Junjo Romantic: Vol. 1

Shungiku Nakamura

Blu

The art is completely weird.  The story is a bit stock.  The characters are dumb but sweet or arrogant and brilliant.  The writing is strange, especially in later volumes.  The sex is not that hot.

And yet this is one of my favorite comics of all time.

I often wonder, when I kick back and reread a volume, whether this was drawn in ball point in spiral notebooks or what.  Because–well, look:

or:

Weird, eh?  I mean, the perspective is completely batty.  (Perspective, you might say, what perspective?)

And yet….

Look at this depiction of arrogance.  It’s so clear, so vibrant.

I find it charming.

For me, the appeal of this comic is its utter shamelessness.  I once read a how-to book about manga that said that Manga is love, and how true it is here.  This is a book with a lot of emotion packed in around some fairly stock skeletons of plot and character.  A young man (Misaki) is trying to get into college, but his exam scores suck, so he gets a tutor.  Said tutor (Usami), a friend of his brother’s, is brilliant and wealthy and arrogant.  They fall in love and have adventures.  The end.  (Well, not really the end, because it’s in 9 volumes and counting, but my point remains.)

The big twist of the series is that the older lover, Usami, is a famous author.  He’s brilliant and writes award winning books.  He’s also crazy as a fruitbat, in that special writer way, which means in his case, his bedroom is full of plush toys and trains and a dinosaur in a wee helmet.  (Really!)  He also, as a hobby, writes boys love novels, which he populates with his real-life crushes.

This allows the author to write some meta, sure, but it mostly allows her to indulge in a variety of hilarious and classic scenarios.  Selections from Usami’s novels are written by various BL novelists and included, like so:

I’m not going to try to convince anyone to get over their distaste of the art to engage in the story.  The art is one of those styles that is very much love it or leave it, I think.  For me, I love it.  What it lacks in realism, it makes up for in expressive charm.  The story itself is fun, but nothing radical, at least in the first volume.   The story starts with Misaki and Usami figuring out how to work together for the sake of Takahiro, Misaki’s brother and Usami’s unrequited love.  It’s romance, pure and simple, with some smut and some humor.  I won’t tell you differently.  But sometimes, romance with smut and humor is exactly what’s wanted.

As a companion to Junjo Romantica, the volume contains another story, Junjo Egoist, which I liked in its first installments, but found disappointing as the run continued.  Since Blu titles are usually shrinkwrapped, be forewarned that fully half of the volume’s pages are Junjo Egoist.

Sue me! Mary Sue Link Roundup

Back when we were discussing the niceness of manga critics, someone asked me about some of the other critics that I was reading.  I mentioned a few suggestions, but the idea stuck in my mind.  The critics and critical circles that seem everyday normal to me (everybody reads coffeeandink, right?) aren’t that familiar or known to everyone.  So when my circle of reading started talking about Mary Sues, it occurred to me that a link roundup might be of interest to some HU readers, since HU hosted a roundtable on the topic not that long ago.

Storming the Battlements or: Why the Culture of Mary Sue Shaming is Bully Culture.

Also, one of these days I’m going to write up a big damn meta post on why the culture around Mary Sue shaming has huge misogynist overtones all over it

Such stuff as dreams are made on

on mary sue policing and why i cannot abide it

Man of Steel!

dissection of Mary Sue and our issues with her

way too much rambling on mozart and mary sues

I have a little trouble

The matter is being doggedly pursued

more on mary sues

Mary Sues on Metafandom

thinky thoughts on Mary (Gary) Sues

wherein Liz thinks about Mary Sues

What I Mean By Mary-Sue and Why I Hate Her

The Mary Sue Character Displacement Theory

A Very Long Entry About Mary Sues

in which I am old…

I was hoping to a little writeup of the various discussions, but then I decided people could just go and poke around as they wished.  All of these are on LJ (Livejournal) and most journals don’t allow anon commenting.  Getting an account is free, or you can use OpenID on some journals.

Muck Encrusted Mockery of a Roundtable: Yellow and Blue Make Green, a light first read

Unlike many readers here, I haven’t read much Moore.  I started with Voodoo, which I  hated utterly, tried something else, and never went back.

I was looking forward to Swamp Thing, because so many people recommended it and thought I would enjoy it.  And I’m sorry to say that I think, well, I think I may not be the right reader for this series.  I did my best.  Honest.  And I don’t dislike it.  I just don’t have the right emotional responses.  By which I mean the writer, artists, and colorists intended (I think) for me to have certain emotional reactions (like fear, or loathing, or being creeped out), and instead I felt differently (was cheered, rolled my eyes, or became confused).

