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Mar 27, 2008
Preliminary (Unknown/20 chp)
I was introduced to and bought this manga at the Yuricon booth at Anime Boston, and had it described to me as "A manga where a lesbian actually is happy to be a lesbian", and I must say that's a pretty good summary. Being semi-autobiographical on the part of the author, she says that she wrote it specifically to not be a depressing, forbidden love story, and it manages to deliver on that promise while not being too over the top in its message.

The art is simple but manages to convey adult concepts at the same time and is consistent throughout the story. There are ...
Mar 27, 2008
Preliminary (Unknown/19 chp)
Most people are probably familiar with this series because of Chiho Saito's association with Revolutionary Girl Utena, and though some characters have obviously similarities to Utena this manga manages to be something else and have an overall different message.

The art can be a joy to look at in the dancing scenes, and though character designs tend not to deviate too much from one base a few like Sajit genuinely stand out from the Japanese. Men tend to look similar (resulting in occasional situations of being unsure of who is who) but the women manage to remain distinctive. Another area that shines is the detail to ...
Mar 27, 2008
Mixed Feelings
For those of you expecting a manga version of the anime series, I'd suggest you throw that idea out right now. Other than a shared setting and some similar elements (the Escaflowne, the main character's names), this is an entirely different story.

While the TV series of Escaflowne combined both shonen and shojo elements, this manga is decidedly shonen. The mecha are bigger (Escaflowne itself is about 10 stories tall), female fanservice is everywhere (Hitomi ends up naked no less than three times in the first volume alone) and the story and protagonists are more like the characters in InuYasha than the TV series, and ...
Jan 11, 2008
Preliminary (30/100 chp)
I once heard this manga described as having a cruel premise, and it does indeed tend to rip your heart out at every opportunity. Unlike many stories in this genre the focus is not so much on fanservice but on the condition of the girls themselves. This is not a nice story. Adults and children are shot up, dismembered, turned into killing machines and go through every imaginable horror, and Yu Aida pulls no punches in portraying the violence and psychological damage inflicted on the girls and their handlers. But nonetheless, I find myself on the edge of my seat waiting for each new volume, ...


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