REVIEW: Law Students in Love: Manga Review: Ichigenme…The First Case is Civil Law by Fumi Yoshinaga
Ichigenme…The First Case is Civil Law, by Fumi Yoshinaga. Published by 801 Media. Retail: $15.99. 1/2 volumes released. Rated 18+ (Mature content, graphic sex between males showing at most some blurred [Japanese self-censored] naughty bits, NOT FOR KIDS). A-.
She doesn’t just spend time on the main characters, as is common in romance, but has arcs about secondary characters that flesh out the story as a whole, and make it a real thing. What happens in these two volumes could very likely have happened in a real Japanese law school ten years ago (when the story was written).
In case you haven’t noticed, this is a male/male romance manga. It is of the category yaoi (pronounced yah-oh-ih), which in
Andà £Ã¢â‚¬Å¡Ã‹â€ à £Ã‚ à £Ã‚  ªÃƒ £Ã‚ Ã…’–à ¥Ã¢â‚¬ ¦Ã‹â€ à §"Ã… ¸ (Yoshinaga-sensei), if by some chance you’re reading this, à £Ã‚  ©Ãƒ £Ã‚ †à £Ã¢â‚¬Å¡Ã¢â‚¬Å¡Ãƒ £Ã‚ ‚à £Ã¢â‚¬Å¡Ã… à £Ã‚ Ã…’à £Ã‚  ¨Ãƒ £Ã‚ †à £Ã‚ "à £Ã‚ à £Ã‚ „à £Ã‚  ¾Ãƒ £Ã‚ â„ ¢. (Thank you.) A for volume 1, A- for the series.
Sincerely,
à £Ã¢â‚¬Å¡Ã‚ ¸Ãƒ £Ã¢â‚¬Å¡Ã‚ §Ãƒ £Ã†’ ¼Ãƒ £Ã†’ ³
(JÄ n)
I will be sure to look that one up. I would add that yaoi is also different from western-styled gay-for-girls genres (slash and MM). Something a few publishers could be more aware of…
Yes, the aesthetic is very different from Western versions of the same. You can almost always tell the difference just by glancing at a page. That doesn’t mean there isn’t good and bad on both sides of the Pacific (and Atlantic! :)). They’re just not the same thing.
Jan, I get the feeling that it takes a while for these manga to make it to the US as you often state that the ones you’re reviewing are several years old. Is this generally the case? Or are your favorites just older ones?
Jan, I love reading your manga reviews and thanks for the heads up on this one, which sounds like something I’ll have to order. I went to my local comic bookstore and didn’t really see anything. Oh, I did see the Harlequin Pink and Violet sitting on the shelf. Came back to see if you’d read and reviewed any of the ones I saw there, but no. The tiltles were Debbie Macomber, Charlotte Lamb, Margaret Way(?). Suppose to be classic love stories. If I had to take a risk it would be the Macomber title I’d try.
It depends. Manga hasn’t been published over here for all that long, and there are years worth of series for the US publishers to potentially take. Sometimes they pick older series, sometimes newer.
Once they do license one, they have to translate, edit the translation, apply it to the cleaned Japanese copy, send it off, proof it, send it back, then get the copies and distribute them. So even the newest takes a few months to get to us in English. Typically the lag between licensing and actually seeing the book is about 9 months.
In the case of this series, yaoi wasn’t published over here before 2005, so there’s a huge list of series to potentially choose from. Yaoi publishers tend to pick series and mangaka already popular among the online crowds, because they know they’ll be good sellers. This author has been a favorite of yaoi fans for years, and her English books have shown themselves to be bestsellers for English yaoi publishers, so they’ve snapped up everything she has to offer no matter what the age.
Another thing to consider about age is that a chapter of a shoujo or yaoi manga series generally comes out once every month or two, sometimes longer. A volume is usually 5-6 chapters. That means it can take on averge a year to make one volume. And there are often 10 volumes in a series. And I like reviewing complete stories. These stories are years in the making. There’s a manga series going in Japan that was started in the 70s and is at 150-some volumes and 1400 chapters.
