Archive for the Yuri Manga Category


Totsuzen Nantonaku Tonari no Seki no Douryou to Kiss Shitaku Narimashita.(突然何となく隣の席の同僚とキスしたくなりました。)

January 29th, 2021

I am so pleased to be reviewing this book today. Miura Kozumi’s Totsuzen Nantonaku Tonari no Seki no Douryou to Kiss Shitaku Narimashita.(突然何となく隣の席の同僚とキスしたくなりました。) is the first Yuri collection I have by this prolific contributor to Yuri anthologies. We’ve seen her work in the White Lilies BRIDE’s Anthology, and several issues of Galette MEETS, Ichijinsha’s Yuriqueur alcohol-centered anthology and Shueisha’s Yuritora Jump anthology. Her work is clean and stylish and often adult in several senses of the word. This collection also marks a new imprint to look out for, Taiyotosho’s Lily Love imprint. You know how happy it makes me when we get another player on the field.

The first story follows a workplace sempai and kouhai who find more than work in common. The title story follow Kobashi, a straight-laced office worker and Hayami, her colleague who sits next to her, as they realize that they both want to have sex…and decide that having sex with each other works for them.  Both these stories come back in later pages and we see that Hayami and Kobashi, despite trying to not let their personal lives ooze into their work relationship, really can’t. They like each other too much, These stories are wrapped around a few shorts that cover a vast array of set-ups from school to work to a woman picking up a stranger on the street.

The stories here occasionally have some angst, but generally they are all very pleasant, nicely drawn and many of them feature things that appeal to me, personally, like dinners out and couples being blissfully happy.  Just the kind of collection, I’ll return to to re-read and re-enjoy.

Ratings:

Art – 9 Just my type
Stories – Variable, but let’s say 8
Characters – I adore Hayami and Kobashi, so 9
Service – 2 Sex scenes are sensual and stylish, rather than fanservice-y. There is some partial nudity
Yuri – 10

Overall – 9

I’m ridiculously happy to have this collection from a creator whose work I enjoy. Thank you and welcome to Okazu, Lily Love Comics!





Hana ni Arashi, Volume 5 (はなにあらし)

January 21st, 2021

While we’re able to enjoy Makoto Hagino’s slow-burn high school Yuri romance, A Tropical Fish Years for Snow in English, there is another Shogagakukan title with a similar feel – the ongoing story of two young women in love for the first time. Nanoha is outgoing, Chidori is a bit more reserved, but they are both happily ensconced in their group of friends and doing fun things together. And, they are in live.

Hana ni Arashi, Nanoha to Chidori, Volume 4 provided another new flex when confronted with the “sempai turned me gay” script. Where Sayaka just flat out gets pissed off and is extra gay at sempai when they meet later just to freak her out, Nanoha is there for Chidori and the two of the let sempai know that they are, in actual fact, an item. So there. At the end of the volume, while fireworks explode above them, they kiss.

In Hana ni Arashi, Volume 5, (はなにあらし) they obsess about that kiss to the point of distraction, in the most adorable way. Then the school festival comes and huddled together under a sheet waiting to scare customers at the haunted house, they are wholly distracted by one another. But once they have a moment to talk about their feelings about the kiss, they end up kissing again.

Nanoha looks for all the world, like a cute energetic femme, but she was a boyish basketball star in middle school, we learn, as an old kouhai of hers transfers in. Mai was injured playing and has decided to distance herself from sport. Mai’s familiarity with Nanoha makes Chidori feel a bit jealous, but we can see she has good cause, as Mai is planning on stealing her beloved sempai away. I’m not that worried, conflicts in this series don’t last more than a few chapters, and Nanoha is more likely to state plainly how she feels about Chidori. We’ve dealt with Chidori’s past….now it’s time to set Nanoha’s past behind her, and move on to the future.

Ratings:

Art – 7
Story – 7
Characters – 8
Yuri – 6
Service – 2 Less service, but the gaze is still creepier than I like. But I feel that way about almost everything these days.

Overall – 7

I find this series less overwrought  and more service-y than Tropical Fish, but just as earnest, and a little bolder, ultimately. It’s hard to not like watching Nanoha and Chidori overheat at the memory of that kiss. ^_^ If Viz were to pick this up, I think it would do quite well for them.





