Yuri Network News – March 6, 2010

March 6th, 2010

Yuri Manga

Erin S. cheerfully announces that Comic Lily, Volume 3 is available for purchase. She’s probably cheerful about it, because she hasn’t read Volume 2 yet. :-)

Aoi Hana, Volume 5 has hit the shelves. More Fumi, more A-chan!

A manga continuation of the story from the CANAAN anime, CANAAN Sufiru, has debuted on cell-phone only in Japan. I imagine that that will cut down on scans for a little while, at least.

Next month, Takemiya Jin will have a collection, Girlish Sweet: Watashi no Kanojo – something to very much look forward to! Now all we need is a UKOZ collection and my top 3 doujinshi circles will have taken that so-huge step to legitimacy.

Gokujouu, that utterly awful book about idiots girls who are very silly, has managed a second volume. Oh, yay.

The fourth volume of Morinaga Milk’s Girl Friends is due out in April.

And the sixth volume of Sasamekikoto is coming out on March 23!

Ending on what should be a very strong (and certainly a more unique) note, Rakuen Le Paradis 2 is now available. Instead of supporting Comic Lily‘s mediocrity – throw your money at this fabulously eclectic anthology!

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Snatches of Yuri

Paradise Lost is a light-novelish manga about two women who met some time ago, and suddenly come back into each other’s life.

The newest Mai-HiME manga series, EXA is pinging all the Japanese Yuri reviewers. Since my opinion and theirs are frequently light years apart, take that information with a grain of salt. :-)

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That’s a wrap for this week.

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Yuri Manga:Tsubomi, Volume 5

March 5th, 2010

I cannot begin to describe how disappointed and frustrated I am with Tsubomi. It’s not like I ever expected it to have me scattering rose petals in front of the publisher’s door, but I really did not expect to make the scrunchy face so often while reading it at this point.

It makes me sigh, and not in a good way. I’m sorry. I don’t see what the appeal of 80% of the stories are. The art is not particularly skilled, the stories that are being told run the gamut from well beyond overdone to death to okay. And most of it is merely meh. The one saving grace of this fifth volume of Tsubomi is that the second volume of Comic Lily is so god-awful that in comparison, this publication looks pretty good.

It vexes me. I want to support Yuri, heck I want more than anything else (and maybe more than anyone else) to see a LOT of Yuri on bookstore shelves all around the world. But I can’t really keep throwing my money at this magazine and hoping that it will suddenly be something it is not. Like, for instance, good. You know how much I eschew delusion in my dealings with anime and manga.

Tsubomi is a collection of nearly identical “Story A” type encounters, and a few downright icky feeling or bad stories. Try as I might, I can’t come up with even one story that really stands apart from the rest.

Yes, I dislike “Ebisu-san and Hotei-san” less than many of the other stories, but that is more because of key concepts in my head than anything the story itself has to offer.

“Hoshikawa Ginza Yon-choume” is a story waiting to happen. Every chapter it inches forward. I’m not in a rush. I’d just like someone to tell me when we get to the story part. This has been the longest prologue I’ve ever read.

And Takemiya Jin has a story that takes one small thing – cold hands in winter – and builds a whole thing about it in “Snow Dome.” But that’s the problem – every story is a “one small thing” take on the same one chapter over and over and over.

There is a Girl, she likes another Girl. They like each other. The End.

I’ve been reading, writing, talking about and promoting Yuri for more than a decade now. Can we *please* have something more than this already? There are more to lesbian lives than just “realizing you like someone” “realizing they like you” and “coming out.”

Ratings:

Overall – 6

I’m not going to be buying this anthology any more. That’s the only way I can tell the publishers that it’s insufficient for my needs. That depresses me. Surely by now, we should be getting some better Yuri in our anthologies, not just more of the same old-same old, shouldn’t we?



Yuri Manga: Octave, Volume 4

March 4th, 2010

In Volume 4 of Octave, (オクターヴ) Yukino very nearly damages her relationship with Setsuko again, but doesn’t. This reason this time? She slams up against the “coming out” wall and gives herself a concussion.

Yukino comes to the somewhat surprising conclusion that her life dreams now include being with Setsuko forever. At work, she has been given a new talent to manage on her own. There’s a lot keeping her busy, but we can see that she’s still not comfortable with her situation. Sure, she wants to be with Setsuko…but she can’t bring herself to talk about it honestly with anyone else quite yet.

