Amayo no Tsuki, Volume 3 ( 雨夜の月)

October 21st, 2022

2022 has been an absolute celebration of amazing Yuri manga licenses and releases. Almost everything I wanted to have been licensed has been. Of the two remaining that haven’t, I am very hopeful that we’ll be getting good news in that regard before the end of the year, because this series is one of my favorite so far this year.

I’ve talked at length about some of the reasons why this series by Kuzushiro is so good, in my reviews of Volume 1 and Volume 2. In Amayo no Tsuki, Volume 3 ( 雨夜の月) we get the last piece that would make this series perfect, IMHO. Whatever happens now, I am in the front row, rooting for everyone.

The story begins with Saki and Kanon out doing, y’know, stuff. They run into a woman handing out fliers for a salon, who asks Saki to be a practice model. As it happens, she needs her hair cut, so Saki ends up there and has one of the most extraordinary conversations of her young life. Because…the woman cutting her hair – and doing a great job of it – has accurate gaydar and sees Saki for who she is. She talks to Saki like she’s been there  – for the first time in her life, Saki has a person with whom she can, should she want, confide in about the one secret she keeps closes to her chest.

Saki meets Kanon’s father who is in town to conduct his orchestra in a performance, and another extraordinary thing occurs. Rinne, Kanon’s younger sister, calls Saki and asks her to spend the evening with Kanon, so she’s not alone on the night of the concert, as Kanon does not wish to attend. Why is this extraordinary? Because it’s a perfectly nice thing a sister might do for a sister she loves…something we really don’t get much of in manga.

Saki invites Kanon over for a sleepover, but gets no sleep at all. She’s more and more aware of Kanon and her feelings for her. On the other side, spending time with Saki is definitely changing Kanon. She’s more open to new experiences. She’s having fun. And she’s looking forward to the next chapter in her life. She wants to be independent when she goes to college, but it also frightens her a bit. Saki suggests they live together and, embarrassed, admits that she cares about Kanon more than anyone else.

Mortified, Saki is ready to be treated differently the next day at school, but Kanon is the same as always, Saki runs away, just a little, still embarrassed…and runs into the girl who hurt Kanon in her previous school. Ayano tells Saki the story from her perspective…it’s honestly sobering. Saki will have a lot to think about in the next volume.

So this series is solid on HHD representation and perspective, shows families that like each other, but still have problems to deal with, pressures faced by people who are caretakers (even if they are self-imposed and/or misguided) and now, has added the last piece. Will Saki open up about being gay? How will Kanon respond? This series is #1 on my most-anticipated license of 2022 and I’m just impatiently waiting now. ^_^ Among other things, it’ll be the second time Kuzushiro has had a series licensed in English. Previously JManga licensed Kimi no Tamenara Shineru, which I edited and of which I have reviewed the first 6 volumes, it continued for many more volumes after that. It was so good, but super obscure. ^_^ I expect this one will have a much broader impact.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 9
Characters – 9
Service – Really not
Yuri – 4, LGBTQ – 6

Overall – 9

I love this series and I hope you all will be able to read it soon, too.

 



Tsukiatte Agetemo Iikana, Volume 8 (付き合ってあげてもいいかな)

October 20th, 2022

“The characters and the art have grown, Tamifull’s narrative skills are excellent here. We’ve been with them through a lot…and we’re still here as they enter the next phase of their lives.” In Volume 7, Saeko and Miwa moved on. Still friends, Miwa encourages Saeko in her new relationship. And Saeko encourages Miwa to find someone new.

In Volume 8 of Tamifull’s Tsukiatte Agetemo Iikana, (付き合ってあげてもいいかな), Miwa has, indeed found someone. But she’s holding back because 1) is it just that Tamaki reminds her of her old sempai? Or 2) that she’s older and therefore doesn’t want to – even unintentionally – manipulate the younger woman into a relationship. Tamaki, on the other hand, makes her feelings clear during their band camp. And so, Miwa follows her heart.

And now Saeko has to face the thing that she’s not had to face before. Her jealousy of Miwa was one of the reasons they had to break up, but that was pure possessiveness. Now she’s watching as Miwa and Tamaki are building something and she’s struggling with it. She’s grown up a bit…and she has her own relationship to deal with. But…

At the band’s first live club performance, Miwa meets Yuria for the first time…and they get along famously, leaving Saeko to comedically worry what they are saying about her. ^_^ It’s a stereotypical scene, but one that works every time. ^_^

Tamaki is very serious about this relationship with Miwa. Saeko is still working on her boundaries with Yuria. All is well, as the volume comes to an end and Tamaki invites herself over to Miwa’s place with very definite mischief in mind.

