BLUE MORNING, VOL. 6
SUBLIME – @SuBLimeManga (Chara Comics)
CARTOONIST: Shoko Hidaka
TRANSLATION: Jocelyne Allen
LETTERS: NRP Studios
COVER: Shoko Hidaka with Shawn Carrico
ISBN: 978-1-4215-8806-3; paperback (September 2016) Rated “M” for “Mature”
250pp, B&W, $12.99 U.S., $14.99 CAN, £8.99 UK
Blue Morning is a series of yaoi manga graphic novels from creator Shoko Hidaka. Yaoi manga features love stories in which the romantic leads are males. A subset of boys’ love (BL) manga, yaoi can also feature explicit depictions of sex. Blue Morning focuses on Akihito, the heir to a viscount-ship, and Katsuragi, his very capable butler, to whom Akihito is attracted.
After the death of his father, Akinao Kuze, 10-year-old Akihito Kuze moves into the Kuze mansion, as he prepares to inherit his late father’s viscount-ship. There, he meets the Kuze family butler, Tomoyuki Katsuragi, who is tasked with raising Akihito. By the time he is 17-years-old, Akihito finds himself relentlessly drawn to Katsuragi, but also frustrated by the distance between them.
As Blue Morning, Vol. 6 (Chapters 28 to 33) opens, Akihito and Katsuragi make love, but then move apart. Katsuragi begins to run the household and business affairs of Soemon Ishizaki, the father of Akihito's best friend, Soichiro. Then, it is announced that Akihito will leave to obtain treatment for a long ailment (which he is feigning). However, Akihito does plan on leaving to study abroad, so will this planned departure be the thing that forces Akihito and Katsuragi back together?
The Blue Morning manga is a romantic period drama, but is also something of a domestic drama. I have compared it to being something like a comic book version of one of those Merchant-Ivory films from the 1980s and 1990s.
Much of Blue Morning Volume 6 is about character drama; people talk, but talk around those with whom they are familiar or have a romantic relationship. While this series begins and ends with intimacy, creator Shoko Hidaka uses everything else to play with the big “if,” which is the question of whether the romantic leads will ever truly unite. I like this series; it is a good one, but the story is ready to be resolved. I don't see it remaining a quality manga past a seventh volume.
A-
www.SuBLimeManga.com
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"
The text is copyright © 2016 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for reprint and syndication rights and fees.
-------------------
[“We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.”]
Showing posts with label Chara Comics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chara Comics. Show all posts
Wednesday, November 16, 2016
Yaoi Review: BLUE MORNING Volume 6
Labels:
Boys' Love,
Chara Comics,
Jocelyne Allen,
manga,
Review,
Shoko Hidaka,
SuBLime,
VIZ Media,
Yaoi
Thursday, April 24, 2014
Yaoi Manga Review: CRIMSON SPELL Volume 3
CRIMSON SPELL, VOL. 3
SUBLIME – @SuBLimeManga
CARTOONIST: Ayano Yamane – @yamaneayano
TRANSLATION: Adrienne Beck
LETTERS: NRP Studios
COVER: Ayano Yamane with Yukiko Whitley
ISBN: 978-1-4215-6423-4; paperback (April 2014) Rated “M” for “Mature”
178pp, B&W, $12.99 U.S., $14.99 CAN, £8.99 UK
Tongues a waggin! That’s for sure, in the latest volume of Crimson Spell.
Crimson Spell, created by Ayano Yamane, is a yaoi manga graphic novel series. Yaoi manga are romance comics that depict relationships in which the romantic leads are male. A subset of boys’ love (BL) manga, yaoi can also feature depictions of explicit sex between males. A fantasy tale, Crimson Spell focuses on a handsome prince beset by a demon’s curse and the sorcerer who helps him fight that curse.
Crimson Spell revolves around 18-year-old Prince Valdrigr Alsvieth a/k/a Prince Vald, the eldest prince of the Alsvieth Kingdom. An excellent and accomplished swordsman, Vald has been possessed by the sword, Yug Verlind, which has a curse that transforms Vald into a demon at night. Halvir Hroptr a/k/a “Havi” is a sorcerer living in exile. Because Havi is adept at breaking curses, Vald approaches him for help. Havi discovers that intense physical intimacy helps tame the demon Vald becomes at night.
As Crimson Spell, Vol. 3 (Chapters 14 to 19) opens, Gileh, an ally and manipulator of demons, holds Havi captive. Gileh wants to possess Yug Verlind, and now, he wants Vald to fight Havi to the death. As incentive, Gileh threatens to kill Vald’s younger brother, Anri, whom he also apparently holds captive.
Forced to fight Havi, who is under an enchantment placed on him by Gileh, Vald transforms into full demon mode. Halrein, a former friend of Havi’s, and Mars, a traveling swordsman who has pledged loyalty to Vald, want to help, but they are actually helpless to save Vald and Havi from death and destruction.