First, there’s Kamo-chan, her childhood best friend, from whom she is withholding the whole truth. It’s obvious that Kamo-chan knows what the deal is, doesn’t really get it and isn’t ready to be kind about it – and Yukino isn’t ready to deal with that, so she prevaricates.

On top of that, her new talent, Shiori, confesses that she likes women, has just broken up with her girlfriend and is relieved that Yukino is ‘like her.’ Yukino lies and says she’s going out with a guy to protect herself from being obvious.

Upset with herself, and even more mortified that Setsuko – who is gaining some notoriety as a songwriter – has met the man Yukino previously slept with, Yukino goes out with Ohzawa and gets exceedingly drunk. Not knowing where she lives, he brings her back to Setsuko and Mari’s place where she sleeps it off. When Yukino sleepily awakens, not knowing how she got there and only half-remembering why, Setsuko slaps her across the face and tells her to shape the hell up already. Which, remarkably, she does. She tells Setsuko about her conversation with Shiori and why she feels so uncomfortable. Once again Setsuko is far more understanding, intelligent and non-judgmental than any real human is likely to be in that situation.

Yukino, having pretty thoroughly smashed herself against the “coming out” wall, brushes herself off, apologizes to Ohzawa for everything and, when he also confesses that he likes her, she tells him plainly and simply that she is seeing Setsuko and let’s him deal with his feelings himself. She then calls Shiori to talk. She explains that she spent the night at her girlfriend’s, to let Shiori know that a) she was right and b) is not alone in the world. (Which is truly the greatest power of coming out.)

In the end, she has a very average, uneventful and loving text chat with the woman she can now admit she loves.

It’s easy to be fed up as Yukino very nearly makes a hash of it…again…but it’s important to remember two things. One, they remind us several times that she is still fairly young, and two, as anyone who has had to come out will tell you, it’s just about the hardest thing in the world to do the first couple of times, until you are comfortable enough with yourself, your life and the people around you to blithely talk about the other person in your life who happens to be the same sex.

In this case, the process is shortened to one volume of manga, but in this one volume Yukino takes leaps forward. It’s a good thing.

In some sense, I’m really hoping we can get all the way through Yukino’s journey and then still have the series continue – a story which would then be about two adult women who are together. At that point, with so much less of her energy going into the soul-searching and self-defining, I think Yukino would probably make a really spiffy manager. Here’s hoping we get to see that Yukino.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 9
Characters – 9
Yuri – 9
Service – 4

Overall – 9

I’m starting to feel incredibly hopeful about this series. It’s realistic, without wallowing in the more tedious details of life. Yukino’s growing up, and one day, I hope Kamo-chan can be happy for her.



Yuri Manga: Comic Yuri Hime, Volume 19 (Part 2)

March 3rd, 2010

The second half of Comic Yuri Hime, Volume 19 starts off with Hakamada Mera’s “Sore ga kimi ni naru” in which You is fascinated by this older woman who looks at her with the memory of a love she had in the past. This time You accompanies Amane to the library where she works, to see what this mysterious woman’s life is like. When You gets caught in a late rainstorm, Amane is confronted with having the girl stay over her place.

“Himekoi” is full of screaming…again. And I’m skipping “Soulfege” because, bleah.

In “DNA Double XX” Aoi proves that she haz mad fightin’ skills, but the Eves have better Yuri-service.

Amano Shuninta’s “Cell Frame no Mukou Kawa” proves that once again, there is a group mind behind anthologies, as yet another cosmetics salesperson find herself part of a plot. This time she has fallen for the local pharmacist, who is unreasonably cute with makeup. For the record – I prefer girls in glasses. Justsaying.

“Mizu-iro Cinema” has an awkward reunion between Yui and her former lover Mizuki, while Tae is a little slow on the uptake. After Yui throws Mizuki out, she worries that Tae will find the fact that she is a lover of women repulsive (as opposed to, “I don’t love women – just you”, the old-school method of avoiding having any lesbianism in Yuri.) Tae is way too sweet (read; doofusy) to let that happen.

In “Cleo the Crimson Crises” the story doesn’t end. WHY? Why gods, do you hate us? Oh, ahem. So, Cleo and Suoh go to wherever Cleo is from and people are assholes to Suoh, so she can be a snot-faced wet rag some more. Gawd.

“Sayonara Folklore” continues – sort of surprisingly, because there’s not a lot of plot there, but… Sumika is still in love with Takase-sempai, who likes her back and everything is okay until another student starts to scream at them, and tells the teacher about them. And Takase finds that she too is not the first one her lover has loved. What does not need forgiveness is forgiven and at the end they still like one another.