A White Rose in Bloom Volume 1

January 20th, 2021

Periodically (pun intended) I subscribe to a manga magazine named Rakuen Le Paradis. It’s technically a Jousei magazine, but is an unusual one. Hakusensha lets their artists have a pretty long leash and so, one finds both men and women creators in its pages creating things that are not conventionally “for adult women.” The stories I’ve seen in the magazine range widely from cute school drama to BDSM. The stories have been straight, BL and Yuri. Some years it was heavily Yuri, and others less so. One of their best known BL names turned their talents to Yuri and so in 2019, we were treated to Nakamura Asumiko’s Mejirobana no Saku.

Now, in 2020, we’ve gotten a chance to read this series in English as A White Rose in Bloom, from Seven Seas. This volume is a perfect blend of a classic Yuri at a private girls’ school story with highlights of the modern world intruding at every turn.

Ruby Canossa’s parents are having trouble and she’s very much caught in the middle. Tossed by their selfishness into an uncomfortable and lonely holiday break nearly alone at school, Ruby find a cause to believe in. But her relationship with the only other girl who stayed behind for the holidays, school star “Steel” Steph, is still awkward, uncomfortably intimate and hard to navigate. As Ruby starts to build some stability, her parents make it impossible for her to stay, but she doesn’t want to leave.

YMMV, but I like Nakamura’s balance of overly dramatic expressions on Ruby, to Steph’s almost complete lack of expression. Nakamura’s got a Goya-esque style that gives everyone a long, lean look that suits the halls of a storied school for wealthy girls. Kudos to translator Jocelyne Allen and the entire Seven Seas team for another excellent job on a book that I hope people won’t overlook, thinking it’s just another school romance.

This book is marked volume 1. There is no Volume 2, yet. Rakuen Le Paradis (楽園 Le Paradis) magazine is only released 3 times a year and the magazine is pretty chock full of top talent, so not every story is featured every issue. I’m so far behind in Rakuen issues (the last one I read was Issue 30)I don’t even know what happens! I’m clearly going to have to make some time to catch up. But it definitely is continuing. Issue 34, the current issue (available in Japanese on Global Bookwalker) lists a new chapter in the table of contents. Good! I really want to know what happens!

Ratings:

Art – As I say, YMMV, but 8 for me
Story – 8
Characters – 8
Service – There is a little, but not what you might expect.
Yuri – 7

Overall – 8

In the meantime, you can enjoy Nakamura-sensei’s great nonplussed facial expressions and slapfighting in the hallways of a staid old institution…and wonder what on EARTH is going on with that headmaster, because she honestly looks so untrustworthy I am sure she’s a blackmailer in her spare time. ^_^

Thanks to Seven Seas for the review copy!





Strawberry Fields Once Again, Volume 1

January 18th, 2021

Akira is resigned to being a loner. She doesn’t want to deal with real people and is content, she tells herself, with keeping her relationships 2-dimensional. So when transfer student Pure states that she is from the future, is Akira’s lover and she’s traveled through time to attend high school with her, “skeptical” doesn’t even come close to how Akira feels about it.

Strawberry Fields Once Again, Volume 1 looks and feels very shoujo manga (or seinen version of shoujo…). In this case, however,  even though it apparently walks and talks like a duck, it is not a duck. For this simple, goofy, instantly emotional premise hides a much more complicated tale. Believe Pure…this is a science fiction story with a pleasingly complex plot, wrapped in a Yuri romance.

I was surprised as heck to have heard Yen Press picked this series up, but I’m kind of glad they did, just because it broke my brain a few times in Volume 2 and repeatedly in Volume 3. In fact, as I said in my review of the Japanese Volume 3, it took me three readthroughs to make sure I had actually followed the plot. I expect it will be significantly easier in English, although the story will remain convoluted…until it makes sense.

Amanda Haley does a fine job with the translation and I wish good luck to her in upcoming volumes.  Absolutely no mark against Haley’s work, the translation notes coming before the extra chapter threw me off, but I did enjoy the extra chapter itself with the antics of a hyper Yuri fan, and Kinosaki-sensei’s amusingly meta rendition of the “the iconic Yuri couple,” the Queens of Yuri, as I like to think of them. ^_^ Abigail Blackman’s lettering has moments of excellence. I know it takes more time, but personally I wish companies gave letterers time and money to also rework the art/fx; it’s not a deduction for the letterer, but for the company.  Folks like Sara Linsley and Jeannie Lee are really pushing lettering into previously unseen excellence, which makes companies that skimp here look…skimpy. I’m always, always, always, going to push for the most authentic reading experiences possible, because I truly believe that is what fans want. Which is why I don’t agree with translating genre terms. We understand SciFi to be a a valid genre term, we don’t need it “explained.”. Yuri and BL are also valid terms.) Thanks to Yen for giving us an authentic manga reading experience here. ^_^

Knowing what I know, ratings have changed a little.

