Yuri, Yaoi Manga and More: Rakuen Le Paradis Magazine

January 31st, 2010

In an industry that primarily determines genre by target audience, the rarest of publications is one for “anyone who wants to read this publication.”

There are a few of these kinds of magazines. Kodansha’s Morning 2 can fall into that category, as can F Comics’ Manga Erotics F magazine. Not surprisingly, I really like both of these magazines. The stories are really meant for adult readers, but the content is varied, kind of odd and offbeat. In Morning 2 you have a sincere, cleanly drawn story about a young man who is a rising star as a magician, right next to some really strange, supernatural, violent, non-linear crazyness. Neither Gunjo nor Peepoo Choo were at all out of place in what is an overall experimental magazine. Erotics F runs stories of adult relationships or gang warfare right next to something like Aoi Hana.

To me, what these magazine say is that there is a different manga reading audience. A niche audience. This audience is composed of adults who admire manga for more than just the heroic fighting or the romance aspects, adults who are looking for good stories, drawn interestingly.

I count Rakuen Le Paradis as one more of these rare magazines. This one particularly seems to be for whoever wants to read it, rather than a particular demographic niche. And it is the very first magazine that I have ever seen that carries stories with straight, lesbian and gay pairings under one cover. I can’t say I liked everything in the magazine, but damn if I wasn’t impressed with it as a whole.

The first story is by Kowo Kazuma, the creator of Junsui Adolescence. It’s a straight romance that I quite liked, with a decent bit of character building in a short space. Following that is what was possibly my least favorite story, also straight, about a guy and woman who were a terrible match and not at all likable, separately or together, by Kiko Urino.

This was followed by a story of an established lesbian couple by Nishi UKO. They are established, but not without conflict. One can’t stop buying books and the other spends all her money on clothes. They can’t stop fighting about it, but it doesn’t stop them from loving each other. I loved this one, I admit it. Their befuddled friends were a great touch. :-)

Mika Hisaka’s story left me a tad cold, but it wasn’t bad. After sleeping with the guy, she leaves him her key. I’m not really sure what the moral was there. :-)

The life of a salaryman is charted by Takeda Chu in a story that combines trains and koto playing. This was charming, but difficult for me to follow.

“Overpass Junction” by Asumiko Nakamura is a rather unique look at Yuri. A girl sees a woman having a screaming match with her phone on the train platform, and finds herself drawn into the other woman’s life…and into love with the woman herself. This was a totally different approach to girl meets girl than I’ve ever seen and I liked it quite a bit.

Unita Yumi’s “Know me now” was a lovely little ditty about a boy and the girl next door. He’s in like but cluesless. Lucky for them, she’s not clueless at all. I like this artist and I really liked this story.

Then came “On,” by Rendou Kurosaki, which was probably the ugliest art in the magazine, but somehow it fit the story. The entire thing is basically a guy having sex with someone, who you think is female until the end, when he turns out to be a guy. I was glad to see BL in the book, but didn’t really like this story.

Takemiya Jin’s “Omoi no Kakera kata” had something I don’t think I’ve ever *seen* before. A girl who knows she’s gay and is totally cool with it, a priori. She likes going to this woman’s cafe, because she gets to read, thinks the owner is attractive and basically likes being around women who are probably gay. When she sees a group of loud woman making another of their group miserable, she walks over and pours a glass over the head of the loudest. Ultimately she meets with the woman she saved, who is having issues about maybe preferring women. Our heroine offers to sleep with her to see what happens. Years later we see our protagonist working at the cafe and the woman she slept with walking by pushing a baby carriage happily. I didn’t love the story so much, but I hope we see more of the protagonist. I loved how straightforward and no-nonsense she was.

“Otome Loop” is some high school wackiness by Suruga Kiryuu that totally missed me.

“…Gokko” was a story that honestly flipped me right out. Hikaru Ninomiya’s story appears to be a brother/sister incest story. But. I really should have read the title. That’s all I’m saying.

Nishi UKO has a second story, “Mio Post” about a woman who sees another woman on the train every day and wonders who she is and where she comes from or goes to. The end has the feeling of a “fateful meeting.”

Kaya Shigisawa’s “Anata sae Inakereba” was, IMHO, a lot of nothing. Very typical relationship drama. The art was nice, though.

Rendou Korosaki weighs in with another supremely ugly piece about a woman sexually harrassing a man. It looks totally consensual, but messy and blecch.

And finally another Kiko Urino “Nichiyoubi ni Jissatsu,” which starts with a guy getting ready to hang himself and his meeting with a young woman who had just killed herself in the afterlife. It was all right. The art was good, the ending a bit typical.

So, let’s see, finally tally was 6 out 15 stories I liked. Not bad for an anthology, really.

In general, it wasn’t that simple to know who this book was for, which I liked a lot. I’m a big fan of ambiguity in target audience. After all, why shouldn’t books be “for whoever might want to read it?”

Ratings:

Everything is variable, of course.

Art – 2-8
Stories 2-8

Overall – 7

My gut sense is that most of these artists have established followings individually, and the goal of the anthology was to utilize the collective buying power of these fans. I hope it worked! There is an ad in the back that mentions a second volume available in February. I will be very interested to see where this collection goes.



