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Who Killed the Hero?, Vol. 1

July 4, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Daken and toi8. Released in Japan as “Dare ga Yuusha wo Koroshita ka” by Kadokawa Sneaker Bunko. Released in North America by Yen On. Translated by Kim Morrissy.

It’s always hard to try to review a book whose very nature requires that the reader is surprised as it goes along. It’s even harder to do this when the book is excellent, as your review essentially amounts to “You’ve got to read this, it’s great!” “Why?” “I can’t tell you, spoilers!”. But here we are, and this book is great, so let’s settle down and try to do this. At its heart this book takes a long look at the fantasy standard “hero’s party goes to defeat the demon lord” cliche. There’s a prophecy, there’s the hero/swordsman/mage/healer party composition, there’s a promised reward of a royal daughter, and, inevitably, there’s a death. Because the book is called “Who Killed the Hero?”, I can at least talk about that. The death, in turn, leads the book and its cast to ask about the nature of the hero, why they have to defeat the demon lord when others cannot, and how a story can be turned on its ear by a simple investigation.

Four years earlier, the hero, Ares, led an elite team to defeat the demon lord. There was noble swordsman Leon, beautiful priestess Maria, and intelligent yet cynical mage Solon. They succeed… and yet, when they return, Ares did not come back with them, and they said that he perished on the return visit. Now someone is going around, getting the word on the street, talking to the other members of the hero’s party, as well as the prophet who made the prophecy about the hero in the first place, to try to figure out what happened. Because no one’s quite sure. Some say Ares was killed by a rogue demon. Some say the other members of the party killed him as there was a love triangle going on. And even the person who is going all around the capital trying to figure things out has their own agenda. What happened?

This is, by necessity, not a book with a large cast, and I enjoyed all the characters tremendously. My favorite was undoubtedly Maria, theoretically a girl devoted to God but in reality someone who will have a boy go and get her the “best” bread every day because it amuses her… only to be stunned when he actually manages to learn the things she was theoretically teaching him. I also was fond of the young princess, who listens to the hero say that he’ll defeat the demon lord, but he’s not coming back, and refuses to accept that. There are a lot of cynical people in this book, and it’s dealing, through almost its entirety, with a death. Despite that, I was amazed at how life-affirming and happy it is, and that once you get all the answers in the end even the one person whose life you assumed would end here ends up being forced into happiness.

There’s two more volumes of this, which seem to have a similar premise but a different cast. Similar to Brunhild the Dragonslayer, I think. In any case, despite not being able to give much away, this is a very rewarding book. Seek it out.

Filed Under: REVIEWS, who killed the hero

Manga the Week of 7/9/25

July 3, 2025 by Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Ash Brown and Anna N Leave a Comment

SEAN: Are you forced to do summer school this year? Why not read some manga inside your textbook? That sure worked during the school year!

MICHELLE: What could go wrong?

ASH: Seems like a solid plan, to me!

SEAN: We start with Yen On, who have a huge number of debuts. The Girl Who Wants to Be a Hero and the Girl Who Ought to Be a Hero (Yuusha ni Naritai Boku to, Yuusha ni Narubeki Kimi) is from the creator of I’m in Love with the Villainess, and is also yuri. A young demon girl travels to a hero academy in hopes of joining the school. There she meets the daughter of the current Hero… and immediately proposes to her!

ASH: I’m not so sure about the “immediately” part, but I did enjoy I’m in Love with the Villainess.

SEAN: How to Eat Life (Inochi no Tabekata) stars a young man who just wants to quietly live his life talking to his friend Baku, a backpack. Then he realizes that a girl in his class can see him doing this, even though no one else can.

ASH: It must be destiny!

ANNA: I’m still a little caught up on the backpack friend part.

SEAN: Is It Wrong to Try to Pick Up Girls in a Dungeon? Collector’s Edition collects the first ten volumes of the series in a deluxe hardcover (and, judging by the fact that it’s 10 volumes in 992 pages, minuscule print).

ASH: Enormous and yet so small at the same time.

SEAN: [Oshi No Ko] Spica the First Star is a spinoff novel of the popular manga series.