Ratings:

Art – 7
Story – 7
Character – 8
Service – 3
Yuri – 6

Overall – 7

As a science fiction story, this series is messy and fun. As a Yuri romance, I find that I look back on it with more fondness now than I felt when I initially read it.  Thanks to Yen Press for the review copy – I’m looking forward to having a chance to reevaluate this series and see what I think this time around. Strawberry Fields wo Mou Ichido, indeed. ^_^





Comic Yuri Hime, January 2021 (コミック百合姫2021年1月号)

January 15th, 2021

The cover of Comic Yuri Hime, January 2021 (コミック百合姫2021年1月号) begins a new Yuri cover story. Where 2020’s cover story was art-focused, with few words that just gave context to the image, this year we have separate stand-alone short stories in a ridiculously small type size that forces me to use a magnifying glass to be able to read it. It is a vaguely time-wimey story that uses a desk as a point of contact between young women in different times. The stories are by Ren Hanna, with quirky illustrations by Kesshin. If it were in 12-point type I’d probably be enjoying it. ^_^

This issue starts off with a new concept  manga from Usui Shio. In “Onna to Tomodachi Kekkonshitemita” Sera is an freelance writer who needs a good idea to write about. She pitches an article on same-sex marriage. Her best friend Ruriko (who is pretty obviously is in love with Sera,) volunteers. And so Sera and Ruriko get married, I trust Usui-sensei completely to do a good job with this story and so far (I just read the next installment yesterday) I’m not going to be disappointed.

Also in the “not a disappointment” category is Takeshima Eku’s “Sasayaku Youni Koi wo Utau” in which watching Yori continues to be a delight. AND it looks like we’re getting an actual post-they like each other arc! Whoo! You can also enjoy this story in English as Whisper Me A Love Song. It’s charming.

Kakaze’s “Lonely Girl ni Sakaraenai” is moving past it’s initial pitch and Sakurai and Honda are finding themselves having experiences neither of them would have been able to imagine previously.

“Kimi to Tsuzuru Utakata,”by Yuama is taking a deeply emotional turn, but I’m rooting for things to move past the obvious conflict here.

And wow, do I actually have no idea at all where – if anywhere, “Watashi no Yuri ha Oshigoto desu!” by Miman is going. Holy crap. This arc has lead everyone to saying stuff they mean. I’m not sure I have ever read this many chapters of, “you need to hear this.” I love it.

“Hello Melancholic” has now officially ended. I am going to miss it, honestly. Minato’s journey hit me in all the right places. /sniff/

Usui Shio is gunning for my favorite author of 2021, with some breathtakingly real chapters for “Kaketa Tsuki to Doughnuts.” I swear to all the gods, if people keep having actual conversations in manga, I’m gonna die of happiness.

SPEAKING of conversations, Ohi Pikachi’s “Hayama-sensei to Terano-sensei ha Tsukiatteiru” was a-ma-zing. Asuka confronts her family with whom she has a very bad relationship…and her being with a woman is only another brick in that wall, until Saki helps her face herself and her parents. Next on to Saki’s family. We already know how her sister feels, so this one ought to go well. ^_^

This issue also includes a chapter of a serialized novel (in slightly larger typeface than the cover,) about a girl who admire idols so much, she wants to become one. It’s not a bad opening gambit for what it a pretty worn trope already.

And, finally, Inui Ayu-sensei details the happy times she spends with her girfriend in her autobiographical comic. This time, they go out to breakfast, because why not? ^_^

Ratings:

Overall – 8

There continues to be series I am not following, and those I am, that I have not mentioned. In my opinion, this was an excellent first volume of the year, with a lot of stuff for many different fans. Including those who are inexplicably still reading “Yuru Yuri.” Why? Seriously. The continuing existence of that series bewilders me.