Yuri Network News – January 30, 2010

January 30th, 2010

This week was the last week of having 4 jobs; as of next week, I’ll be back to my usual 3 at a time. Thank you all for your patience with gaps in reviews. I’m *still* open to guest reviews, so if you have something you’d really like to review here, email me and we can talk!

Before we start, I have a Mystery to Solve. Someone sent me an absolutely *beautiful* doujinshi from Romania. There was no name, no note, no nothing. Can someone claim credit and let me know who to thank?

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Yuri Manga

The pre-order for the first volume of Gunjo is up on Amazon JP. It’s got a February 25 release date.

Ordering from Amazon JP isn’t as hard as it appears, since all the buttons are the same size, color and shape on every Amazon, and the check-out can be displayed in English. However, I know that not everyone is comfortable with the idea of ordering from there. So, to make things easier, I’ll be coordinating a bulk order. I’ll let you know when it’s all set up, but here’s the plan: I’ll set up a link to take orders through Paypal. You’ll have to pay shipping from Japan, the cost of the book, the fees on Paypal and shipping to you. However, you’ll be paying a smaller shipping cost than if you placed the order on your own. You don’t *have* to order this way, I just want to make it easier for you if you want it. :-)

YNN correspondent Sean G. did some great investigative reporting this week, when he contacted Digital Manga Publishing and asked whether they had abandoned the Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha StrikerS manga. Their response was ‘We still have it. Lyrical Nanoha Strikers will come out this year. Vol. 1 is in September.’ As Sean said, “there you go.”

Octave Voume 4 is up for preorder, and the latest Comic Yuri Hime magazine has already hit the shelves.

The big news is that Morinaga Milk will be doing a color illustration for Yuri Hime. This has excited some hope that she – and therefore Nana and Hitomi’s story – will be returning to the magazine. File that under conjecture and rumor. All it really means is that she’s doing a color illustration.

CANAAN Volume 1 is now available. So far, it pretty closely mirrors the anime, which is both good, and bad.

It’s the Year of Nanoha! The movie is out, with a Number #1 song for Mizuki Nana, and the first volume of Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha ViVid has hit the stands. The story is excellent, the execution gives me nightmares.

For those of us who prefer the adult characters, the first volume of Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha Force is also available.

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Yuri Artist Interview

Speaking of Yuri manga artist Morinaga Milk (Girl Friends), she answers 10 questions on the Comic High website. These cover important issues like her unusual pen name and what items she keeps around when she’s writing, etc.

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Other News

It’s my pleasure to announce the winner of “Get this thing out of my house! Contest” from last week – Satoshi Miwa. Miwa, can you DM me on Twitter or email me with your address and I’ll get this fine example of unrestrained crap out to you as fast as I can manage? :-)

It’s all the rage to give away manga these days among the manga bloggers – I may make this a regular feature!

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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 Anime: El Cazador de la Bruja, Volume 2 Disk 4 (English)

January 29th, 2010

El Cazador de la Bruja, Volume 1El Cazador de la Bruja is magic.

In the final few episodes, we learn the significance behind the name and the agenda of Project Leviathan, come to understand and perhaps sympathize with LA more than we could have expected. We learn to like “Blue Eyes” and feel affection for Ricardo and his foster daughter, Lirio.

We watch Ellis change and watch her change Nadie.

Above all things, we watch them come to understand that they are far more than traveling companions to one another.

The climax of the show is ridiculously trite and overdone and sappy, and we don’t care. Why don’t we care? “When you have that sparkle in your eyes, that’s the Nadie I love.”

Ellis FTW.(I mean that in the old-school biker usage, not the new fan usage.)

El Cazador de la Bruja FTW. (This time I mean it in the fan way.)

What a great series. Now I finally have all three of Bee Train’s “Girls with guns on the run” series. Time for a mega-marathon. ^_^

Ratings:

Art – 7
Story – 9
Characters – 9
Yuri – 8
Service – 2

Overall – 9

One more time with feeling – thanks to Okazu Superhero Amanda M. for sponsoring today’s review!



Yuri Manga: Kimochi no Katachi, Volume 2

January 28th, 2010

Kimochi no Katachi, Volume 2 (きもちのかたち), continues to follow the stories of Satsuki’s relationship with Kano, and Mako’s relationship with Rina. In both cases, the relationship become closer and matures past that “Story A” space.

Satsuki’s story really takes off in what is probably my favorite of all the chapters, which centers around a most common object – a cell phone.