Last week’s discussion about Ware’s work included some talk about the different levels of reading–close readings, shallow readings, and so on.  Personally, I think they all have their place.

In this case, I’m making what I would consider a fairly shallow reading.  These are my gut responses, my initial reactions, my petty self.  I think that’s a perfectly valid critical reading of a genre work, especially pulpy genre work, which Swamp Thing so clearly is.    Now, maybe the beauty of Swamp Thing was something that you had to get at the right time in your life.  It’s not my intent to harsh anybody’s squee.  But you know, this comic just plain didn’t do it for me.  And before I can muster up the effort to minutely examine the intimate details of the words and the scenes and the art, I have to have a strong emotional reaction (good or bad).

This comic has, as its fundamental premise, the idea of a plant monster.  As an avid gardener, maybe I just don’t find plants scary enough, because darned if I could work up any fear in the swamp bits.  I saw the first page of Book 2 and thought, “Oooh, what cute little lizards!”

I just don’t think that’s what they were going for, somehow.

There’s that whole first chapter/book of Saga of the Swamp Thing that starts with Dr Woodrue’s little daydream scenario and I spent the entire time eagerly looking forward to finding out what actually happened, versus what he daydreamed would happen.  Then we get to the cheerful lizards and it turns out that no, that whole sequence was what happened, and it was some kind of framing technique, yada yada.

And yet Dr Woodrue was so obviously mad as a hatter.  What gives, I asked myself.  Wouldn’t he be an unreliable narrator?  Wasn’t that the point?

But no.  So we move on.  “Clouds like plugs of bloodied cotton wool dab ineffectually at the slashed wrists of the sky.”  Plugs of bloodied cotton wool?  Plugs of bloodied cotton wool?  Fellas, the sky is neon orange and the clouds are pink.  It looks like a clown threw up.

Don’t get me wrong.  I liked parts of it.  There was a lot of stunning art.  The plants especially are wonderfully drawn and cleverly inked.  I loved the raccoons and the frogs and the lizards and the bugs and the flowers.  I even cooed “Raccoon!” out loud, causing my dog, who knows that word, to look around hopefully for a bandit faced critter.  And of course, I liked Abby Cable a lot, and I thought she and Swamp Thing should hook up and live in the swamp among the happy bugs and orchids forevermore.

But I kept running into these problems.  There’s a Very Serious Moment with the Justice League, who are informing us, as outside plot devices of authority are supposed to do, of the Dire Nature of the National Tragedy.  Superman says, “Insane’s the word…He’s suffered a massive psychological breakdown since the last time we encountered him.”  Italics not mine.  The dialog is above a wanted poster for Jason Woodrue.  And I’m thinking: The man is a plant monster and you only now realize he’s caaaaraaaaaaaaaazy?

I laughed myself silly.  And then the Justice League basically say they’re going to lose.  Against a man who thinks he’s a plant.  I don’t even know.  I just…  I mean.  I know people enjoy this comic, but–

The villain thinks he’s a plant!  He’s wearing chia-pet underpants!  A couple pages after Swamp Thing tells him the green doesn’t love him anymore he runs into a pink sunset so that he can squirt flesh-toned cheeze-whiz on himself.

I don’t know.  I just don’t.   I’m sorry, but that’s the best I can do.  I tried to keep going, but there was a soon to be death by swordfish (neat, I thought to myself) and then an autistic kid, and I just can’t face autistic kids or any child victims, actually, unless they’re done well.  Which I could tell this wouldn’t be.

Kind of a pity,  I guess, because I sort of wanted to know whether the yam-tubers he developed when he was dreaming of his dead wife were any kind of feminine symbolism or if I’m just being too much of a gardener again.   Oh well.  I suppose I can live just fine without knowing.

Song of the Hanging Sky, vol 2

Yes, gentle reader, I read the next volume.  The story picks up three years after the last volume.  During the interim, things have been pretty quiet.  The doctor Jack continues to live with his adopted child-aged father and the bird men tribe.  However, the shaman River has disappeared and one of the tribe members, Horn, has become increasingly sick and has disturbing visions about the Day of Destruction.

This is, hands down, the most confusing manga I have ever read.  Well, OK, maybe not quite as confusing as Angel Sanctuary and it’s multi-personality no glossary messiness, but close.

