Summer Reading – Little Women

June 24th, 2012

As a child, I read omnivorously – as I imagine many of you might have, as well. I originally approached this review from the perspective that I was too busy reading books about cowboys and horses and soldiers to have properly read a much girls’ literature, but upon retrospect, I find that I actually did read quite a bit of girls’ lit – both books for girls and about girls. So it kind of stuck out that, among all the books about soldiers and cowboys and barbarians and horses, I managed to read Pollyanna and Pippi Longstocking and all of Laura Ingalls Wilder’s Little House books, but I had never read Little Women.

This wasn’t much of a problem until I became involved with anime and manga. No one ever asked if I’d read it. I didn’t need it for a book report or a research paper (although I imagine that if the me I am now were back in school for literature, it would surely appear in any footnotes that this alternate me might create.) It’s awkward to have read so many materials that refer to Little Women and never have actually read the thing itself.

The story is more bound up with Yuri than you might initially expect. The first Japanese lesbian organization was known as the Wakakusa no Kai. Wakakusa (young grass) also happens to be the Japanese title for the Little Women. (These two facts are not likely to be related, it may well be a coincidence. Wakakusa is also a term that is analogous to the political meaning of  “grassroots” in English.) And, well-known to long time Yuri fans, the characters of Bakuretsu Tenshi are named Meg, Jo, Amy…and Sei. Lastly and probably highest on the list of motivation for me was the fact that contained in Maria-sama ga Miteru: Soeur Audition, is the the magnificent story titled “Joanna,” which is the specific moment in which Yumi and Touko’s relationship alters permanently. In this story we learn that Touko, despite being a first year student, has earned the role of Amy in the Drama Club’s rendition of Little Women.

So now, I have read Little Women by Louisa May Alcott. And to my surprise, I did not hate it. Although deeply bound in morality and gender roles that I myself do not particularly care for, the characters were real enough that I felt that the setting – and the lectures on morality that filled the corners of that setting – paled in comparison with the characters themselves. Meg was by far and away the least interesting to me. Amy is at first is quite annoying, but by the end is quite possibly the most interesting character, and Jo will always be an appealing character to anyone who is or was a tomboy. Beth wasn’t easy to like, being so pale, tragic and perfect. And now I think I understand why Sei is not named Beth and why in other references to the story, Beth is not named, but referred to. Aside from Beth being pale and tragic and ultimately sloughing her mortal coil, Amy’s eventual child is also named Beth…and is also weak and possibly not long for the world. Well, clearly we’re not going to name a character “Beth” unless we plan on killing her off.

Amy and Jo deserve center stage, precisely because they are both wildly imperfect. It’s not their accomplishments that make them interesting, or their successes, but their faults and their failures. Even though both end up married with children, neither really lose any of their essence in any way. Of course the morality play tells us that they set aside their artistic pursuits….but neither did so in order to be good wife, wise mother. Amy realized on her own that talent is not the same thing as genius and set her brush aside voluntarily since she did not have genius. Jo stops writing after she’s reached a certain level of success because…she’s done with it. Neither connects the artistic drive to unfulfilled desires or replaces it with more common, more “feminine,” desserts of marriage and family.

Okay, yes, I would have loved for Jo to be the crazy aunt, traveling the world and writing fabulous, famous stories from afar, but hey, this wasn’t my book. ^_^

When I began the book, I started as a fan of Jo. Now, finished, I stand with Amy. Like Touko before her, she charmed me, eventually.

Not a bad read.

Ratings:

Characters – 8
Story – 7

Overall – 8

As I fill in random gaps in my reading, I’ll review them here, because it makes sense to do so when they are relevant. Little Women was surely relevant. Next up in this series, that classic of lesbian vampire literature – Carmilla by Sheridan Le Fanu.



Yuri Network News – June 23, 2012

June 23rd, 2012

Happy Pride month to everyone! We have another week of fascinating news from all corners of the Yuri Network!


In honor of diversity and doing away with labels, today, you’re just getting the news as I slapped it down on this blog. ^_^

A beautiful essay on identity, pride and Sweet Blue Flowers – a very suitable start to this week’s News Report!

Alice Austen was an early female photography pioneer. Like her Japanese contemporary, Yoshiya Nobuko, Alice bucked society’s rules and lived together with her life partner Gertude. Their house, which is in Staten Island, NY is a museum. Learn more about her here: Alice Austen House. Since I have yet to manage to make it to Yoshiya’s house, I’ll have to at least visit Alice’s.

This week ALC proudly announced a new set of Yuri manga releases in partnership with JManga!

This week JManga announced my long-hoped for model of bookstore-like purchasing. From now on, you don’t have to have any subscription plan for JManga, you can just pay as you like. To encourage people to retain their subscriptions, JManga offers discounts for people who remain on subscription. I think that’s more than fair – and kind of a little excellent, with the subscription reward. JManga has now effectively “fixed” every single thing I wanted to see changed. I couldn’t be happier and of course, I’ll do everything in my power to see that you get more great Yuri!

Everyone tune into the Nozomi/RightStuf Panel at Anime Expo 2012  on Friday, June 29 6PM PST (it will probably will be live tweeted and live blogged on ANN) and get ready to cheer….!!

Aoi Hana, Volume 7 is slated for the end of July. I don’t know about you, but I can’t wait!

Yuru Yuri 9 is also headed toward bookstores. Once again, it’s being sold as a special deluxe edition or a regular manga-only edition. The second trailer for the upcoming anime is available for your viewing pleasure.

Maidens Garden 7, the Yuri doujinshi market in Kyoto, finally announced dates. It will be held on November 11. Amazingly, I was planning on being in Osaka that weekend, so I should be able to make that show and Comitia the next weekend back in Tokyo. That sounds like double the fun! (I’m tired just thinking about it….)