It’s a different process than publishing a novel, and anyone wanting something complete in English is going to be getting a story that was started at least a couple of years before.
[quote comment=”28001″]Jan, I love reading your manga reviews and thanks for the heads up on this one, which sounds like something I’ll have to order. I went to my local comic bookstore and didn’t really see anything. Oh, I did see the Harlequin Pink and Violet sitting on the shelf. Came back to see if you’d read and reviewed any of the ones I saw there, but no. The tiltles were Debbie Macomber, Charlotte Lamb, Margaret Way(?). Suppose to be classic love stories. If I had to take a risk it would be the Macomber title I’d try.[/quote]
Thanks Keishon!
I have a Lamb title sitting here but haven’t read it yet. The Macomber might be one of the older ones. Check the original copyright date on the thing. If it’s before the 90s, I’d skip it.
Thanks for this review, Jan. Amazon waved this one at me in one of its “You’ve been buying Eroica and Shout Out Loud, so you might like this” auto-emails, and I’ve been wondering whether to get it. It’s now on my wish list for later. :-)
[quote comment=”28013″]Amazon waved this one at me in one of its “You’ve been buying Eroica and Shout Out Loud, so you might like this” auto-emails[/quote]
Those are two of my favorite series, so chances are you’ll like this one too. :) It’s similar to Shout Out Loud in that it spends time on developing characters and story outside of the main romance and that lends it a depth lots of yaoi doesn’t have.
The only caution I have is that some people don’t like her artwork. I didn’t when I first saw it. But I guess it’s an acquired taste because I really love it now.
Sounds right up my street. I’ve been a fan of Eroica since I encountered it years ago as a fan translation being distributed through the slash fanzine circuit, but I only really started on some of the others when they were released in official translations. Snagged a handful at the Tower closing sale pretty much at random, and got a mix ranging from stuff like SOL that really hit my buttons, to PWP that was rather too close to shota for my taste.
Of course, one of the beauties of writing pro original slash is that when my editor asks if I’d be interested in writing yaoi-style material as well, yaoi manga becomes research material and a tax-deductible business expense. :-)
Last time I was in my (small town midwest USA) Borders they had expanded the manga to *8* shelves which is about the same as for fantasy and over half the space given to romance. I was surprised to see they are selling so much of it here.
It’s popular everywhere. :) There are lots of conventions throughout the midwest. The coasts however rule with the really big ones.
The buyer for Borders was known to love manga, and that’s why they had a great selection. He left there recently though so I don’t know if all that will change. I’d heard rumors that they were going to shrink it down a bit.
[quote comment=”28018″]Snagged a handful at the Tower closing sale pretty much at random, and got a mix ranging from stuff like SOL that really hit my buttons, to PWP that was rather too close to shota for my taste.[/quote]
I’ve been thinking about this. It you want titles with something older than schoolboys, and god knows that’s what I’m always searching for (men dammit, I want men!), and with some story, you might want to consider these titles. Some are more smutty than others: Kizuna, Embracing Love, Antique Bakery (not really yaoi but very slashable, with one of the lead characters being gay; by Funi Yoshinaga also (with some hot Japanese doujinshi available too). Also Last Portrait, Your Honest Deceit, The Judged, Yellow.
The first two are long ongoing series that take a volume or so to find their footing but very worthwhile (and rather smutty). LP, YHD, TJ are all short, single volume stories but better than the average oneshot. Yellow is 4 volumes, complete, about a couple sexy bad boys who do not quite legal work for a living. I’d add Challengers as well, 4 volumes, complete, if you want comedy. It’s very light on sex but the two heroes and all their troubles including some hilarious secondary characters always make me laugh. Bondz and Loveholic are two by a favorite mangaka of mind, Toko Kawai. Bondz is especially good. Her book In the Walmut is coming out soon, and you’ll like that.