This volume feels exactly like the moment a clogged drain starts working again. Everything that had blocked up between Miwa and Saeko is gone and they can support and love one another as friends. Seeing them root for each other (even if sometimes Saeko is faking it, which is going to have to be a thing addressed in a future volume) is so much better a feeling than watching them struggle to make sense of them as a couple. The band stuff always feels tangential, but it’s not – it’s very much part of their lives. This is what life looks like – people and places and activities that slip by almost before you can remember it happened and the next thing, you’re older and making a whole new set of mistakes. ^_^

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 9
Characters – 9
Yuri – 9
Service – 5

Overall – 9

I am convinced that if the manga had started here in Volume 8 it would not have been as popular as it is, but having started where it did, it resonated with a lot of people…and nwo we’re seeing a path forward. If I had to guess, I’d say this series ends at graduation. It’ll be interesting to see where it does go from here. Volume 9 sports a different cover design again, I assume it’ll take us in a new direction!



Ohana Holoholo, Volume 1 French Edition, Autour d’elles, Guest Review by Fraise

October 19th, 2022

Hello and welcome to Guest Review Wednesday on Okazu! We have a brand new reviewer today and I’m very excited, because she’s reviewing a series that I loved in Japanese, but which has not made it to English. I reviewed the whole series in Japanese here on Okazu and found it complex and compelling. I hope our French-speakers in the audience will pick this series up. The mic is yours, Fraise!

In a few words: I am a historian (M.A.) specialized in popular and scientific representations in media, mainly newspapers. I write mostly non-fiction under my legal name but will occasionally dabble in fiction under my pen name. You can fine me on Twitter @aurantium.

“Loneliness is the human condition. Cultivate it. The way it tunnels into you allows your soul room to grow.  Never expect to outgrow loneliness. Never hope to find people who will understand you, someone to fill that space. An intelligent, sensitive person is the exception, the very great exception. If you expect to find people who will understand you, you will grow murderous with disappointment.”
                                                                                         – Janet Finch, White Oleander

« Rien ne vaut son chez-soi. »
“There’s no place like one’s home.”

During their college years, beautiful, poised Maya and “wild child” Michiru were a couple…depending on Michiru’s whims. Small and elusive, Michiru kept throwing herself in anyone’s arms, men and women alike, as if to try and get rid of something by doing so. Nonetheless, she often ended up finding Maya to the point of “squatting” in the same studio as her. Thus continued their strange but peaceful days, until Maya’s disappearance one fateful morning… Only for the woman to reappear five years later on Maya’s doorstep, accompanied by her young son, Yûta. The two women, still attached to each other, decide to live together again, the small makeshift family of three later completed by a fourth member: Nico, an actor with a mysterious connectionand a deep attachment to Yûta. Thus begins a new daily life for each one of them, between work, school, friendship and family.

Thus starts the first volume of Ohana Horohoro (オハナホロホロ), or rather Autour d’elles as it is called in French. A series published in Japan from 2008 to early 2014 inside Shôdensha editions’ Feel Young magazine (the same magazine that published Sakurazawa Erica’s Sheets no Sukima, Between the Sheets in English to give an example) and later in six volumes, it was later translated and distributed in French countries from 2020 to 2021 by Akata. A small note for international readers who may not know about the world of French manga publishers: created in 2001 by Dominique Véret, his wife Sylvie Véret Chang, Erwan Le Verger and Sahé Cibot, Akata is a publisher that, in the last couple of years, has been specializing itself in publishing mangas that deal with various societal topics, from LGBTQ+ topics (Ohana Holoholo, If We Were Adults, Boys Run the Riot) to disabilities (Perfect World, The Sound of my Soul), as well as sexual violence and abuse (Sensei’s Pious Lie). Autour d’elles also serves as the introduction of author Shino Torino to the French-language public, a rather atypical mangaka trying to stay away from formatted magazines so she can keep developing her personal artistic style, and who is recognized in Japan for her way of drawing very human and contemporary characters.