Sword of the Stallion (Sword of Stallion: Taneuma to Yobareta Saikyou Kishi, Ringoku no Oujo wo Netore to Meijirareru) stars a knight gone to seed after the death of his fiancee. He spends his nights in brothels, earning the title nickname. Then… his not-quite-dead fiancee shows up, and demands he seduce the princess of another kingdom. This is from the creator of Strike the Blood, and looks amazingly trashy. I might give it a try.

ASH: That premise really is amazing.

ANNA: It does sound amazingly trashy!

SEAN: To Sir, Without Love: I’m Divorcing You (Haikei Mishiranu Danna-sama, Rikonshite Itadakimasu) stars a noblewoman whose husband went off to war on their wedding day. Eight years later, he returns, but she wants a divorce, as she has her own life now. (Given the genre, odds are they will not be getting divorced.)

ASH: I can understand where she’s coming from.

ANNA: I’m in favor of noblewomen divorces!

SEAN: Also from Yen On: Sword Art Online 28, That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime 21, and The Theater of Haruhi Suzumiya (the 12th novel in the series, which came out digitally last year).

Yen Press debuts Convenient Semi-Friend (Koutsugou Semi-Friend), a yuri title from Manga Time Kirara. A shy girl hopes to make friends, and so goes off to college… to find her roommate groping another girl. This sounds like it’s for those who enjoy heroines blushing on every frame of every page.

Sword Art Online Unital Ring is the latest manga arc adapting the latest light novel , and it runs in Shonen Ace. Are they trapped in another game? Sorta kinda?

There’s also a third volume of K-ON! Shuffle.

Viz also has a few debuts. Disney Twisted-Wonderland: The Manga – Book of Octavinelle is the latest “we’re Alice in the Country of Hearts but without the legal battles” title. It runs in GFantasy.

ASH: Ha!

SEAN: Spider-Man: Kizuna runs in the kids manga Saikyou Jump. A young Japanese boy accidentally ends up merged with Spider-Man after a villain attack.

ASH: This looks fun. And gives me hope other Spider-Man manga might someday be released?

ANNA: I might check this out!

SEAN: Tsumiki Ogami’s Not-So-Ordinary Life (Ogami Tsumiki to Kinichijou) is the story of an awkward boy and a sweet girl. The girl is a werewolf, but that’s no issue. This runs in Weekly Shonen Sunday.

Ultraman: Along Came a Spider-Man runs in Corocoro Comic, and is exactly what you’d expect from that title. Pure crossover.

ASH: Other, other Spider-Man manga, that is.

ANNA: Is this the summer of Spider-Man manga???

SEAN: Yaiba: Samurai Legend (YⱯIBA) is a 1990s era manga from the creator of Detective Conan… erm, sorry, Case Closed, we love Jimmy Kudo, please put down those lawyers. It ran in Shonen Sunday, and we seem to be getting the omnibus bumko edition. A boy and his search for an enchanted sword. From what I hear, this is like Dragon Ball in that it starts silly and gets more serious as it goes on.

ASH: I’ve enjoyed what I’ve seen of the anime!

ANNA: Cool!

SEAN: Also from Viz: Beyblade X 3, Case Closed 95, Destroy All Humans. They Can’t Be Regenerated. A Magic: The Gathering Manga 4, Firefly Wedding 3, Kirby Manga Mania 8, and Sleepy Princess in the Demon Castle 28.

Tokyopop debuts You Can’t Live All on Your Own! (Hitori de Ikiru wa Mamanaranu), a josei manga from Comic Qurie. The adventures of four women living in a shared house in Tokyo.

MICHELLE: Intriguing!

ANNA: Oooh, I might have to get this.

SEAN: Titan Manga has a 3rd volume of Corpse Blade.

SuBLime has Ask and You Will Receive 2 and Therapy Game Restart 5.

MICHELLE: I really need to catch up on Therapy Game Restart! I love it very much.

SEAN: Steamship debuts SEX DRIVE – My Listless Instructor (Sex Drive Watashi no Kedarui Kyoikugakari). A young woman develops a condition that makes her go into heat and emit pheromones. Naturally, she’s fired. Her only chance to survive is to join an espionage agency. This runs in Choco Live, one of Libre Shuppan’s few non-BL magazines.

ASH: I was not expecting espionage.

ANNA: Maybe she can make friends with a spy’s backpack.

