30 Day Yaoi Challenge, Day 3: Affair

Before we set out to talk about Affair by Shiuko Kano, I want to first talk about how I write about BL/yaoi and how I feel about BL/yaoi.

Yesterday’s post prompted a small discussion about how I write about BL/yaoi (among other things) with my best friend, who has read a lot more BL and yaoi that I have over the years.

She asserted that women don’t read yaoi to be turned on (sexually) and that she doesn’t see yaoi as porn, though others might. She also asserted that some fujoshi don’t mind coerced relations because many women think that the victims could easily overpower their attackers. Therefore, most of the victims aren’t helpless, just disgruntled that they’re being propositioned in ways they don’t like, with the exception of times where it’s very obvious that the person does not want to have sex at all.

If fujoshi don’t mind coerced sex because they think the instigators can easily be overpowered… Well, I find that disturbing. Perhaps because I’ve read enough yaoi manga where the victim wasn’t given the opportunity to protest and the attacker wasn’t listening if he was. There’s a lot of  “JUST SHUT UP, ACCEPT MY FEELINGS AND HAVE SEX WITH ME.” And that’s not including the times when the victim is tied up, slammed against a wall or otherwise shocked into submission. And then at the end, it’s all fine and the victim wants to have buttsex with his attacker forever! I just cannot ignore that as I’m reading. My brain mentally halts and cringes, then gets a little mad at the ending.

Which brings me to how I view BL and yaoi. I’ve clearly misled a little bit with my language by using terms like “turn on,” but I find that it’s apt for this purpose. I see BL and yaoi as avenues for fan girls to fantasize and/or gawk at boys they find attractive. Obviously, there is something about the story, the plot or the characters that excites them. So if something about the BL/yaoi manga  I’m reading doesn’t excite me at all, then it feels like a huge waste of my time and money. I am very aware that I have high standards for BL/yaoi manga, but I’d rather have fewer high quality BL/yaoi manga than a large quantity of trashy, poorly written BL/yaoi manga. It’s no surprise to me; all my favorite manga are very well-written works. I definitely prefer est em and Fumi Yoshinaga to anything else out in the yaoi-sphere right now. Onto the review portion…

Affair by Shiuko Kano

By my standards so far, you’d think that I’d absolutely hate Affair. There’s a lot of coerced sex going on, if not rape or other kinds of assault. But I don’t. It’s not my favorite yaoi ever, but I don’t hate it.

Affair is clear that every relationship contained in its stories is twisted from the start. Then these relationships are further bent by what happens inside the stories, then a revelation occurs and everything begins to unravel into something happier.

Take the worst (in terms of rape-y elements) story of the bunch: A young yakuza heir takes advantage of his half-brother in all sorts of ways, including sexually. The heir then decides to get back at his half-brother, who is the only person who cares about catering to the heir’s whims, by sleeping with the family’s lawyer. Unfortunately, the lawyer rapes and then tries to choke the young heir, all while revealing that the brothers were switched at birth, explaining their bad relationships with their mothers, and that he killed the heir’s real mother. The half-brother bursts in and saves him, then the two reconcile with each other and the heir realizes his love for his half-brother.

It’s all kind of gross, even when you don’t think about the incest factor, but at least all the forced sex and the rape served to set up the story and move the plot forward. It was gratuitous and unpleasant, but also purposeful. The characters had back story and depth. You could see the main character questioning himself for doing something that was wrong. The lawyer’s confession spurred a change of heart in the young heir, not the assault that had occurred during that confession. I can get behind storytelling like this far more than when a character is rushed or forced into the sex, then decides he’s happy with assailant, with very little explanation as to why.

The rest of the stories in Affair are like the one I just described, but with fewer icky parts. A relationship is started and is complicated by something, until there is some kind of revelation that un-complicates things and the relationship becomes a happier one. I also liked the art style, which did have a lot of varying hairstyles and facial structures, even though there was a lot of pointy-chin syndrome going down.

In the end, I’m satisfied with Affair. It’s the kind of yaoi I’d like to see a bit more of, where even the icky parts were used as something to give the characters faculty and to move the story forward. It’s not my favorite, but it hit the right notes.