As mentioned before, this series was translated as Autour d’elles in French, which means “Around them”. And it is indeed a fitting title, for around our main “couple” gravitates several colorful characters: Yûta, Michiru’s quiet and sensitive young son, who loves pudding, rocks and Giga Rangers; Nico, their womanizing downstairs neighbor, who can be seen almost constantly squatting in their apartment; and finally  Kuwabara “Hidesuke” Eisuke, an old classmate of Maya that Michiru nicknames “Uglysuke” (Hideuxsuke in the French text). These three  characters (for now) all exist around the pair, and each are given an agreeable degree of characterization, to the point they seem more like full-fleshed characters in their own right, rather than fodder to help our two heroines develop. This first volume also hints at each of them having their own arc and story, in which Maya and Michiru play a prominent role (Yûta) or a more subtle one (Nico, Hidesuke).

From the get-go, one of the most interesting aspects of this series are the visual. Torino succeeds at creating a unique slice-of-life tone that can mix humor and melancholy in the same page thanks to an intertwined narration (where we follow both the characters’ actions and their thoughts) and using black bands to bring out the thoughts. The backgrounds are detailed, small secondary texts adorn various pages, all seem suit to accompany what can only be described as a rich and rather complex narrative, which manages to hit right in the heart. As for the characters, Torino showcases here multiple warm silhouettes with multiple facial expressions, and with emotions that can be deliciously exaggerated in the funniest of ways. The best examples of this are Nico constantly gagging over Yûta, Michiru’s jealous fit over Maya and Hidesuke reconnecting, and finally Yûta with his bright eyes filled with sparks of wonder when happy, and the sorrow in them when sad.

And yet, in spite of all the gorgeous details, Torino also succeeds at crafting an incredible story, with a very specific topic at its center: family, or rather the (imagined, occasionally dramaticized) reality of a blended family, to which Torino adds an LGBTQ+ element via its heroines, who still love each other without resuming a relationship together (they are just roommates for now, keyword: for now), and who come to occupy both a role of mom to Yûta, with Nico acting as something along the lines of a big brother/friendly uncle. With this first volume, Torino also  shows up the formation of this new unit, as well as its ups and downs, like in any family out there.

And now, it comes down to Maya and Michiru, our main couple… Or rather, duo, for the women have agreed not to resume a relationship.  Although we are told that they used to be together in the past, the first volume shows us exactly why this relationship might have fallen apart, with a Michiru who seems afraid of loneliness and starved for affection, to the point where she literally runs away with Yûta to her  mother’s house the moment she considers that Maya and Hidesuke might start dating after spotting them having a conversation. This all  escalates to an hilarious scene where she takes refuge alongside Yûta at Nico’s apartment, attempting to convince the young man to marry her if Maya decides to go forward with Hidesuke. Needless to say, Nico refuses, for his own reasons and also because he is aware that Michiru is acting on the count of loneliness and despair.

Maya might seem more poised at first sight, the more responsible of the two, yet she has her own demons as well. She does not trust Michiru at all, often acting more like a mother or big sister than a roommate or romantic partner. The first chapter showcases it well, with her literally scolding Michiru for acting up like a child when she throws a tantrum over Yûta and Nico eating her beloved pudding. And yet, she is just as lonely as her roommate, affirming inside her mind that she deserves to be. That Michiru keeps running away from her because she cannot provide the affection the other woman is looking for. It is therefore obvious to the reader that resuming the relationship can only end up in disaster once more, in spite of how much both women want to… Thus giving Torino enough room in the future to develop both characters, and bring them in a position to enter a much healthier relationship with one another than the first

And yet, for now, one cannot help but root for them… And with a scene like the one that closes our first chapter, with both women leaning over each other as the sun rises, who could resist?

Concerning the French edition, the translation from Japanese to French was done by Jordan Sinnes (who also worked on the French language edition of Even Though We’re Adults, also published by Akata) who succeeds in translating, in Molière’s language, the different atmospheres and emotions of the original Japanese text. The quality of the paper and the printing are also remarkable, despite a couple of pages that are a little transparent. The cover is also very soft to the touch, and this first volumes opens up with a gorgeous first page in full color,
depicting the small family having dinner.