Here are some notes that I took while reading.

Man=child

Hello=boy

Another River is not a man

Cherry=soldier

There’s a desperately needed, somewhat helpful cast of characters, but it’s not enough.  Man, for instance, is included there under the name No Man.  If you have someone staring at a big scary thing, saying “Man,” is your first thought that this is someone’s name?  The name of a baby at that?  Because it wasn’t mine.

Which brings us to the other big problem.  Most of this volume takes place in the past, which means that everyone looks different.  They’re also often addressed by their relative nicknames like sis, my older cousin, my nephew.  Which would maybe be OK, but the relative in question is often dead in the present.  And then there’s the character who is addressed by more than one gender pronoun.  The character glossary has this amusing sentence: He has no gender.  Um, yeah.

Did I mention that there seem to be two completely different Days of Destruction?

So why struggle through it?  The art is lovely and the story is quite interesting.  There’s a lot of cool plot going on under all the bizarre name problems, with interesting interpersonal politics and ideas about destiny (can it be changed?) and what honor means and the power of war.

I hesitate to explain the major plot points, because the twists are quite fun, but I think I can add that there is a nice backstory of the chief Fair Cave retelling the story of the clan’s destruction to Jack.   The story, such as it is, that happens during the modern day is primarily about the soldier Cherry, a young officer who is wounded in battle.  He makes an interesting contrast to the young Hello nee Nuts Peck, who was rescued in a similar way in the previous volume.

I’ll probably succumb and get the next volume, despite the massive translation/confusion problems.  I wish they would do something like bold or capitalize the first letter of the names.  It’s so puzzling and detracts from an otherwise very fun comic.

Song of the Hanging Sky: vol 1


Song of the Hanging Sky, volume 1

by Toriko Gin

Note: This review contains spoilers for the whole manga.  FYI.

This is a strange but rather interesting manga.  The story is about Jack, a doctor who was a soldier in a war, but now lives in a cabin in the snow with his trusty German Shepherd dog Gustav.  While they’re tromping around, lonely, they find an injured boy.

Since this is a manga, the boy has wings.

He’s also Native American: some vague tribe that pulls from the Plains hunting traditions but also includes some farmers.

This could all end in horrible no good very bad stereotypes and awfulness, but oddly, I rather enjoyed it.  For one thing, the Indians are drawn as normal and the doctor is portrayed as white (and different).  The othering going on isn’t the standard Indians heap big weird.

Certainly, there are aspects that are troubling.  The gun is referred to as making thunder: it might as well be the Thunder Sticks of the awful Spaghetti Westerns of my Sunday afternoon childhood.  But other parts are turned on their head.  Eventually, the doctor is adopted into the tribe (much like the Brady Bunch episode, actually) but, instead of getting a dopey Indian name, it turns out the doctor is now the son of the boy he helped.  That’s right, the little boy is now his father.  Unlike a more traditional Western, both the Indians and the doctor seem to suffer PTSD from the wars they’ve been in.  Again, unlike the traditional Westerns, this is not set in a Wild West of the 1800s.  A plane with parachuters appears eventually.

Now we get to a nifty part of the manga that I enjoyed, but that slammed quite unfortunately into a nasty technical translation problem: The names of the tribe members are indicative of what they do or like, names like Bear or Wolf, as per usual.  But, most unfortunately, the manga lettering does not indicate that these are names.  A figure sitting in darkness with wings unfurled, another character says, ” CAVE …?”  Would you guess that’s the guy’s name?  I didn’t.  Nor did I figure out that Cave was the chief until much later.  “HOW IS NUTS?” was another howler.

Nuts Peck turned out to be the name of the little boy.  Until his contact with the human.  Then the human changed the boy’s soul and destiny and Nuts Peck became “Hello”.  Which is great!  It really made for an interesting philosophical change, but do you have any idea how baffling it is to run through people saying Hello with no indication if it’s the name or the regular meaning?  And then there’s the fact that the bird people speak one language (bird songs and noises), the doctor speaks his own language (which is where Hello comes from, I think), and then there’s the local language of the humans–which the doctor speaks and which the birdmen shaman speaks.  Baffling.  Baffling I tell you.

In any case.  The story has its stock components, but it also has its charm.  I’m easily charmed by plucky German Shepherds, but still.  There’s good stuff here.  Introspection, the meaning of communication, destiny, magic, and the line between childhood and adulthood in various ways and who leads whom.  The art is quite beautiful.  Lots of lovely line work, great contrast, and an interesting style.

