but nearly all of the stories featured twins either trying to be exactly the same, or very focused on the few things that they matched in. I’m not a twin, so I can only imagine that it probably is something they are concerned about to a degree, but I feel like most twins (I happen to know two separate triplets, too) I know don’t like being compared, and are no more interested in their siblings than non-twin siblings.

Basically, this is a fetish-catering manga. There is a lot of focus on nipples, and the sex is shown. The preview on Bookwalker has one full short story, and it’s about the same from there. One of the ones that particularly irked me was a story where two twins are very different… but their weights are the same. Why? Because the one tries to match her intake and output to the other. Loosely linked to binary stars?

Basically, if you’re into it, you’re into it, and it does what it says on the tin, and does that pretty well. If you’re not, you’re probably reading this with a sense of horror. If you’re curious, read the preview on Global Bookwalker, (with an 18+ warning to click through) and if you hate that, it only gets better in the sense that the rest of the book isn’t quite as non-consensual. Oh, did I mention that? In the first story, the twins get annoyed that someone can tell them apart and force themselves on her as punishment. It’s my least favourite… not that I had any favourites. I won’t be reading this again.

Ratings:

Art – 7 – mixture of artists, all fairly decent.
Story – 1: twins have sex, sometimes someone else is included, in one it was a dream. I think.
Characters – 2 – few characters have any depth beyond ‘I’m obsessed with my twin and this correlates to sexual activity with them’.
Service (level of salaciousness) – 10. Lots of sex. Every story. Dead dove content, if you will.
Yuri –  10, I mean. They’re all explicit yuri, so…
Overall – 4.

Thank you to Seven Seas for the review copy. I’m off to read something a little more wholesome.

Erica here: Thank you Luce, for once again stepping in to give us a solid review of this jiggly collection.

For my part, I was merely sad that none of the creators tried to do something interesting with the premise. Like, an astronaut returns fall in love with another astronaut of a space station and they find they were separated at birth…or something. But as you say, this is “a series of twins having sex” so, if that’s a reader’s thing, then that reader ought to like it.  ^_^