[This volume contains the bonus story, “The Fairy’s Cocoon.”]
As I wrote in a previous review of the Crimson Spell manga, the series seems serious about being fantasy fiction. In some ways, it resembles sword and sorcery comic book adaptations of Robert E. Howard Conan the Cimmerian (or Barbarian) and is also visually similar to the various comics and OEL manga based on World of Warcraft.
Crimson Spell Volume 3 is filled with explosive fight scenes and raging displays of magic, and creator Ayano Yamane thrills her readers by placing her characters in peril that reads as being genuine. Yamane also shows her serious-about-yaoi side with an entire chapter devoted to human sorcerer/human-demon hybrid sexual intercourse. Apparently, Yamane thinks that boys’ love lovin’ should involve at least one guy being especially and exceedingly orally attentive to the penis. Fun for all, for sure.
A
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
www.SuBLimeManga.com
www.yamaneayano.com
The text is copyright © 2014 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this site for syndication rights and fees.
SUBLIME – @SuBLimeManga
CARTOONIST: Ayano Yamane – @yamaneayano
TRANSLATION: Adrienne Beck
LETTERS: NRP Studios
COVER: Ayano Yamane with Yukiko Whitley
ISBN: 978-1-4215-6423-4; paperback (April 2014) Rated “M” for “Mature”
178pp, B&W, $12.99 U.S., $14.99 CAN, £8.99 UK
Tongues a waggin! That’s for sure, in the latest volume of Crimson Spell.
Crimson Spell, created by Ayano Yamane, is a yaoi manga graphic novel series. Yaoi manga are romance comics that depict relationships in which the romantic leads are male. A subset of boys’ love (BL) manga, yaoi can also feature depictions of explicit sex between males. A fantasy tale, Crimson Spell focuses on a handsome prince beset by a demon’s curse and the sorcerer who helps him fight that curse.
Crimson Spell revolves around 18-year-old Prince Valdrigr Alsvieth a/k/a Prince Vald, the eldest prince of the Alsvieth Kingdom. An excellent and accomplished swordsman, Vald has been possessed by the sword, Yug Verlind, which has a curse that transforms Vald into a demon at night. Halvir Hroptr a/k/a “Havi” is a sorcerer living in exile. Because Havi is adept at breaking curses, Vald approaches him for help. Havi discovers that intense physical intimacy helps tame the demon Vald becomes at night.
As Crimson Spell, Vol. 3 (Chapters 14 to 19) opens, Gileh, an ally and manipulator of demons, holds Havi captive. Gileh wants to possess Yug Verlind, and now, he wants Vald to fight Havi to the death. As incentive, Gileh threatens to kill Vald’s younger brother, Anri, whom he also apparently holds captive.
Forced to fight Havi, who is under an enchantment placed on him by Gileh, Vald transforms into full demon mode. Halrein, a former friend of Havi’s, and Mars, a traveling swordsman who has pledged loyalty to Vald, want to help, but they are actually helpless to save Vald and Havi from death and destruction.
[This volume contains the bonus story, “The Fairy’s Cocoon.”]
As I wrote in a previous review of the Crimson Spell manga, the series seems serious about being fantasy fiction. In some ways, it resembles sword and sorcery comic book adaptations of Robert E. Howard Conan the Cimmerian (or Barbarian) and is also visually similar to the various comics and OEL manga based on World of Warcraft.
Crimson Spell Volume 3 is filled with explosive fight scenes and raging displays of magic, and creator Ayano Yamane thrills her readers by placing her characters in peril that reads as being genuine. Yamane also shows her serious-about-yaoi side with an entire chapter devoted to human sorcerer/human-demon hybrid sexual intercourse. Apparently, Yamane thinks that boys’ love lovin’ should involve at least one guy being especially and exceedingly orally attentive to the penis. Fun for all, for sure.
A
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
www.SuBLimeManga.com
www.yamaneayano.com
The text is copyright © 2014 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this site for syndication rights and fees.
Labels:
Adrienne Beck,
Ayano Yamane,
Boys' Love,
Chara Comics,
Review,
SuBLime,
Tokuma Shoten,
VIZ Media,
Yaoi
Friday, February 21, 2014
Yaoi Manga Review: BLUE MORNING Volume 4
SUBLIME – @SuBLimeManga
CARTOONIST: Shoko Hidaka
TRANSLATION: Jocelyne Allen
LETTERS: NRP Studios
COVER: Shoko Hidaka with Shawn Carrico
ISBN: 978-1-4215-5555-3; paperback (February 2014) Rated “M” for “Mature”
218pp, B&W, $12.99 U.S., $14.99 CAN, £8.99 UK
The fourth volume of Blue Morning, the yaoi manga graphic novel series from creator Shoko Hidaka, was recently released. In yaoi manga, the love story features romantic leads that are both male. This subset of boys’ love (BL) manga can also feature explicit depictions of sex. Blue Morning focuses on Akihito Kuze, the heir to a viscount-ship, and Tomoyuki Katsuragi, his very capable butler, to whom Akihito is attracted.