Ratings:

ART – 9 : Shino Torino’s art is incredible, and has been praised in both her native country and in French language press alike. One thing to note, she used to be a chief assistant to her friend Chica Umino (March comes in like a Lion, Honey and Clover), with whom she has collaborated more than once on various fanzines. Thus, many publications cannot help but compare the two, albeit I’d argue both women have distinctive styles.
STORY – 8 : the first volume does an amazing job at establishing the world, the characters, their relationships, and so on, while also establishing the foundation of the main storyline, with Hidesuke’s resurgence in Maya’s life being the trigger.
CHARACTERS – 8 : As mentioned, each character feels rounded, with virtues and flaws alike. An extra point goes to Yûta, who is probably amongst the cutest kids in manga.
SERVICE – 3 : Michiru is shown nude once in a brief moment in the first chapter, and topless multiple times in the first bonus story. Said topless scene includes details such as nipples, but in a non-sexual manner. I’d even argue there is something compelling, even beautiful about her naked half, and Maya seems to agree.
YURI – 8 : Michiru and Maya were a couple once, and the manga explicitly hints at both women’s desire to resume their relationship. As a side-note, Michiru and Maya, as well as Nico are all bisexual, and Nico and Maya are said to have dated both men and women. Maya, for her
part, has chemistry with Hidesuke, and was in a relationship with Michiru before her disappearance.

OVERALL – 8 (puddings out of 10)

Autour d’elles, on Akata’s website (French only):
French edition, on Amazon.fr
French edition, on Amazon.ca
Japanese edition of Ohana HoloHolo (), on Amazon.co.jp

Erica here: A fabulously in-depth review, thank you Fraise! This series really blew me away in Japanese and I am so very excited for French Yuri fans to be able to read it! This has a good old classic 00s Jousei feel and Torino’s art is solid Feel Young gold. Vous êtes tous tellement chanceux!



Queer Transfigurations: Boys Love Media in Asia

October 16th, 2022

I treated myself to a copy of Queer Transfigurations: Boys Love Media in Asia, edited by James Welker recently and I honestly found it to be really inspiring.  Obviously, Boys Love media as such is not terribly interesting to me, but the way fandom creates, interacts with and consumes it, is.  While I read the various essays in this book, I found myself having some of my questions answered and new ones forming. As a result, I will (eventually) be making a survey to do some primary research on Yuri fandom  and I hope you’ll help me out when it’s done by filling it out. ^_^

In the meantime, I found the various essays in this book really interesting in part for the history of how BL media made inroads in various Asian countries outside Japan (mostly through scanlations,) and how various local fandoms have absorbed and adapted BL concepts to fit their own ideals and circumstances. Additionally, a few of the essays discuss the response to BL from queer fandom (and in a few, the impact queer fandom has had on BL.)

Which is where my brain kind of stuck. There’s a lot of throwing the word “queering” around in regards to BL and this got me thinking. IMHO, there are a number of gaps between 1) media being queered by a straight audience and media being queered by a queer audience or; 2) between queer media and straight media being queered; or 3) by queer media being consumed by straight folks as opposed to queer folks. Fundamentally, it is hard for me to credit the “queering” of straight media by straight people as being “queer” in any meaningful sense. Nonetheless, this appeared to be a commonly held assumption about BL based on this selection of articles. (Of which some of the writers are, I know, to be queer themselves.) 

My thoughts as I read these essays often turn to the idea of replacing “BL” with “lesbian porn.” If a writer is making a statement about BL’s inherent queerness that might sound absurd if I replaced it with “lesbian porn,” I question if it could be true. Is straight people creating queerness out of mainstream media “queer?” Is a straight folks imagining lesbian sex between two female movie stars “queer?” Why might one be “queer” and the other not? I have no answers, but I do have a lot of questions. Some of which I will ask James when I interview him for Casa Con this December!

Also interesting for me was the several mentions of misogyny in BL and BL fandom and it’s impact on and relation to local feminisms. I have seen how BL empowered women…and also how some empowered by fandom, turn on other marginalized folks in their communities. Is that changing? Is it worse or better than it used to be? I can answer that a little for Yuri, but not for BL.

Lastly, there were some tidbits of research subjects talking about how BL helped them either empathize with gay issues, or find their own queer identities and that interested me a lot, so that’s probably where I’m going to be focusing my research. How has Yuri made an impact on fans’ identities and sympathies? Let’s find out!