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Day 2 of My 30 Day Yaoi Challenge: Ambiguous Relationship

I shouldn’t have prayed for the yaoi gods to smile upon me yesterday. It only incurred their sense of schadenfraude…

Ambiguous Relationship by Masara Minase

Ambiguous? More like ABUSIVE! Half the stories in this collection begin the relationships with rape or coerced sex. Seriously, this manga was a montage of terrible ways to begin a romantic or sexual relationship: Outright rape, coercion, a boss demanding that his secretary sleep with him and financial pressure to become a kept man. There’s even an adult who winds up sleeping with a minor, and that’s one of the cuter stories in this book. (More on that later.)

I don’t know what to say about the writing other than I still don’t understand how any manga with this kind of romance or sex sells this much. It just doesn’t turn me on and I can’t understand how it could possibly turn anyone else on. I can kind of understand in the story where an older man puts financial pressure on a younger friend to become his adopted son/heir/lover (which is apparently common among gay couples so that they can be legally attached to each other when gay marriage isn’t an option.) The fantasies at play there are “he’ll do anything to be with me”, “he’ll take care of me for life” and “He wants me to be his forever.” Those are all fantasies that depend on the context of the story to determine whether or not they’re creepy. In this case, they were really hateful, especially since they were paired with rape. But somehow it’s okay because the victim also had feelings  for the guy? Hell no. This is not real life, and were I the creator of manga like this, I wouldn’t write stories where unhealthy relationships are acceptable because I’d be too afraid that one of my readers would be dumb enough to believe it.

There are two stories that I found cute in this manga collection though. Unsurprisingly, both are on the verge of abusive. The first one revolves around a pediatric doctor and one of his older (but still under 18) patients. It’s really obvious that the teen has feelings for his doctor, but the doctor is really conflicted about his feelings for the teen. With good reason! Being in a relationship with one of his patients would be a breach of his ethics for many reasons. He talks about it with a guy friend of his, and as the guy friend drops the doctor off at his house, he kisses him because the smitten teen is watching. This forces the smitten teen to confess, which makes the doctor pretty happy, and they begin their relationship with some hot sex in the clinic. Not too bad (for this author) aside from the underage component. While the kid could be almost 18, it’s made clear that he’s still in high school.

The second is about a college kid and his boss at his part-time job becoming sexually involved. While they enjoy each other’s company, the student gets miffed because the boss gives him money after sex. Still, he decides to continue the relationship until he graduates because he really is in love with his boss. After graduation, he quietly slips away and starts his new life… Until one day his boss shows up at his front door. They argue about the nature of their relationship until the boss reveals that he gave the student money because he knew the kid was strapped for cash and didn’t want him to worry about money while spending time with his lover, not because he was paying him for sex. All is good and they couple progresses to the point where they exchange keys. Very cute. Almost makes up for the mostly terrible rest of the book… Not really.

The artwork is just fine, although everyone’s got long, swishy, bishounen hair, but I wouldn’t have paid full price for this book had I known it was so rape-tastic. I’m not so happy I spent $4 for it because now I don’t really want to keep it. I try to read the back covers carefully to avoid manga like these, but they can only tell you so much and they’re often misleading. (Having written back cover copy for manga before, you definitely try hard not to give to much away.)

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The 30 Day Yaoi Challenge: Let’s Begin with A.N.A.L.!

Yesterday, was a slightly momentous event in my manga-reading history. I went to Digital Manga Publishing’s Warehouse Sale and bought myself 44 books in total. That fact, in and of itself, is not significant. I drop more money on more manga at various anime conventions. What is special about that is that over 34 of these titles are either yaoi or BL, making it the most of those particular genres that I’ve ever bought at one time.

I’m actually not all that into BL and yaoi, despite many people assuming otherwise. I have no prejudices against the concept, but I do have a lot of problems with many of the tropes used, and for good reason. Why would I want to read about rape, men pressuring other men into sex or student-teacher romances when I wouldn’t want those same things to happen to me? There’s also a heavier reliance on tropes than in most manga, which I find to be an instant snooze fest. Needless to say, finding BL or yaoi manga that I want to spend my money on has been tough.

So, in celebration of acquiring 34 books that I would have never read before now, I’m challenging myself to read and blog about one or more BL or yaoi manga a day, every day, for 30 days. I have given myself a lead time of one day, so I can find the time to type everything up if I get a bit busy. Some days, I’ll blog about more than one volume of a particular series. Some books have been disqualified because I don’t have the preceding volume, because I’ve already read them, or because they’re novels. Now to begin!

All Nippon Air Line: Paradise at 30,000 Feet by Kei Azumaya

A.N.A.L.