After the death of his father, Akinao Kuze, 10-year-old Akihito moves into the Kuze mansion, as he prepares to inherit his late father’s viscount-ship. There, he meets the Kuze family butler, Katsuragi, who is tasked with raising Akihito. By the time he is 17-years-old, Akihito finds himself relentlessly drawn to Katsuragi, but also frustrated by the distance between them.
As Blue Morning, Vol. 4 (Chapters 16 to 20) opens, the truth of Katsuragi’s lineage has already been revealed. With this truth revealed, Katsuragi leaves the Kuze household, and enters the employment of Soemon Ishizaki, the father of Akihito’s friend, Soichiro.
Akihito is determined, however, to have his way. He attempts to live a life different from the one meant for him, and he breaks off his engagement. He makes such a bold move regarding the standing of the Kuze family that Katsuragi is forced to counter them with strategy of his own.
The Blue Morning manga is a romantic period drama. It is like a comic book version of one of those Merchant-Ivory films from 1980s and 1990s. The series does sometime earn its “yaoi” label with a sex scene. Blue Morning Volume 4 offers a torrid love scene that leaves the characters in need of a bath. Everything that Akihito and Katsuragi can’t or won’t say to one another is translated into urgent lovemaking, complete with pants, moans, and groans.
Beyond the sex, there are more reveals. Through the dialogue, Shoko Hidaka opens the characters, their lives and secrets, in ways that cement Blue Morning’s status as an exceptional character drama and period romance.
A
www.SuBLimeManga.com
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
The text is copyright © 2014 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this site for syndication rights and fees.
Labels:
Boys' Love,
Chara Comics,
Jocelyne Allen,
Review,
Shoko Hidaka,
SuBLime,
VIZ Media,
Yaoi
Thursday, November 21, 2013
Yaoi Review: BLUE MORNING Volume 3
BLUE MORNING, VOL. 3
SUBLIME – @SuBLimeManga
CARTOONIST: Shoko Hidaka
TRANSLATION: Jocelyne Allen
LETTERS: NRP Studios
COVER: Shoko Hidaka with Shawn Carrico
ISBN: 978-1-4215-5554-6; paperback (November 2013) Rated “M” for “Mature”
226pp, B&W, $12.99 U.S., $14.99 CAN, £8.99 UK
Blue Morning, the yaoi manga graphic novel series from creator Shoko Hidaka, continues with the publication of a third volume. Blue Morning is the story of Akihito Kuze, the heir to a viscount-ship, and the man he loves, Tomoyuki Katsuragi, the very capable butler who has taken care of him for the better part of a decade.
After the death of his father, Akinao Kuze, 10-year-old Akihito moves into the Kuze mansion, as he prepares to inherit his late father’s viscount-ship. There, he meets the Kuze family butler, Tomoyuki Katsuragi, who is tasked with raising Akihito. By the time he is 17-years-old, Akihito finds himself relentlessly drawn to Katsuragi, but frustrated by the distance between them.
Blue Morning, Vol. 3 (Chapters 11 to 15) opens with surprising news for Katsuragi. The servants inform him that Akihito has now decided to handle Kuze family’s business interests himself. It is a big leap for the young man, but his other changes to the household constitution may prove to be too much for household members to accept.
Akihito is so firmly focused on his future that he considers marriage and begins to court 15-year-old Chikako, the daughter of Duke Sajo. Akihito asks the father of his friend, Soichiro Ishizaki, to act as a go-between in the marriage talks. The father, a merchant, is willing, but what he wants in return may be too much for Akihito to give.
The Blue Morning manga does occasionally earn its “yaoi” label by depicting sex between its male leads, but depicting sex seems to be the least of creator Shoko Hidaka’s concerns. This series is a character drama which seems to focus on three things: a star-crossed romance, family history, and intrigue among the nobility and upper crust of society.
As such, it is an excellent read, and Blue Morning Volume 3 may be the best volume yet. Hidaka always draws me in, slowly, with an easy pace, even in the scenes involving a shocking reveal. Before I know it, I have bought into the plot, conflicts, motivations, and characters. Maybe, Blue Morning is “Masterpiece Theatre” for the boys’ love set.
A
www.SuBLimeManga.com
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
The text is copyright © 2013 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this site for syndication rights and fees.
SUBLIME – @SuBLimeManga
CARTOONIST: Shoko Hidaka
TRANSLATION: Jocelyne Allen
LETTERS: NRP Studios
COVER: Shoko Hidaka with Shawn Carrico
ISBN: 978-1-4215-5554-6; paperback (November 2013) Rated “M” for “Mature”
226pp, B&W, $12.99 U.S., $14.99 CAN, £8.99 UK
Blue Morning, the yaoi manga graphic novel series from creator Shoko Hidaka, continues with the publication of a third volume. Blue Morning is the story of Akihito Kuze, the heir to a viscount-ship, and the man he loves, Tomoyuki Katsuragi, the very capable butler who has taken care of him for the better part of a decade.