And, finally, in “Tokimeki Mononoke Gakuen” Arare and Pero, now in the world of humans, go to Arare’s house, Pero meets her mom, is terrified of her, and licks the bowl clean – literally. Meanwhile, Kiri mopes, remembering how Arare disappeared through a vortex…and suddently realizes Pero’s with her! The end of this story becomes ever more obvious, but you, know, I’m still okay with it. ;-)

And there you have it. Better than average, with more very good and good than not.

Ratings:

Overall – 8

A fine specimen of a Yuri Hime, and another issue that gives me hope that one day I’ll see what I really want in a Yuri magazine – something somewhere between “Story A” and porn about women who love women.



Yuri Manga: Comic Yuri Hime, Volume 19 (Part 1)

March 2nd, 2010

“Got your heart!” says the cover of Comic Yuri Hime, Volume 19. And so far, at least, it’s right. :-)

After some color illustrations that are less skanky than I’m used to, we jump right into a new series “Moso Honey” by the insanely prolific Mikuni Hadzime (of Gokujou Drops). Nonoka enters a new high school and is drafted into the high-end and rather bizarre Student Council by a “cool beauty,” Nozomi. What will this mean for the decidely average Nonoka? Hijinx and Wackiness, of course!

“Kuma-san ni Tsuite” is a slightly uncomfortable love story between a woman who obsesses about teddy bears and her long-suffering friend.

“Spike Girls” is really interesting to me, not because it’s a perfectly respectable sport romance, but also because Takemiya Jin is also doing a sports romance as Junk-Lab, so clearly he’s really into the whole idea right now. :-) Jun is recruited by by Ichi-sempai to play on the volleyball team, but unexpectedly finds herself falling for Ichi-sempai, who was in love with her own sempai. Jun confesses, thinking that Ichi-sempai will be disgusted, but oh, look! not so much.

Mitsue Aoki’s “Sweet Room” is the kind of story that works only if you’re reading an anthology of a lot of one type of short story and you are therefore inclined to be a bit generous about handwaves that are awkward, because how many different ways are there, really, to tell the same story. Nozomi find a stranded high school girl and takes her into her home, because 1) she thinks high school girls are cute and 2) the girl was stranded, duh. But after the girl makes herself comfortable, pretty much moving in, Nozomi begins to doubt her own motives. When Nana seduces Nozomi, she’s wracked with guilt, unti Nana admits to being 21 and having made up the whole high school thing to appeal to Nozomi, who she overheard talking about how cute high school girls are at the convenience store where she works. Heh.

Miura Shion’s Yuri essay touches on Sasamekikoto and “Para Yuri Hime” is Fujio’s love letter to a school crush named Waka.

At the the Black Cat Mansion, tutor Jun rues the fact that she rejected her student Chiasa, on their last day together.

“Mahou no Te” is another over-complicated love story about a girl who learns that someone who touches you on the back of the arm is sure to be your true love, or something like that. Nasu is passively-aggressively in love with Seri. They embrace.

“Renai Joshika” follows Fumi, who falls in love with the woman behind the makeup counter. It turns out that “love” is the best makeup of all.

And this section, we’ll end end with “A Knife Edge Girl” which was probably the most realistic “friend in love with friend” story we’ve seen in a while. There’s a lot of interior emotion and some very little interaction, but it rings true in that a real love story is not one story – but two. Each of the people involved has their own story going on in their head, apart from the other. While this story only so far follows one character, we can see that the other has a whole separate set of stuff going on.

Up to this point, the magazine’s been better than average and has a fairly high percentage of grown up characters, which I will never complain about. The level of high melodrama is lower, and so is the “afterschool special” feel as compared to some of the stories we’ve had in the past.

Also, I’d like to note that the tone of obsessive destruction that used to walk hand in hand with Yuri is pretty much out of the picture now. No knives, paper cutters or rooftops threaten our Yuri with the grim specter of suicide. These characters might be depressed a bit when they think their love isn’t returned, but Yuri and madness no longer are equivalent.

In fact, what I’m seeing is more of that tectonic shift to strong characters, characters with jobs, lives, friends, characters with hobbies and interests and – can you believe it took this long – female characters in sports! ‘Bout time too. Honestly, you’d think *someone* would have written an Olympic-like competition Yuri story for this issue. Duuuuuuhhhhh……. However, I am sufficiently glad for the absence of Valentine’s Day stories. Phew.

Tectonic shift it may be, but I’m liking it.

Part 2 next.