This was such a great title to start with!

The premise is obviously goofy: An airline, staffed completely by men from the CEO down to the lowliest janitor, called All Nippon Air Line (A.N.A.L.) where gay sex with anyone (and everyone?) is encouraged! Customers included!

The stories of this airline and its passionate staff are told in funny vignettes where the punchline usually revolves around the airline’s name, the unusual services they provide, the public’s reaction to such a flamboyant airline or the bizarre tastes of the hottest flight attendants. Even some of the sound effects are a good laugh. (Spanka Spanka, anyone?)

I found it really interesting just how much stuff about running an airline was covered, despite all the gay jokes. Even topics like how young people become attracted to the lifestyle of the flight attendants, how airlines can have major crises if they can’t get clearance and how airlines take care of sick employees is covered. The author outs herself as an airplane nut and it shows, although it became quite obvious that the manga was written pre-9/11. (Being able to enter the cockpit? Not anymore!)

Aside from a few short moments of coerced sex, the manga is pretty clean. (And rated 16+! Wow!) I didn’t find those few instances funny, but since the point of All Nippon Air Line is humor, I have an easier time with the coercion than when those moments are meant to fulfill my sexual fantasies.

The only other minus to this manga is the occasional disproportionate face, but otherwise I’ve seen much worse art in manga. Pick it up if you’re interested in a silly BL romp.

One day down. I can only pray that the rest of my foray into BL and yaoi manga is this enjoyable. (I won’t get my hopes up.)

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Moyoco Anno’s Study of the Bitch

There is something about how Moyoco Anno portrays women in her manga.

sakurancomic

Put simply, each and every female character is a bitch. While this may seem like a derogatory way to say it, it is simply how Anno sees all women. To her, women are fierce, fighting bitches, not simpering little things who take life as it comes. The women Anno draws are incredibly complex mirrors of the inner drama real women go through. In fact, many of Anno’s characters are studies of young women at different stages in their lives.

Take Kayoko Shigeta from Happy Mania. She’s so annoying it hurts. She bombs around with no consideration for others, is a total drama queen, makes mistakes and generally doesn’t learn a thing from it. I can see why josei might have failed in America if a lot of readers got their hands on Happy Mania first and not a smoother read. It’s rough to stick around for 11 volumes to see Kayoko grow. Unless you’ve already read Anno’s other work, you’re likely to give up and quit.

Kayoko is literally a crazy bitch throughout her own show. But at the same time, she’s a stereotype of female self-discovery. Her life is so up-and-down, so extreme, can she ever reach the perfect societal ideal of marriage, kids and happiness? Is that what she really wants? Can she ever learn to be introspective enough to get herself together? Is she over thinking things? All questions a lot of women ask themselves while trying to plan their lives in their mid-twenties. (As I can personally attest, since I’m currently at Kayoko’s age. I wouldn’t be surprised if someone found me annoying at my age either.)

Kiyoha of Sakuran: Blossoms Wild isn’t annoying to read about, but she can be as reckless and careless as Kayoko. She paints herself as indifferent, only caring about escape or irritating others around her. She paints herself as the bitch as an attempt not to get hurt, but finds herself to be young and naive instead. She has been too cloistered to truly understand everything she’s trying to protect herself from.

To me, Kiyoha’s story is about the first time a woman gets burned in love, usually as a teenager (like Kiyoha!) This can happen to anyone of  any gender, of course, but I think it happens to women first. Women are often sold an image of glamorous love at a young age, just as it was sold to Kiyoha, and we often get our heart broken when our expectations don’t match those of our lover. We feel foolish, we do foolish things, then we go to our safe place to cry, just as Kiyoha did. Then we learn to forgive ourselves and move on with our lives.

Going further back in the development of women, we have Chocolat and Vanilla of Sugar Sugar Rune. Both girls are in their pre-teen years at best, but are very different people, thus both are a different kind of “bitch.”

Chocolat is no-nonsense. She does everything her way. People think she’s a trouble-maker,  and therefore a bitch to them. But Chocolat is only diligent in following her own sense of right and wrong, which conflicts with others’. Inside, she’s just as sensitive and caring as Vanilla.

Vanilla, on the other hand, is the good girl. She does what she’s told and takes on the expectations that people have for her. All of this only shocks those around her more as Vanilla rebels and tries to become her own person, not a vessel for someone else’s desires.