After the death of his father, Akinao Kuze, 10-year-old Akihito moves into the Kuze mansion, as he prepares to inherit his late father’s viscount-ship. There, he meets the Kuze family butler, Tomoyuki Katsuragi, who is tasked with raising Akihito. By the time he is 17-years-old, Akihito finds himself relentlessly drawn to Katsuragi, but frustrated by the distance between them.
Blue Morning, Vol. 3 (Chapters 11 to 15) opens with surprising news for Katsuragi. The servants inform him that Akihito has now decided to handle Kuze family’s business interests himself. It is a big leap for the young man, but his other changes to the household constitution may prove to be too much for household members to accept.
Akihito is so firmly focused on his future that he considers marriage and begins to court 15-year-old Chikako, the daughter of Duke Sajo. Akihito asks the father of his friend, Soichiro Ishizaki, to act as a go-between in the marriage talks. The father, a merchant, is willing, but what he wants in return may be too much for Akihito to give.
The Blue Morning manga does occasionally earn its “yaoi” label by depicting sex between its male leads, but depicting sex seems to be the least of creator Shoko Hidaka’s concerns. This series is a character drama which seems to focus on three things: a star-crossed romance, family history, and intrigue among the nobility and upper crust of society.
As such, it is an excellent read, and Blue Morning Volume 3 may be the best volume yet. Hidaka always draws me in, slowly, with an easy pace, even in the scenes involving a shocking reveal. Before I know it, I have bought into the plot, conflicts, motivations, and characters. Maybe, Blue Morning is “Masterpiece Theatre” for the boys’ love set.
A
www.SuBLimeManga.com
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
The text is copyright © 2013 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this site for syndication rights and fees.
Labels:
Boys' Love,
Chara Comics,
Jocelyne Allen,
manga,
Review,
Shoko Hidaka,
SuBLime,
Tokuma Shoten,
VIZ Media,
Yaoi
Saturday, October 19, 2013
Yaoi Review: SLEEPING MOON Volume 2
SLEEPING MOON, VOL. 2
SUBLIME – @SuBLimeManga
CARTOONIST: Kano Miyamoto
TRANSLATION: Christine Dashiell
LETTERS: NRP Studios
COVER: Kano Miyamoto and Courtney Utt
EDITOR: Jennifer LeBlanc
ISBN: 978-1-4215-5551-5; paperback (October 2013) Rated “M” for “Mature”
234pp, B&W, $12.99 U.S., $14.99 CAN, £8.99 UK
Sometimes I encounter a situation in which the second volume of a manga series is so much better than the first volume, even when that debut volume is itself good. That recently happened again, and I am totally wowed by Sleeping Moon Volume 2.
Sleeping Moon is a yaoi manga graphic novel from creator Kano Miyamoto. Yaoi manga is a subset of boys’ love manga (BL) and features explicit depictions of sex between male characters. SuBLime Manga is publishing Sleeping Moon, which follows a young man trying to unravel a family curse, as a two-volume graphic novel series.
Sleeping Moon introduces 27-year-old college student-teacher, Akihiko Odagawa. He returns to his family’s ancestral home in order to solve the mystery of a rumored curse that brings early death to the male descendants in his lineage, the Sakaki Family. There, he meets his Aunt Akiko and her two children, twin brother and sister, Ren and Eri. While in the home, Akihiko experiences a time slip that takes him back 100 years in the past to Japan’s Meiji Period, where he meets student, Eitarou Shinjou. The two men form a deep emotional bond as they bridge time to unravel a family curse?
As Sleeping Moon, Vol. 2 (Chapters 6 to 9) opens, Akihiko surrenders to his cousin Ren. Their relationship, which has already turned sexual, grows more personal and intimate. Akihiko, however, cannot stop thinking about Eitarou, the relative that he visits when he can time travel at night.
Eitarou and Akihiko grow closer, and together seek the truth behind the curse on their family. Its origins are buried in an incident involving the Shinjou Family, which was tied to the Sakakis. What went wrong or what happened? But the nearer the two men from different eras get to the truth, the more Akihiko’s body seems to fade away.
No wonder so many readers seem to love these love stories that involve time travel. They can make for great reading, and the Sleeping Moon manga is a terrific read. Correction: Sleeping Moon Volume 2 is a great read.
After reading Vol. 1, I thought that Sleeping Moon had potential. Its supernatural elements were creepy, and the romance was strong; however, as I read it, I thought that creator Kano Miyamoto was being cool and deliberate about passions and revelations. With the four chapters that make up the second half of the story, Miyamoto seems to unleash a torrent of passion, longing, and rage.