Overall, I found this book to be a fun and interesting read. Few of the articles were bogged down in over-dense language. I was especially interested in the section on China as mostly everyone can see that danmei is already the next big cultural export from China…even as it’s not apparently acceptable by their own media laws.

Ratings:

Overall – 9

If you’d like to understand how fandom studies look from the inside, or are interested in BL and/or queer media studies, I highly recommend Queer Transfigurations: Boys Love Media in Asia. It got me thinking – I look forward to seeing what comes out of this thought and I hope you do, too. ^_^



Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – October 15, 2022

October 15th, 2022

Yuri Events

I am a guest at Women In Comics Con at the Bronx Library Center on October 29, from 11-6. Admission is free! Rica Takashima and I will both be there.

And I’m a guest at AnimeNYC on November 18-20 in Javits Convention Center in NYC. I really hope you’ll all make plans to be there…it’s a great convention for fans of anime and manga.

Girls Love Fest is being held in the Tokyo Metropolitan Industrial Trade Center Hamamatsuchō on November 23.

Comitia will be held once again at Tokyo Big Sight on November 27.

I hope to all the gods that these two events are on the same week next year, too. Because that’s when I plan on going back to Japan. ^_^

 

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Yuri Anime

Joanna Cayanan on ANN reports on The Magical Revolution of the Reincarnated Princess Anime’s 2nd Video Cast, Opening Song, and Debut.

 

Yuri VNs

Our friends at Aikasa Collective want you to keep an eye out for their upcoming Kickstarter: Red Rebellion! This is a “a sapphic fairy tale mashup as Robin Hood teams up with Red Riding Hood to save their town, in this yuri / lesbian historical fantasy.” Sounds fun!

Ratalaika Games and Visual Novels wants you to know about their VN A Year of Springs, which is available on the PS4 and PS5. Don’t worry if you missed the sale the games are priced pretty low. This VN explores “the stories of Haru, Erika, and Manami … a visual novel trilogy about three friends navigating their feelings of love, connection, and just wanting to belong.”

 

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Yuri Light Novels

J-Novel Club has announced new pre-publication chapters of Yuri Tama: From Third Wheel to Trifecta about a two-timing school lotharia. (Yes, I know that “lothario” has no feminine form as a noun. It does now. ^_^)

 

Yuri Webtoons

Via Yuri Mother, Filipino artist Logihy has a new series called Careless x Confidential on Pinoy Comiks site Penlab. Check out Chapter 1 right now. The art is very slick.

On Color_LES’s facebook page, the creator of Mage and Demon Queen has announced Velverosa and Malori plushies!

 

Other News

Global Bookwalker is offering up to 50% coin back on selected titles to celebrate it’s 7th anniversary! Some Yuri titles and J-Novel club titles (sadly, not Yuri Tama) are included. Check out the sale this weekend. I picked up Volume 1 of Is Kichijoji The Only Place To Live? for 50% coin back. This was recommended by Christopher Woodrow Butcher on this week’s Mangasplaining podcast. The first chapter talks about Zoshigaya, of which I am very fond…so I was instantly hooked. ^_^

YNN Correspondent Patricia Baxter has written in to let us know of the “2022 ShortBox Comics Fair. Patricia says, “It’s a digital comics fair devoted to showcasing a large variety of brand new comics by various cartoonists from around the world. On top of the majority of the cartoonists being LGBTQ+, most of the comics showcased this year revolve around queer themes, especially sapphic characters and couples. The fair will be hosted throughout the month of October, the creators get to keep the rights to their comics, and 100% of the sales go directly to the cartoonists.” Thanks Patricia – I’ve seen a lot of good stuff popping up from this event!

ANN’s Kim Morrisy reports that Bushiroad’s New D4DJ Unit Includes Lesbian Couple. I was thinking about this and wondering if it was indeed, as Kim said, “notable,” and came to the conclusion that, yes, it is notable that the couple, no matter how fictitious or ephemeral, is notable for being announced by Bushiroad as being “lesbian.”

Via Autostraddle,  and apropos of nothing, please enjoy this video clip of Melissa Etheridge and Rachel Maddow put on the spot for a segment called “Do Lesbians Give a Damn?”

We’ll end on this feel-good moment from Thai Yuri publisher lily house with an image of their booth at a recent event! Sold out and having a great time – just the way we like our Yuri! ^_^

 

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