Transparent Light Blue

By Kiyoko Iwami. Released in Japan as “Toumei na Usui Mizuiro ni” by Ichijinsha, serialized in the magazine Comic Yuri Hime. Released in North America by Seven Seas. Translated by Katrina Leonoudakis. Adapted by Asha Bardon.

This yuri manga, right off that bat, had something different from the usual that made me raise an eyebrow: there’s a guy in it. In a major role, no less. A lot of the more recent yuri titles tend to avoid having men in them altogether, taking place at all-girls’ schools and the like. There’s a good reason for this: yuri fans tend to regard any guy in a title where they have ship preferences as the absolute worst. Just ask old-school Tomoyo fans about Syaoran in Cardcaptor Sakura. Having a cast be all girls does not remove the drama, necessarily, but it does allow the drama to happen without the worry of “what happens if this is just a tease and the het couple winds up together?” That said, that’s unlikely to happen here, as the magazine this comes from, Comic Yuri Hime, has yuri as the definition. So we do get a guy, and even worse, he’s a childhood friend.

Ritsu, Ichika, and Shun are all childhood friends. Unfortunately for Ritsu, Ichika and Shun have begun to date. This is particularly unfortunate as Ritsu is also in love… with Ichika. Yes, it’s a standard love triangle, only in a yuri fashion. Ritsu is torn up by this, but at least Ichika remains close to her, even allowing the other girl to clean her ears (a very intimate act in Japan). Ichika’s trust moves Ritsu to kiss her while she’s sleeping… which Shun walks in on. From that point, there’s lots of melodrama, discussion of who likes who and why, and teen angst. In the end, though, Ichika feels safest when she’s with Ritsu, and likes her back. I really liked that the manga makes Ritsu morally dubious while keeping her the heroine, and also doesn’t make Shun a villain, keeping him the childhood friend who realizes that his girl is going to go off with another girl. I could have done without the ear cleaning porn noises, admittedly, both at the beginning and as a plot point.

As with a lot of these sorts of single volume titles, there’s not enough material for a full volume, so we get Apron, a story of a girl at a cafe who’s in love with another female employee. She’s caught sniffing said employee’s clothing by her coworker, who has a similar height and build to the other girl, and therefore is semi-blackmailed into wearing her apron so that she can pretend. Unfortunately, the girl she has a crush on is fooling around with the (male) manager. Fortunately, the coworker she’s been using also has a secret they’ve been keeping. This chapter is not really allowed to get as deep as it possibly needs to, and feels a bit too pat as a result. That said, the author is very good at drawing crying faces of angst, and we get some good ones here.

This promises a quick-hit volume with some yuri, and that’s what it delivers. I think fans of the genre will enjoy it.

The Irregular at Magic High School: Visitor Arc, Part III

By Tsutomu Sato and Kana Ishida. Released in Japan as “Mahouka Koukou no Rettousei” by ASCII Mediaworks. Released in North America by Yen On. Translated by Andrew Prowse.

A word of warning that I’m still mostly grumpy about this volume, as I have become about this series in general. I think it’s become something where I’m interesting in seeing where the author takes things, but hate every decision he makes when he takes them. This volume wraps up the arc with Lina coming to Japan and Shizuku going to America, and also the killer “parasites” that do, in fact, kill more people before they are taken down. There’s also graduation, as Mayumi and the rest of her year move on to University – though not, the author reassures us, away from the story, though no doubt they will appear less. And there are some nudges towards the main plotline, as Erika figures out what family Tatsuya is really from. I was thinking at the start of this arc that she, like Honoka, might actually confess to him, but that’s unlikely to happen now. Besides, we know which ship will win.