OMG! The revenge-ghost story part of Sleeping Moon suddenly becomes spine-tingling J-Horror. There were times when I thought the bad spirits would emerge from the page and contaminate me. I really invested myself in wanting a resolution to the curse.
Akihiko, Ren, and Eitarou form one of the best love triangles that I have ever found in a comic book from any country. That is another element of Sleeping Moon in which I heavily invested my emotions. I wanted Akihiko to be with Eitarou, but at the same time, I saw that Akihiko and Ren made a great couple – regardless of the incestuous nature of their love. This is one of those examples in which the reader will be happy about the outcome, but still yearn for the other outcome.
This is one of my favorite manga and comic books of the year. There is a nice epilogue, entitled “Waning Moon,” and it is a near perfect ending, but it just reminds you that the good time you had reading Sleeping Moon is about to end.
A+
www.SuBLimeManga.com
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
The text is copyright © 2013 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this site for syndication rights and fees.
SUBLIME – @SuBLimeManga
CARTOONIST: Kano Miyamoto
TRANSLATION: Christine Dashiell
LETTERS: NRP Studios
COVER: Kano Miyamoto and Courtney Utt
EDITOR: Jennifer LeBlanc
ISBN: 978-1-4215-5551-5; paperback (October 2013) Rated “M” for “Mature”
234pp, B&W, $12.99 U.S., $14.99 CAN, £8.99 UK
Sometimes I encounter a situation in which the second volume of a manga series is so much better than the first volume, even when that debut volume is itself good. That recently happened again, and I am totally wowed by Sleeping Moon Volume 2.
Sleeping Moon is a yaoi manga graphic novel from creator Kano Miyamoto. Yaoi manga is a subset of boys’ love manga (BL) and features explicit depictions of sex between male characters. SuBLime Manga is publishing Sleeping Moon, which follows a young man trying to unravel a family curse, as a two-volume graphic novel series.
Sleeping Moon introduces 27-year-old college student-teacher, Akihiko Odagawa. He returns to his family’s ancestral home in order to solve the mystery of a rumored curse that brings early death to the male descendants in his lineage, the Sakaki Family. There, he meets his Aunt Akiko and her two children, twin brother and sister, Ren and Eri. While in the home, Akihiko experiences a time slip that takes him back 100 years in the past to Japan’s Meiji Period, where he meets student, Eitarou Shinjou. The two men form a deep emotional bond as they bridge time to unravel a family curse?
As Sleeping Moon, Vol. 2 (Chapters 6 to 9) opens, Akihiko surrenders to his cousin Ren. Their relationship, which has already turned sexual, grows more personal and intimate. Akihiko, however, cannot stop thinking about Eitarou, the relative that he visits when he can time travel at night.
Eitarou and Akihiko grow closer, and together seek the truth behind the curse on their family. Its origins are buried in an incident involving the Shinjou Family, which was tied to the Sakakis. What went wrong or what happened? But the nearer the two men from different eras get to the truth, the more Akihiko’s body seems to fade away.
No wonder so many readers seem to love these love stories that involve time travel. They can make for great reading, and the Sleeping Moon manga is a terrific read. Correction: Sleeping Moon Volume 2 is a great read.
After reading Vol. 1, I thought that Sleeping Moon had potential. Its supernatural elements were creepy, and the romance was strong; however, as I read it, I thought that creator Kano Miyamoto was being cool and deliberate about passions and revelations. With the four chapters that make up the second half of the story, Miyamoto seems to unleash a torrent of passion, longing, and rage.
OMG! The revenge-ghost story part of Sleeping Moon suddenly becomes spine-tingling J-Horror. There were times when I thought the bad spirits would emerge from the page and contaminate me. I really invested myself in wanting a resolution to the curse.
Akihiko, Ren, and Eitarou form one of the best love triangles that I have ever found in a comic book from any country. That is another element of Sleeping Moon in which I heavily invested my emotions. I wanted Akihiko to be with Eitarou, but at the same time, I saw that Akihiko and Ren made a great couple – regardless of the incestuous nature of their love. This is one of those examples in which the reader will be happy about the outcome, but still yearn for the other outcome.
This is one of my favorite manga and comic books of the year. There is a nice epilogue, entitled “Waning Moon,” and it is a near perfect ending, but it just reminds you that the good time you had reading Sleeping Moon is about to end.
A+
www.SuBLimeManga.com
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
The text is copyright © 2013 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this site for syndication rights and fees.