A Wise Man Sleeps

By Mick Takeuchi

Go Comi, vol. 1

This is a fun and strange little manga by the author of Her Majesty’s Dog.  In this story, Miharu is a girl with a strange ring, a gift from her dead mother.  Her father has abandoned her to deal with his business debts, held by the Yakuza.  The story begins by a strange black clad man asking Miharu about her ring, which he tells her is the reason for all of her bad luck.  He wants her to give him the ring, which is very valuable.  She denies the possibility that it is bad luck, goes home, and is promptly confronted by graffiti and the creepy old Yakuza boss’s sexual harassment.  Ewww.

There’s a fun argument with the Yakuza boss that results with Miharu swallowing the ring to save it.  Which is quite the flavor of the manga right there. 

The socially awkward black-clad man is an alchemist with a ring of his own that allows him to turn into a gorgeous, blond sleazy lovey-dovey weirdo who can throw a punch, fight a fight, and act courageous–for exactly three minutes.

It’s no surprise to say that Miharu and the angel-guy deal with the Yakuza boss and free her and that they end up working together to solve alchemy-related jewel problems.  My favorite thing about this series is Miharu:

She’s great.  Unpredictable, capable of taking care of herself, and fun.  The plots aren’t always the greatest, but they’re interesting and the art is cheerful and beautiful.  In one story, just when I suspected the villain to be possessed by a rock, it turned out his jewel was in fact plastic.  When I suspected the doll was–  Well.  But I wouldn’t want to spoil it.  If you enjoy episodic fantasy-horror magic stories with a romantic subplot, this one is worth checking out.

Not-James: Y-fronts, dicks, and dykes

I’d like to make a couple of notes before beginning.

Autobiography. I’m afraid that I approached this comic like a book, a story, a tale.  In truth, the story isn’t a story crafted and directed by the author except in methods of portrayal.  The other actors aren’t characters, they’re people with their own agendas and abilities to walk off stage when the story theme would dictate that they stay and kiss under the mistletoe or at least buy a pink rabbit with pearls.  The main character is a person, not a character.  But in order to engage in the story, I treated her like a character in my head.  I liked her, and I grew to hate Sally, and I thought the mom should’ve gotten a grip, and a thousand other reactions that more befit a novel than a nonfiction book.  Throughout this essay, I’ll probably engage with Ariel-the-character as well as Ariel-the-author even though I know Ariel-the-person will be along soon.  *gulp*  But I can only approach it as best I can and as honestly as I can as a critic and as a reader even if I know that the person might be hurt or affected by my words. 

Queerness.  Second, usually I think it’s good to know nothing about the personal life of a given critic, but when one is commenting on a persecuted group, especially when dealing with identity,  it’s worth knowing how a person stands: with, against, or where.  So I’m not straight and I’m female, and there you have it.

That preface over with, I’m going to dive right in.

In this essay, I’m going to address: the art and its changes through the story as well as some technique choices, Joyce and Sally sitting in a tree, lesbian fashion choices, Ariel’s fashion choices, dildoes, and It.

In the beginning, Ariel and her friends discuss It.  I was struck by how close this high schooler discussion reflected academic politics, how much Ariel felt the need to have It, how much she felt Sally had It, and how fashion reflected the presence or absence of It.

In the comic, Ariel portrays herself with a few simple visuals: she has dark, short hair; she wears converse and jeans; she wears a white or a black tee shirt; her underwear are Y-fronts.  All of these code for a butch lesbian, in fashion terms.  At one point in the roundtable, Caro noted (and then later pulled) a comment that Ariel had answered the gender question by saying to the Barnard interviewer ‘I am not a woman’.   But I don’t think the book ever really seriously suggests that Ariel is trans; I think instead it addresses her as a woman, a very butch woman, who is a lesbian in a mostly straight world.

One of the funniest sections in the comic is when Ariel decides to change her appearance.  She gets some new jeans and tries to wear them the way guys do.  Except she has the same problem I do, ie, hips much bigger than the waist, which means that the damn jeans hang oddly.  (This is why I am in love with certain hip-curvy jeans that came out after Likewise was released.)  Ariel compares herself to the guys, trying to wear them the way the guys do, with hilarious results.  She tries them pulled up like most women, especially Sally.  Then she tries the half-hip look, which made me smile fondly.  She ends up wearing something that isn’t what a man would wear–that doesn’t work.  But the femme look doesn’t work either.  So what is it?