Satsuki’s father is rather strict and old-fashioned and he doesn’t see a business case for his children getting cell phones. So Satsuki has to rely on the family phone, which makes talking to Kano awkward. Kano lends Satsuki her cell phone, but Satsuki’s father hears her talking in her room and throws a hissy fit, assuming she’s talking to a boy who’s up to no good. Scared half out of her mind, Satsuki decides to approach her father directly and ask for a phone. Unfortunately, he’s a shouter, and starts to overwhelm his daughter before she can get started. Like some kind of miracle, Kano shows up, apologizes to Dad for the fuss and woos him into being quiet long enough for Satsuki to make her request. He agrees that she can have one, which becomes their next Sunday date. But that isn’t the point. The point of the scene, as both Satsuki and Kano later comment on, is that Kano sits in seiza, with one hand lightly on Satsuki’s back as she petitions Dad to allow his daughter to have a phone. It’s a beautiful moment. That small gesture claims Satsuki as *hers* in a way that’s unmistakable, without saying a word. Later on, Kano admits that she was terrifyingly close to asking Dad for Satsuki’s hand in marriage. ^_^

Meanwhile, Mako is making herself ill because she really, really, really wants to kiss, touch and do other things with Rina. Unfortunately she’s still horribly gun shy and, even though no one is stopping her, Mako is just not ready to accept her own desire. (As I once wrote in a story, desire is a terrible thing, because you can never go back after giving in.)

Mako’s previous crush doesn’t make it easier by telling Mako that *she’s* ready to accept Mako’s feelings. Mako’s making herself and Rina miserable, but the only one who can release her from her prison is her. Eventually Rina helps Mako see the light, and Mako and she finally are able to move their relationship forward.

For a series titled, “Shape of Feelings,” both arcs really fit the bill. There’s a genuine and heartfelt exploration of feelings and situations that a young woman who finds herself in love (and lust) with another woman might be dealing with. More importantly, the stories deal with the fallout of these feelings into other, completely normal everyday experiences. Mako’s inability to cope with her fantasies about Rina, or even her enjoyment of looking at Rina’s body; Satsuki’s fear that Kano will be stolen from her, or that her feelings for Kano will be discovered by her family are not unusual to anyone who has ever fallen in love with the “wrong” person.

I can’t recommend this series enough. It’s got strong characters and completely real, completely accurate feelings. Something that I’m glad to say there’s more and more of these days. ^_^

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 9
Characters – 9
Yuri – 9
Service – 2

Overall – 9

Congratulations to Sakuraike and many thanks for their fantastic work over the years!



Maria-sama ga Miteru Christmas Album

January 26th, 2010

It’s a day early, but today’s post is a welcome guest review from Okazu Superhero, Guest Reviewer, supporter, fan and friend, Eric P. The occasion for the Guest Review today is a good one – I will be giving a keynote speech tonight at the ArtsCAP’s Electronic Media Bootcamp in Asbury Park, NJ. Because my schedule will remain a tad overbusy until the end of this week, I make no promises about reviews for a few days. In the meantime, please offer a warm welcome once again to Eric!

Christmas Album: La Vierge Marie Vous Regarde

A holiday-themed review would be considered overdue at this point, but — better later than never, perhaps? Anyway, one may assume taking the Catholic schoolgirls of Maria Sama ga Miteru and putting them together to do a Christmas album would make an obvious and fitting combination. By and large, one would be correct.

I never saw any point in collecting the MariMite Drama CD’s because I can’t fully appreciate what I don’t understand listening to, unless it’s J-Pop or J-Rock. So when I heard of there was a MariMite Christmas album, I figured I should at least get this. I went in half-expecting to hear holiday music backed up with broken English (every time I hear or say those two words I can’t help but think of the song). It turns out that their English is actually pretty good, but if you’re really listening then of course some of the pronunciations may be off. But that’s really a nitpick that can’t be helped, and the seiyuu still sing with their own natural grace, so that it is easy to overlook.

Their voices go so well together, almost like an angelic chorus, with a melodic flow. It only makes sense that most of their songs are classic Christmas songs like “Joy to the World”, “O Come All Ye Faithful”, “Silent Night” and “Angels We Have Heard on High”. “Santa Claus is Coming to Town” with its danceable beat would almost feel out of place on this list, but it seems meant to be the one fun break before the seiyuu return to the softer tunes. The only other non-religious song is “We Wish You a Merry Christmas,” serving as the album’s appropriate sign-off.

Since the credits on the album are in Japanese, and it’s been a while since I watched the series, I can’t really tell which specific characters sing which songs. I would imagine that Yumi and Sachiko lead most of them, or perhaps it could be Shimako since that’s her picture on the cover. Inside is a booklet containing the lyrics along with a square-card version of the cover image. This card offers us in plain English best wishes throughout the coming year, making it seem like Shimako is praying as much for us.

The only downside is you can get so into the music but it’s over before you know it. The whole thing is literally just 20 minutes long, with 6 songs. They really could have added more to make a fuller-length album so it wouldn’t have to end so soon, but it’s still a very fine CD made up of lovely music nonetheless. You may not be a fan of Christmas songs, and I for one have been fed up with them over the years, but it helps to be even a casual MariMite fan to appreciate this ensemble’s rendition. Some time by the next holiday season, assuming this CD stays in print that long, feel free to add this to your collection (you too, Erica!). And here’s to looking forward to Right Stuf’s future release of the 4th season of Maria Watches Over Us.

Ratings:

Overall-9 (minus 1 point just for the short length)

Thanks Eric! I’ll be passing on this, because there is *more* than enough Christmas music in my house and as a non-celebrant, I feel happier avoiding it as much as possible, sung by popular voice actresses or not. ;-)