Labels:
Boys' Love,
Chara Comics,
Christine Dashiell,
Jennifer LeBlanc,
Kano Miyamoto,
manga,
Review,
SuBLime,
VIZ Media,
Yaoi
Thursday, August 22, 2013
Yaoi Review: BLUE MORNING Volume 2
BLUE MORNING, VOL. 2
SUBLIME – @SuBLimeManga
CARTOONIST: Shoko Hidaka
TRANSLATION: Jocelyne Allen
LETTERS: NRP Studios
COVER: Shoko Hidaka with Shawn Carrico
ISBN: 978-1-4215-5553-2; paperback (August 2013) Rated “M” for “Mature”
202pp, B&W, $12.99 U.S., $14.99 CAN, £8.99 UK
Blue Morning is a yaoi manga graphic novel series from creator Shoko Hidaka. Credited as “Shouko Hidaka,” she authored Restart, a manga set in the world of male models. Yaoi manga is a subset of boys’ love manga (BL) and features explicit depictions of sex between male characters.
Akihito Kuze is the heir to the viscount-ship of his late father, Akinao Kuze. After the death of his father, Akihito, at the age of 10, moves into the Kuze mansion. There he meets the Kuze family’s very capable butler, Tomoyuki Katsuragi, who is tasked with raising Akihito. By the time he is 17-year-old, Akihito finds himself relentlessly drawn to Katsuragi, but frustrated by the distance between them.
Blue Morning, Vol. 2 opens with a flashback. Akinao Kuze, who is still living at the time, assigns a large number of books for reading and study to Katsuragi, his prodigy of sorts. Whatever plans that Kuze has for his young protégé are put on hold with the announcement that a male Kuze child has been born.
Back in the present, Akihito has physically consummated his relationship with Katsuragi (i.e. had sex with the dude). Now, he wants to grow closer to and more intimate with the butler, but Katsuragi’s attitude towards his young charge remains emotionally cold. Now, Akihito is about to make a deal with Katsuragi, one that he hopes will keep the butler in the fold and maybe in his bed. However, a party at the Marquise Moriyama complicates the matter with surprise appearances and shocking revelations.
The Blue Morning manga earns its “yaoi” label by depicting sex between its male leads. Blue Morning Volume 2 offers some intense lovemaking, but this manga isn’t necessarily about sex. Obviously, Akihito wants to have passionate physical contact with Katsuragi, but this story is strongly romantic and is about a committed relationship that could be the equivalent of marriage. The conflict is that neither of these young men wants exactly the same thing, and the differences are just enough to create believable tension. This relationship/romance could turn out bad for a number of people.
The high-society intrigue and class conflict (especially regarding the peerage system) make this manga seem like a comic book adaptation of something from “Masterpiece Theatre.” Of course, Downton Abbey does not “get down” like Blue Morning gets down.
B+
www.SuBLimeManga.com
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
SUBLIME – @SuBLimeManga
CARTOONIST: Shoko Hidaka
TRANSLATION: Jocelyne Allen
LETTERS: NRP Studios
COVER: Shoko Hidaka with Shawn Carrico
ISBN: 978-1-4215-5553-2; paperback (August 2013) Rated “M” for “Mature”
202pp, B&W, $12.99 U.S., $14.99 CAN, £8.99 UK
Blue Morning is a yaoi manga graphic novel series from creator Shoko Hidaka. Credited as “Shouko Hidaka,” she authored Restart, a manga set in the world of male models. Yaoi manga is a subset of boys’ love manga (BL) and features explicit depictions of sex between male characters.
Akihito Kuze is the heir to the viscount-ship of his late father, Akinao Kuze. After the death of his father, Akihito, at the age of 10, moves into the Kuze mansion. There he meets the Kuze family’s very capable butler, Tomoyuki Katsuragi, who is tasked with raising Akihito. By the time he is 17-year-old, Akihito finds himself relentlessly drawn to Katsuragi, but frustrated by the distance between them.
Blue Morning, Vol. 2 opens with a flashback. Akinao Kuze, who is still living at the time, assigns a large number of books for reading and study to Katsuragi, his prodigy of sorts. Whatever plans that Kuze has for his young protégé are put on hold with the announcement that a male Kuze child has been born.
Back in the present, Akihito has physically consummated his relationship with Katsuragi (i.e. had sex with the dude). Now, he wants to grow closer to and more intimate with the butler, but Katsuragi’s attitude towards his young charge remains emotionally cold. Now, Akihito is about to make a deal with Katsuragi, one that he hopes will keep the butler in the fold and maybe in his bed. However, a party at the Marquise Moriyama complicates the matter with surprise appearances and shocking revelations.
The Blue Morning manga earns its “yaoi” label by depicting sex between its male leads. Blue Morning Volume 2 offers some intense lovemaking, but this manga isn’t necessarily about sex. Obviously, Akihito wants to have passionate physical contact with Katsuragi, but this story is strongly romantic and is about a committed relationship that could be the equivalent of marriage. The conflict is that neither of these young men wants exactly the same thing, and the differences are just enough to create believable tension. This relationship/romance could turn out bad for a number of people.
The high-society intrigue and class conflict (especially regarding the peerage system) make this manga seem like a comic book adaptation of something from “Masterpiece Theatre.” Of course, Downton Abbey does not “get down” like Blue Morning gets down.