I’d argue that she ends up dressing like a butch lesbian.  Which is still female.  Later, she is choosing her dick, a new dildo, and she decides to get a semi-realistic but not skin-toned one.  Her harness is simple.  If I may be delicately blunt here: it reads exactly like a toppy but female choice.  Not a choice that’s going for a true male dick, but for the kind of appendage that allows for a pleasurable toppy experience for a woman with another woman.

There are a few comments in the comic where people take her for a guy and I’d like to address one of the most problematic aspects of this.  I think the Sally issue complicates things.  Sally’s not bisexual; she experiments, but she prefers men.  Ariel’s in love with Sally.  Who among us hasn’t tried to turn ourselves inside out to become the person our loved one wants?  (I’ll grant that some of you out there haven’t, and if so, more power to you.)  Playing at being more male is one way to get Sally.  So to be taken for a man isn’t as simple as a yes no issue, it’s not just Ariel’s sexual identity in question, but her sexual identity in relation with others, especially Sally.

Sally is the instigator of a lot of the fashion choices, the cutting of the hair to super-short, the hip-sliding jeans, the imagining of a pair of older overweight butch dykes walking together.

So if Sally brings up the issue and muddles it, I think Ariel answers it herself.  I think the gender identity is resolved in two places: The first hint comes when Ariel walks into the bathroom on her birthday and looks at herself in the mirror, “I’m pretty.”  She is dressed as herself–same dark shirt and jeans and sneaks and eyeglasses.  She’s just herself.  What she wears when she’s drawing at her desk.

The birthday instigates getting the dick and breaking up with Sally.  Even though Sally wants her again, she says no,  breaking off contact, choosing the healthier route.  The route where she’s not turning herself inside out.

The comic then switches to a whole lot of experimentation.  The first shot of experimentation reveals Ariel in a weird, blocky jacket in a whole new art style.  Trying different things with the recorder and talking to new people, hanging out in new locales, experimenting with different kinds of relationships.

See, I think my fellow roundtablers are right that Joyce’s Ulysses is a main theme and influence for Likewise.  I think they’re wrong to suggest that Ariel is allying herself with Joyce, that she’s trying to do a comic Ulysses.  Instead, I think she’s doing something much more daring: I think she rejecting Joyce and his Ulysses in favor of something else.

In this last part of the comic, the art switches from style to style, sometimes mimicking the emotions at play (as when it slides into scratching gestural drawings for sadness) or shocking with different locales (the music club, the strip club) and more black shapes.  Sometimes the comic becomes washes, sometimes pen on wet paper, sometimes sketches, sometimes obsessively detailed.  It has a patchwork feel, a taking a little of this from here and a little of that from there, and putting it together.  Which is much of what Joyce does.  He takes the structure from other works, makes references and in-jokes, patches together bits of literature from across the canon.  It’s interesting and engaging to be sure, but–

Given the option (as I am), I prefer the Odyssey to Ulysses.

It’s not that I feel the last section of the comic is ineffectual.  I think it accomplishes what it sets out to do: the comic records the voices of other characters through the recorder, through the dialog, through the written poems, through the musical lyrics.  It is as though the artist is trying on different clothes.  New outfits.  Let’s wear Madame Bovary today, or let’s put on some New York.  That’s a very Joyce approach, and I think the tension of what Ariel is expressing (other people’s voices, their stories, the strangeness of emo girl at the signing) is the tension that happens as people create themselves, but also as some of the modernist stories are written.  Bits of this and that, woven together to create something else, but with the bones showing.

And towards the end, the experimentations die down.  The drawings return to a style that seems to be more like the main style of the comic.  Sure, there are ink washes, but it’s still recognizably the base style.   The clothing settles back to a dark shirt, Converse, jeans.  The heroine celebrates her graduation with her real ally, the unapologetic dyke Ms. Salt (who wears very dyke outfits).  When Ariel goes home, she looks in the mirror, popping zits, and is comfortable with what she sees there.  The regular clothes, the regular face.  It’s not a collection of stressed voices recorded from other people, but her own perspective, her own art, her own voice.  Which is different from Joyce’s Ulysses.  Sally loved Joyce, and Ariel read it, and I think, I am arguing, that she tried being what Sally liked: played at being more of a man, played at comic-creating more like Joyce, but she decided instead to be who she is (or be comfortable with who she is) and draw what she draws, write what she writes in her own voice, and let go of Sally (and Joyce).

Update by Noah: The whole Likewise Roundtable is here.