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That’s a wrap for this week.

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: Kanojo to Camera to Kanojo no Kisetsu, Volume 1 (彼女とカメラと彼女の季節)

June 22nd, 2012

Even after all the many, many volumes of manga I have read, every once in a while, a manga really surprises me. Kanojo to Camera to Kanojo no Kisetsu (彼女とカメラと彼女の季節)helpfully shortened to “Kano Came” on the cover, is one of those manga.

Akari is a very typical high school girl. She and her friends trade puricula (photo booth photos) and talk about bands and the like.

Akari notices that a classmate of theirs, an aloof girl named Yuki, wanders off by herself quite often. One day, Akari decides to follow her. As a result she discovers a whole new world….

Yuki is an avid photographer, and an enthusiast of old, dual lens cameras. Following Yuki around, Akari learns about photography and realizes early on that Yuki is very talented. The more she learns about photography, and Yuki, the more Akari wants to know.

While all of this is happening, the most popular guy in the class, good looking, smart, star of the baseball team, is showing an interest in Akari. She mostly puts him off, but can’t quite bring herself to outright refuse him. When she’s with Yuki, she feels as if she’s falling for Yuki. When she’s with Fukuyama, she can’t help but be interested in him.

One night, when she stays overnight at Yuki’s, Yuki manages to snap a picture of the two of them kissing while Akari is in the bath.

Her friends have noticed that they are being blown off. They become suspicious of Akari’s relationship with Yuki and jealous of Fukuyama’s interest in her. One day, they tape a picture of her and a picture of Yuki together and surround it with a heart, to tease her (not in a nice way.) Akari’s put out, but Yuki pulls out the developed picture of the two in the bath and that shuts the girls dead silent. It’s so forward, so revealing, their little attempt at light bullying seems childish. More importantly, they realize that Yuki has some skill, and want her to photograph them, but she stomps that down with a nasty comment.

Yuki runs off laughing, daring Akari to chase her, but Yuki quite suddenly collapses. Fukuyama appears out of nowhere and offers to carry Yuki home – after all, he is a childhood friend of hers. Cut out of the loop, Akari can only watch as the two lope off without her. And we can only watch as she watches, and wait impatiently for Volume 2.

Why did this manga surprise me? On the face of it, it’s a pretty bland love triangle. Well, the devil’s in the details. Fukuyama being a “nice guy” helps, but it’s the trend of stomping down the bullies that really surprised me. I’m seeing that here and there nowadays, and every time, I’m pleased by it. But what really stood out this time was what shut the bullies up was being audacious and forward. The lesson there is something completely different than it might have been even a few years ago. In the same vein, the mangaka profile had something I’m not sure I’ve ever seen before…a photograph. It kind of blew me away. An actual photo of an actual person. Maybe this is the beginning of that changing a bit, too.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 8
Characters  – 8
Yuri – 6
Service – 3

Overall – 8

I look forward to the day when manga artists feel comfortable enough putting their photos on their books.



ALC Publishing and JManga announce a Yuri Summer with Three Comic Yuri Hime titles!

June 21st, 2012

ALC Publishing and JManga are proud to announce a hot new collaboration, with three new Yuri manga titles, all from Ichijinsha’s Comic Yuri Hime.

Look for Riakchi’s Sorairo Girl Friend and well-known BL-combo Zaou Taishi and Eiki Eiki’s first Yuri collaboration Haru Natsu Aki Fuyu and Namori’s super popular manga and anime hit Yuru Yuri to heat up your summer!

Details about release dates (and some exciting news about promotional extras) are forthcoming. (Quick note, I’ve been asked a number of times already if this is print…it is a digital release only. Jmanga is not, yet, working in print. If this changes, I’ll let you know.)

Check out the synopsis of all three series on our announcement on Yuricon!

Jmanga and ALC are very pleased to be working together to bring you, the world-wide audience, more Yuri manga!



Yuri Manga: GUNJO, Volume 3 (羣青下)

June 20th, 2012

The third and final volume of GUNJO (羣青 下) is no easier to read than the previous two volumes. In fact, there are several moments that still manage to shock and appall, even with all we’ve been through.

“What would you kill for?” The brunette, Megane-san, asks the blonde’s, Sensei’s, sister-in-law, and she in turn asks her husband. It is a question that is buried deep in the heart of this volume.

Things we thought we knew, turn out to be not true, and the depth of the despair of Megane-san’s life only becomes truly apparent when she’s all but shed her last layer of emotional armor. Still, it is in moments where kindness manages to be felt for a mere moment, that brutality is the most harsh, and in the middle of the most intense violence when gentleness can be felt most clearly.

One of the questions asked back when I reviewed the first or second volume was – how much time has passed? I can answer that now – it’s been about a week, going on two.

As I read this story, probably about halfway through what would become the second volume, I conceived a wish – a hope. It was an insane hope, because there was nothing at all in the story that lead me to think it could ever come true. I desired, most of all, to see the two characters – the beaten, abused, unloved woman, and the woman who killed for her – smile. It was a ridiculous wish that could never happen.

The final half of this final book is the literary equivalent of lancing an infected wound to get the infection out. There’s really no other way to describe it. Page after page of confession, admission, digression, discussion finally brings the two characters through the last of their despair to the inevitable end of their story.

GUNJO is over and I have nothing left to say about it. It’s been wonderful, it’s been painful, it’s been sublime.

In the end, there’s only one question left for you to ask – Did they ever smile? You’ll have to read it and find out.

Ratings:

Overall – 10

Once again, I want to thank Nakamura Ching-sensei for creating this extraordinary story. 

Without question, GUNJO is the best manga I have ever read, and it encroaches deeply on the “best book I have ever read” list.