B+
www.SuBLimeManga.com
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
Labels:
Boys' Love,
Chara Comics,
Jocelyne Allen,
Review,
Shoko Hidaka,
SuBLime,
Tokuma Shoten,
VIZ Media,
Yaoi
Sunday, June 23, 2013
Yaoi Review: Sleeping Moon Volume 1
SLEEPING MOON, VOL. 1
SUBLIME – @SuBLimeManga
CARTOONIST: Kano Miyamoto
TRANSLATION: Christine Dashiell
LETTERS: NRP Studios
COVER: Kono Miyamoto and Courtney Utt
EDITOR: Jennifer LeBlanc
ISBN: 978-1-4215-5550-8; Rated “M” for “Mature”
186pp, B&W, $12.99 U.S., $14.99 CAN, £8.99 UK
Kano Miyamoto is a prolific creator of boys’ love manga and of independent or amateur comics (doujinshi). Sleeping Moon is a yaoi manga graphic novel series from Miyamoto. Yaoi manga is a subset of boys’ love manga (BL) and features explicit depictions of sex between male characters. The series follows a college student trying to unravel a family curse.
Sleeping Moon, Vol. 1 introduces 27-year-old college student, Akihiko Odagawa. He returns to his family’s ancestral home in order to solve the mystery of a rumored curse that brings early death to the male descendants in his lineage, the Sakaki Family. There, he meets his Aunt Akiko and her two children, twin brother and sister, Ren and Eri.
Eri remains mostly unseen because she has some kind of illness, and though he is distant at first, Ren begins to make moves on Akihiko. That isn’t the most shocking thing. While in the home, Akihiko experiences a time slip that takes him back 100 years in the past. There, he meets student, Eitarou Shinjou, who looks strikingly like Ren. Can the two men bridge time to unravel a family curse?
Not really sexual in terms of content, Sleeping Moon, Volume 1 is a supernatural mystery. There really is not a strong current of romance, for that matter. Instead, it is ghosts plus time travel; that can be an interesting combination, and it is here. The ghosts and spirits are especially creepy and menacing, and, in the early chapters, Kano Miyamoto teases them just enough to string the reader along with sightings and dark auras to stir the echoes of fear.
There is something oddly sweet about the time travel angle. This is a mysterious and less sci-fi kind of time travel. It is impressionistic and spiritual; therefore, this kind of “time slip” seems earthier than the usual future-tech histrionics. Yes, I do want more sex scenes in the next volume, but I also want to solve the mysteries of this engaging manga. Readers looking for romance, mystery, and the supernatural will want to try Sleeping Moon.
B+
www.SuBLimeManga.com
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
SUBLIME – @SuBLimeManga
CARTOONIST: Kano Miyamoto
TRANSLATION: Christine Dashiell
LETTERS: NRP Studios
COVER: Kono Miyamoto and Courtney Utt
EDITOR: Jennifer LeBlanc
ISBN: 978-1-4215-5550-8; Rated “M” for “Mature”
186pp, B&W, $12.99 U.S., $14.99 CAN, £8.99 UK
Kano Miyamoto is a prolific creator of boys’ love manga and of independent or amateur comics (doujinshi). Sleeping Moon is a yaoi manga graphic novel series from Miyamoto. Yaoi manga is a subset of boys’ love manga (BL) and features explicit depictions of sex between male characters. The series follows a college student trying to unravel a family curse.
Sleeping Moon, Vol. 1 introduces 27-year-old college student, Akihiko Odagawa. He returns to his family’s ancestral home in order to solve the mystery of a rumored curse that brings early death to the male descendants in his lineage, the Sakaki Family. There, he meets his Aunt Akiko and her two children, twin brother and sister, Ren and Eri.
Eri remains mostly unseen because she has some kind of illness, and though he is distant at first, Ren begins to make moves on Akihiko. That isn’t the most shocking thing. While in the home, Akihiko experiences a time slip that takes him back 100 years in the past. There, he meets student, Eitarou Shinjou, who looks strikingly like Ren. Can the two men bridge time to unravel a family curse?
Not really sexual in terms of content, Sleeping Moon, Volume 1 is a supernatural mystery. There really is not a strong current of romance, for that matter. Instead, it is ghosts plus time travel; that can be an interesting combination, and it is here. The ghosts and spirits are especially creepy and menacing, and, in the early chapters, Kano Miyamoto teases them just enough to string the reader along with sightings and dark auras to stir the echoes of fear.
There is something oddly sweet about the time travel angle. This is a mysterious and less sci-fi kind of time travel. It is impressionistic and spiritual; therefore, this kind of “time slip” seems earthier than the usual future-tech histrionics. Yes, I do want more sex scenes in the next volume, but I also want to solve the mysteries of this engaging manga. Readers looking for romance, mystery, and the supernatural will want to try Sleeping Moon.