Both are excellent portrayals of how society often forgets humans are complex beings and defines people by a one-dimensional trait. This habit is amplified in children, especially in girls. Being the good girl isn’t always a good fit for young women; they either reject the idea completely until they can find a compromise between their personalities and satisfying society, or they play along until the stress of not being able to defy expectations breaks them and makes them rebel.

Just to make sure you don’t think Moyoco Anno’s bitch stops at the main characters, Kiyoko and Harumi from Flowers & Bees; Takako from Happy Mania and just about every woman in Sakuran can all be defined as different kind of bitches. There is no room for delicateness in these manga, except as a mask put on to fool naive men.

I’m really looking forward seeing Hataraki Man in English some day. (Get on it, publishers. It’s only four volumes long right now!) It seems to be the next step in Moyoco Anno’s exploration of female emotion and bitchiness as themes (the character is 28, just slightly older than Kayoko of Happy Mania.)

In the mean time, I am grateful to Vertical Inc., Del Rey, Viz Media and TOKYOPOP for publishing Moyoco Anno’s manga in English, and to Ash Brown of Experiments in Manga for hosting the Moyoco Anno Manga Moveable Feast! (You can find the archives here.)

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I Want to Browse, Dammit

There is something about online shopping that appeals to me, and yet, doesn’t appeal to me at all.

I have no problem with shopping online for clothing, accessories, kitchenware and even sizable pieces of furniture. But shopping for physical volumes of manga online? Pshaw! Except for one year in college where I clearly remember struggling to get my packages from my dorm’s front desk, I’ve only sporadically bought manga online. Even when there’s a really good sale going on at RightStuf.

It probably started when I was a young teen getting stranded in Orange County Barnes & Noble stores while waiting for my mom to pick me and my friends up. Yeah, we were total manga hobos, but at the time we were only hobos blocking the aisles, so no one cared yet. That period ended when I got a car, which also allowed me to get a job and become a real manga consumer. (I like to think I’ve more than made up for my hobo days now.) Even when I was a busy college student, it was easier to hop on the bus or in my car and go down to the local chain bookstores than to order something online. And I worked in the on-campus mail delivery department.

Why? I really love browsing in bookstores and comic book stores. Lingering along the stacks, amassing a small armful of books. The spontaneous purchase of manga is very alluring to me. I’m probably some kind of dying breed of manga fan, but I don’t care. Browsing is important to me. I find it a really good way to legally preview a new series I might want to pick up. This habit started in the days before there was legal manga online to look at, so I find it hard to break now.

But now I have a problem.

Back in May, my boyfriend and I moved to a new apartment. It’s a lovely place, except for the overabundance of spiders, but there’s only one tiny comic book store around and they barely sell any manga. I could just order stuff from Diamond through them, but that doesn’t work out for new manga if I’m not so sure I want to buy it.

There’s no chain stores or other comic book stores around for 3+ miles, and in LA traffic terms that means you need more than one reason to go to that part of town. That really kills ability to spontaneity of casually going down to a bookstore and buying something just because I feel like it. It is literally easier (and more effective because they have more manga than most bookstores) to go down to a comic book store an hour away because it’s close to my mom’s house. But I’m always really busy whenever I’m down there visiting her. Talk about hell for a perpetual browser like myself!

Despite all the problems chain bookstores and comic book stores have caused for the manga industry, I really miss having more them around.

Says the girl who order a couple hundred dollars of manga at this year’s RightStuf holiday sale. (But I only bought two volumes of new stuff I hadn’t previously been collecting. So sue me!)

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Geeky Art in the Home

During my hiatus from this blog, my boyfriend and I moved from a small apartment, to a much bigger apartment. Having the space has been great for spacing out my manga collection, but another great perk of our new place is that the owners don’t care if we hang stuff up!

So, of course, I had to frame and hang a bunch of my geeky art! And I know I’m not the only one doing this: More than a few times while house-hunting, I came across folks displaying comic book art or similarly geeky things on their walls. So without further ado…

First up, a Sailor Moon poster. If you’re collecting the series, you’ll recognize this one as the cover art for volume six.
I bought this trio of dachshunds from a friend at this year’s Wondercon in Anaheim. I’m a huge dog lover, so there was no question about hanging these cuties up.

I got this slightly-faded beauty from the TOKYOPOP garage sale. In hindsight, I probably should have grabbed some of the other posters like this, but I didn’t have the space in my apartment at the time. Now it gets a lovely spot right next to my desk. You can also see some of my Princess Tutu figures, which aren’t really anything to write home about.