And last, because I’m never sure how people will take this, I recommend the Finder series, 3 vols, incomplete. It’s got rape, non-con, bondage, S&M you name it in the first volume. But in the second a great story starts that’s going into its fifth volume in Japan.
OK, Done now. (I want a job that lets me deduct manga! Too bad I review stuff for free. :) )
Thanks for those suggestions. I’m British, so I think of age of consent as 16 and the older schoolboy stuff doesn’t freak me as such; but even apart from shota squick factor, I prefer men to boys. It’s useful to have some suggestions.
And feel free to ping me if you want review copies of any of my stuff.
[quote comment=”28039″]Thanks for those suggestions. I’m British, so I think of age of consent as 16 and the older schoolboy stuff doesn’t freak me as such; but even apart from shota squick factor, I prefer men to boys. It’s useful to have some suggestions.
And feel free to ping me if you want review copies of any of my stuff.[/quote]
That’s the age of consent where I live too. If 16-17 is OK as long as the story is good, I’d suggest a few more more titles that just have good stories: Desire, Rin!, Seven, and Love Mode. The last is tied with Finder for my favorite series. It’s very romantic and emotional, and always makes me laugh cry through the whole thing every time I read it.
I read some of your excerpts. *gulp* You’d like the Finder series. What the heck did you read as research for Lord and Master? Because I’d like to read it too. I’d love to read any yaoi you’ve written, and the sf looks good as well (though not the one with torture).
Email=janatdearauthor@gmail.com
I haven’t got this book yet, though I was considering it. I was just put off by the art on the cover which is really not that attractive. I have some other books by this publisher and they’re fun romps (*rumps, I should say).
If anybody would like to try reading more romantic yaoi with less smut, try any title from June Manga (junemanga.com) or a few from DramaQueen (onedramaqueen.com). I’d recommend Only the Ring Finger Knows from June and Allure from DQ.
If, however, you would like more smutty titles, try any title from Be Beautiful (bebeautifulmanga.com) or Kitty Media (www.kittymedia.com).
Yaoi truly is a very romantic genre of manga and none of the truly hardcore (shota, tentacle rape, muscle men, beasts, insects) get published in North America anyways. There is one book with gay tentacle rape, however, it is called The Crimson Spell by Ayano Yamane from Kitty Media.
I hope this information helped! I hope I’m allowed back in this forum!
Yoshinaga’s art isn’t the prettiest, but it’s usually very expressive. She communicates a lot through the characters’ faces, and their words as well.
Aw, the tentacle sex in The Crimson Spell doesn’t even come close to hentai. It’s not graphic at all, and is played for humor. People shouldn’t get the impression that it’s a book for sickos. I plan on reviewing The Crimson Spell at some point, if I ever get the time away from work. I think it’s one of the best BL manga of the year.
I’d also recommend Your Honest Deceit from DQ. It’s one of the sweeter titles out. I’ve not been all that impressed with most of June’s latest flood of titles, though I liked Spell a lot, and The Paradise on the Hill.
Yeah, The Crimson Spell actually holds its own as a great yaoi fantasy even though yaoi fantasy stories are quite rare because it would simply conflict with the romance by being too distracting.
You’re right, the tentacle sex in Crimson Spell is quite tame. I don’t think the yaoi genre has much of it because it’s mostly used in erotic manga featuring females. I think the yaoi genre’s main focus is romance whereas the yuri genre’s focus is complete smut and to turn on the male reader as much as possible.
Here’s a link that features “gay” yaoi mangas for sale from Japan. I think their main focus is to turn on the gay male reader so they should be super smutty (you know, tailored to the male brain) –>
http://jpqueen.com/onlineshop/searchresult.asp?KEYWORD=gay+yaoi+manga
I have Your Honest Deceit too and I’m looking forward to the 2nd vol. and yes, Junes titles aren’t all great but they’re romantic and in abundance for those types who prefer softcore stuff. Thanks for replying!
Sincerely, Oliver