B+
www.SuBLimeManga.com
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
Labels:
Boys' Love,
Chara Comics,
Christine Dashiell,
Jennifer LeBlanc,
Kano Miyamoto,
Review,
SuBLime,
VIZ Media,
Yaoi
Friday, June 7, 2013
Yaoi Review: BLUE MORNING Volume 1
BLUE MORNING, VOL. 1
SUBLIME – @SuBLimeManga (Chara Comics)
CARTOONIST: Shoko Hidaka
TRANSLATION: Jocelyne Allen
LETTERS: NRP Studios
ISBN: 978-1-4215-5552-2; Rated “M” for “Mature”
202pp, B&W, $12.99 U.S., $14.99 CAN, £8.99 UK
Also credited as “Shouko Hidaka,” mangaka Shoko Hidaka is known for her boys’ love manga, such as Restart, which is set in the world of male models. Her new work is Blue Morning, a yaoi manga graphic novel series. Yaoi manga is a subset of boys’ love manga (BL) and features explicit depictions of sex between male characters.
Blue Morning, Vol. 1 introduces Akihito Kuze, the 10-year-old heir to the viscount-ship of his late father, Akinao Kuze. After the death of his father, Akihito moves into his father’s mansion, where he meets the Kuze family’s very capable butler, Tomoyuki Katsuragi. Katsuragi is tasked with raising Akihito.
Seven years later, the 17-year-old Akihito is relentlessly drawn to Katsuragi, but is frustrated by the distance between them. The handsome and intelligent Katsuragi is well-respected and popular, even among the aristocracy, so he is highly sought after for his advice. Driven to learn more about his butler, Akihito investigates Katsuragi’s past, both with the Kuze family and in Katsuragi’s own family.
First, there isn’t much in the way of “explicit sex” in Blue Morning Volume 1, except for a night in which the rough play between manservant and charge is emphasized. Blue Morning is a period piece and romantic drama in which romance must compete with intrigue concerning high society and class structure.
Schools for the elite, parties for the nobility, and assorted gatherings of the rich, powerful, and influential are a staple of the first volume of Blue Morning. I think that what makes this story interesting is how much Akihito Kuze hates it all, yet this life is his destiny. Not only is he supposed to be the viscount, but he is also expected to increase the family’s rank. The narrative can be a bit dry at times, and it seems like a boys’ love version of Downton Abbey, except without the popular British drama’s self-assuredness in its storytelling and characters. I’m interested to see where this series goes… especially if the romance gets even rougher.
B
www.SuBLimeManga.com
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
SUBLIME – @SuBLimeManga (Chara Comics)
CARTOONIST: Shoko Hidaka
TRANSLATION: Jocelyne Allen
LETTERS: NRP Studios
ISBN: 978-1-4215-5552-2; Rated “M” for “Mature”
202pp, B&W, $12.99 U.S., $14.99 CAN, £8.99 UK
Also credited as “Shouko Hidaka,” mangaka Shoko Hidaka is known for her boys’ love manga, such as Restart, which is set in the world of male models. Her new work is Blue Morning, a yaoi manga graphic novel series. Yaoi manga is a subset of boys’ love manga (BL) and features explicit depictions of sex between male characters.
Blue Morning, Vol. 1 introduces Akihito Kuze, the 10-year-old heir to the viscount-ship of his late father, Akinao Kuze. After the death of his father, Akihito moves into his father’s mansion, where he meets the Kuze family’s very capable butler, Tomoyuki Katsuragi. Katsuragi is tasked with raising Akihito.
Seven years later, the 17-year-old Akihito is relentlessly drawn to Katsuragi, but is frustrated by the distance between them. The handsome and intelligent Katsuragi is well-respected and popular, even among the aristocracy, so he is highly sought after for his advice. Driven to learn more about his butler, Akihito investigates Katsuragi’s past, both with the Kuze family and in Katsuragi’s own family.
First, there isn’t much in the way of “explicit sex” in Blue Morning Volume 1, except for a night in which the rough play between manservant and charge is emphasized. Blue Morning is a period piece and romantic drama in which romance must compete with intrigue concerning high society and class structure.
Schools for the elite, parties for the nobility, and assorted gatherings of the rich, powerful, and influential are a staple of the first volume of Blue Morning. I think that what makes this story interesting is how much Akihito Kuze hates it all, yet this life is his destiny. Not only is he supposed to be the viscount, but he is also expected to increase the family’s rank. The narrative can be a bit dry at times, and it seems like a boys’ love version of Downton Abbey, except without the popular British drama’s self-assuredness in its storytelling and characters. I’m interested to see where this series goes… especially if the romance gets even rougher.
B
www.SuBLimeManga.com
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
Labels:
Adult Entertainment,
Boys' Love,
Chara Comics,
Jocelyne Allen,
Review,
Shoko Hidaka,
SuBLime,
Tokuma Shoten,
VIZ Media,
Yaoi
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)