This is Sailor fanart that was gifted to me by a friend. As you can see, it’s in the style of stained glass church windows, but you might not be able to tell it’s printed on a transparency! That’s why it’s not in a frame like the others.I fell in love with The Hunger Games novels right before the movie came out, so I *had* to get this poster at San Diego Comic Con this year.More fan art! This time of How to Train Your Dragon. I bought this as a gift for my boyfriend at FanimeCon a number of years back. It actually wasn’t for sale, but I begged the artist to sell it to me. Needless to say, the boyfriend loved it. Now it sits over his desk.The boyfriend and I are also huge fans of Avatar: the Last Airbender. So when I saw this beautiful limited edition Legend of Korra print being sold at San Diego Comic Con a few years ago, I had to have it! I wound up buying the last two prints and gave the other one to my best friend. It came already matted, so it looks just gorgeous in its frame.NSFW Warning! There are some boobies here. This isn’t geeky art per say, but I get geeky about weird things and Gustav Klimt’s dazzling artwork is one of them. I got to see his masterpiece “The Kiss” in Vienna a few years ago, along with some of his other work, and it just blew me away. When an exhibit of his sketches came to Los Angeles, I jumped on the chance to see more of his work and got myself a print of my favorite print in the exhibit. This particular piece was partially inspired by Japanese woodblock prints, so I guess Klimt and I have some similar tastes. 🙂I’m not a huge figure collector, but I just couldn’t pass up the cute Tezuka figures in the front when I saw them at Meltdown Comics. The Junko Mizuno skull was a freebie at SDCC awhile back and the Domo-kun skeleton was a gift.

This is an original watercolor by Audra Furuichi, the creator of Nemu*Nemu, whom I’ve known for a little while thanks to her frequent appearances on the California convention circuit.This print speaks for itself. I got it at San Diego Comic Con this year and finally decided to hang it in our brightly-colored kitchen where everyone can see my affinity for dogs. The artist draws a webcomic called Kiwi Blitz.
That’s all for my geeky art. What about your walls? Do you cover them in fan art? Perhaps you hang up your anime posters instead? Or maybe you enjoy original cartoon-style artwork better? Send me pictures! 😀

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Yaoi-Con Purchases

Since Yaoi-Con was in my neck of the woods this year, I decided to go for a day and hang out. It’s really not my type of con. I’m not that into yaoi or fangirling or cosplay or even seeing the hot dudes get stripped down to their skivvies. When it was up in the Bay Area and I was in college, it was the kind of con we’d go to hang out and be geeky. Now that all my friends couldn’t make it, I pretty much went for the excellent swap meet and a bit of shopping.

The one thing I’ve been noticing about yaoi manga lately is that there’s more out there to suit my tastes (solid consensual romances, usually between two post-college-aged men, heavy on the good writing.) So I tried to look for some DMP titles to satisfy my cravings for  good yaoi manga. I thought I’d review what I bought there briefly, along with two non-yaoi manga and the manga that came free with my con badge.

This Night’s Everything by Akira Minazuki

Bllllllllurrgh.  No only was this post-revolution “body guard” manga not was I was hoping for (something more like Men Of Tattoos…), but it was so character driven that the potentially interesting setting was completely ignored. Not the kind of writing I really like to read. There was also a bad taste of rape culture in the air of this manga, although whether or not the sex is consensual is up to interpretation.

I also really hate the emotion-less assassin archetype because it’s often not done well. You just need other, more vibrant characters or a solid story to pick up the slack. This Night’s Everything just has a lot of emotion-less assassins sulking around and no real story. It’s a common pitfall of yaoi manga: the story only matters as long as it gets the lovers from Point A to Point B. (Point A being the beginnings of a gay crush and Point B being sex.) So boring.

Manhattan Love Story by Momoko Tenzen

An older June title set entirely in New York City, I wasn’t sure if I’d like it or not, but I took the chance anyway. And I did like it, up til one chapter that was okay with a 13 year-old boy getting with his MUCH older teacher/apex sexual predator. As if that wasn’t bad enough, there was a sex scene with another young boy and said older teacher. Talk about icky!

But I did like everything around that one chapter. Lots of cute, inter-connected stories about couples falling in love and established couples deepening their love. These chapters were fluffy and cute, but solid enough to make you feel like these characters were real. I just wish I could have stopped Momoko Tenzen from publishing that one chapter, or at least have her put the boy in college, not grade school.