I am almost at the point with Tatsuya and Miyuki where I wish they DID sleep together, if only as it would provide an excellent dropping point. But no, we continue to have Miyuki try to be the dutiful little sister even as her thoughts are growing more and more romantic and sexual as she gets older. As for Tatsuya, well, he’s ambivalent to everyone else, and seems to be pushing back on Miyuki when she takes things too far, but it’s hard to gauge his feelings on the matter given his past and lack of emotions. That said, I’m not really rooting for Honoka here either, who seems to have forgotten she confessed to Tatsuya and was rejected several volumes ago and is goaded by Shizuku (over the phone, and likely sleep-deprived) to press her case harder. This does lead to the funniest part of the book, where Honoka “makes herself useful” against the forces tailing them in a way that you know would have made Tatsuya facepalm if he had the ability.

As for Lina, her arc overall was “there’s always someone better than you”, in this case Tatsuya and Miyuki, showing her that she’s not as terrific as she thinks she is. Which is fine. I was far less happy with the “you’re too nice to be a soldier” bullshit from Tatsuya, which I’m fairly sure he would not have said had Lina been a man – but then if Lina had been a man I suspect her character would have been killed off anyway. It’s also a bit off that we never really see Lina reuniting with her superiors, or how they felt about her performance. I’m sure she’ll show up again, but it’s likely going to be a while, and I bet I’ll never really see resolution there, just as we never really resolved the 2nd part of the Nine Schools Competition after it got attacked. The author drops loose ends like crumbs.

We start the new school year next volume, which seems thankfully to be a single volume arc. I’ve no doubt that we’ll expand the cast with exciting new freshman. Till then, I’m honestly happy to see the back of this arc.

86 –Eighty-Six–, Vol. 1

By Asato Asato and Shirabii. Released in Japan by Dengeki Bunko. Released in North America by Yen On. Translated by Roman Lempert.

I have a certain reputation for being a softie, and will freely admit that I drop series sometimes just because I find them too bleak and depressing – in fact, see my review of WorldEnd a few months ago. But sometimes I get a book that, even though it is unrelentingly downbeat and cruel, I end up enjoying far more than I thought, simply because the writing is so damn good. Such a book is 86, a blunt look at war and racism seen from an alternate universe that seems eerily close to our own at times. It examines how easy it is for people to fall into hatred and murder, how being idealistic and thinking something is wrong is not really enough when you’re in a position of great privilege, and the constant physical, mental and emotional strain of being a disposable soldier whose “leaders” want them to die. I was depressed while reading most of the book, but I absolutely could not put it down. It’s stunning.

The Republic of San Magnolia is at war with the Legion, weapons of the Empire. Fortunately, they have unmanned drones to fight the battles for them! Unfortunately, their technology isn’t great, so their “unmanned” drones are manned by the Eighty-Six. There are 85 Sectors in the Republic, and it decided to take all those who weren’t “pureblood” and put them in an 86th, which is essentially a concentration camp, and send them out to fight the war. They’re not people, after all, just subhuman pigs, so it doesn’t matter what happens to them. Our story follows Lena, a young idealistic “handler” who thinks this is wrong, but also thinks that she can do something about it by virtue of forcefully making her point. She’s assigned to a new group of Eighty-Six, the crack squad who are on the front lines preventing an invasion of the Republic. Unfortunately, her squad is getting diminished by the day. And they have no respect for her. And the enemy are horrifying.

This is absolutely a book with an agenda, make no bones about it. It’s about human dignity and rights, and how easily everyone can throw away someone else’s for their own. The technology of the “Legion”, which is a bit higher than the Repiblic’s, allows for a truly terrifying scene where we see what has happened to many of the 86s who have died in battle, and it causes Lena to have a bit if a screaming fit. There’s also several scenes where Lena has her hypocrisy and privilege pointed out to her in the most caustic of terms, and she’s the one who grows the most in this book, to the point of sacrificing almost everything – but not her ideals. Despite being unrelentingly grim, the book somehow avoids being cynical. I honestly felt it was a one-volume series till the very end – it was apparently written for a competition, so had to be self-contained. (It won.)

I hate to repeat myself, but I don’t think I’ve been this blown away by a first volume in quite some time. If you are tired of isekais, or tired of fascism, or just love good prose, and don’t mind a lot of death and degradation, 86 is absolutely a series you should be reading. Highly recommended.