Flutter by Momoko Tenzen

Now this is the kind of age-range I like to see in my manga! Grown men! High school boys are just too close to hitting icky territory and college-aged students tend to act like high schoolers in most yaoi.

That being said, this is a really fluffy manga. It’s all about the emotions and the pair getting from Point A to Point B. It’s better than most fluff, but you can see Momoko Tenzen relying on a lot of tropes to tell the story. I can’t help but see all of these as crutches that yaoi mangaka rely on too much. I’d rather spend my money on more original content. (Sometimes I wonder if that’s why I’ve been so slow about catching up on my shoujo manga lately.)

I just wish there was a little bit more meat to Flutter because it’s terribly pretty. Even a character’s back story wasn’t enough to plump this one up into a better read.

Honey*Smile by Yura Miyazawa

Okay, okay! I swear I don’t dislike all yaoi! Honey*Smile was actually a pretty good example of what I *do* like. This manga is divided into two sections, one story about two college buddies finally hooking up at the company they work at and another related story about a lawyer who falls in love with his intern, whom he had previously defended in juvenile court.

But, Daniella, you say! I thought you didn’t like the young ones! While the intern’s exact age isn’t mentioned, it’s pretty much implied that he’s an adult. Thank goodness. I don’t want more manga that veers into underage territory on my shelves!

What I like best about these stories is that they have back story, quirky characteristics like disliking cigarette smoke and, thus, more depth than usual. It’s funny how a little something like an aversion to cigarette smoke can help me enjoy a manga more, but it just goes to show you how little thought goes into most characters in yaoi manga. I wouldn’t be able to describe many as clearly as the characters in Honey*Smile, where I can tell you what the characters like to eat even though it’s been a week since I read the book.

Itazura na Kiss volume 9 by

I think it’s pretty obvious that I like ItaKiss considering how many volumes I’ve bought now, but sometimes I’m surprised I like this series. To say that the protagonist gets constantly abused by those around her (who should be close friends and loved ones) is a vast understatement. This manga should be re-named “Kotoko the Underdog.”

That said, there’s less focus on Kotoko getting straight-up bullied by her husband and more of her struggling through nursing school. At least in the context of nursing, the “abuse” makes sense. It’s an extremely tough job and Kotoko stumbles a LOT. But it’s all for those sweet moments when she reconfirms her love for her husband or she overcomes a previously impossible hurdle. I recommend ItaKiss if you’re not reading it already!

Passionate Theory by Ayumi Kano

High school boys and math is a pretty apt description of this manga. If you’ve read this far, you’re probably bracing for impact already, but this freebie I got for attending Yaoi-Con really wasn’t so bad. It helped that there wasn’t any sex.

I wouldn’t call this one a favorite manga at all, the main couple just went around in too many circles, but it did have depth to it. I think Fumi Yoshinaga has completely spoiled me…

Your Story I’ve Known by Tsuta Suzuki

The first story in this volume is a little weird. It has a host dating this yakuza guy who used to date his mother. The yakuza feels a bit guilty since the host was often abused as a kid. I’m not sure how I feel about guilty love in yaoi, but it made for something more interesting than the norm.

The rest of the stories are nothing to write home about except a short story about a high school boy and a samurai ghost falling in love. It was pretty hilarious and touching, even though I’m not a fan of the gratuitous underage sex. You can tell the author has a small talent for creating interesting characters.

Secret Thorns by Kikuko Kikuya

I thought I was going to like this one because the first story about two former lovers reconciling was decent. But then the next two stories were underage/quasi-incestual and bordering on non-consensual respectively. That’s all I have to say about this one. Too bad because I liked Entangled Circumstances by this same mangaka…

Start with a Happy Ending volume 1 by Risa Motoyama

I was surprised to see this one among all the yaoi, but it’s a new DMP release, so why wouldn’t they promote it anywhere the company can? I wasn’t sure what I was getting into, but what I got was surprisingly touching stories about humans who died with unfinished business and cats.

Each chapter pretty much tells the same basic story, so it’s very predictable, but still so very, very cute. If you’re a fan of any kind of pet manga or just want to read something adorable, you should totally pick up Start with a Happy Ending. It’ll cheer you right up!

So my total score comes to 5.5 out of 9 manga total. Not so bad, although it just makes me long for more manga like Fumi Yoshinga or est em’s…

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