SEAN: Also from Steamship: The Trapped Former Villainess Wants to Escape from the Sadistic Prince 2.

Square Enix Manga gives us The Emperor’s Caretaker 3 and Just Like Mona Lisa 6.

Seven Seas has two debuts, both BL. My Younger Knight Takes Care of Me in Another World (Isekai de Toshishita Kishi ni Sewa wo Yakareteimasu) stars an office worker who accidentally gets isekai’d to another world along with a young woman. She’s the one they wanted, he’s excess baggage. Fortunately, a knight takes a shine to him.

ASH: Awww.

SEAN: The Feisty Omega and His Twin Mates (Tsuyogari Omega wa Bokura no Ban) runs in Be x Boy Omegaverse. Usual omegaverse stuff. Omega pretends to be a beta. Is attacked one day when he goes into heat. Rescued by his destined alpha. Unfortunately, his destined alpha is… twins?

Seven Seas, danmei: The Husky and His White Cat Shizun 9.

Seven Seas, manga and manga-related byproducts: At 25:00 in Akasaka 4, The Big Apple 3, DUNGEON DIVE: Aim for the Deepest Level 7, Even Dogs Go to Other Worlds 5, The Long Summer of August 31 2, Malevolent Spirits: Mononogatari 11, and My New Life as a Cat 10.

One Piece books debut Teppeki Honeymoon, the latest shoujo title from Meca Tanaka. A high school girl famed for her ludicrous strength but also in debt suddenly finds her debts will be cleared… if she marries this handsome smug guy with an agenda. She does so, but what if the smug guy with the agenda turns out to be the love interest? This ran in Hana to Yume Ai, so yes, he is the love interest.

MICHELLE: I really like this cover and find the fluffy shoujo premise appealing!

ASH: It’s nice to have fluffy options.

ANNA: I enjoy Meca Tanaka manga.

SEAN: Retailers say KUMA is debuting Haberdashery Ginmokusei (Ginmokusei no Shitateya), a BL title from Chara. A man inherits his grandfather’s tailoring store, but business is terrible. Suddenly a handsome young man offers to turn the shop around.

MICHELLE: Sounds potentially fun!

SEAN: Kodansha Manga has one debut, 23:45 Re;, a sequel to the earlier 23:45. More doomed BL ghosts. This ran in Gateau, and is also done in one.

ASH: I’ll admit to enjoying doomed BL ghosts.

SEAN: Also in print: Medalist 9, My Noisy Roommate 3, and A Sign of Affection Omnibus 3.

ANNA: I need to get caught up with both Medalist and A Sign of Affection.

SEAN: Digitally there is Gang King 31, Manchuria Opium Squad 7, and Ya Boy Kongming! 20.

One debut for J-Novel Club, a light novel. In Another World with Household Spells (Isekai ni Kita kedo, Seikatsu Mahou shika Tsukaemasen) stars an office lady who does not even get a considerate truck-kun hitting her, she just wakes up as a destitute 10-year-old noble. Can she turn her family’s fortunates around at the magic academy despite only knowing minor household spells?

ASH: I hate just waking up to things like that.

SEAN: Other light novels: Dimension Wave 4, Fluffy-Eared Realm Restoration 2, The Frontier Lord Begins with Zero Subjects 9, The Hero-Killing Bride 3 (the final volume), The Legendary Witch Is Reborn as an Oppressed Princess 5, The Poison King 5, Rebuild World 6-2, Record of Wortenia War 29, The Reincarnation of the Strongest Exorcist in Another World 5, The Tanaka Family Reincarnates 3, and Welcome to Japan, Ms. Elf! 10.

Other manga titles: Housekeeping Mage from Another World 8, I’ll Never Set Foot in That House Again! 7, The Invincible Little Lady 9, and The Oblivious Saint Can’t Contain Her Power 4.

Ghost Ship has a 16th and final volume of Ayakashi Triangle.

Digital Manga Publishing has a 2nd edition of the BL title Even So, I Will Love You Tenderly.

ASH: I’m still giving DMP the side-eye, but am glad to see this back in print.

SEAN: Retailers say Denpa Books has the 6th and final omnibus of Nana & Kaoru.

ASH: Perhaps!

SEAN: Airship, in print, has the 11th volume of Classroom of the Elite: Year 2 and the 12th volume of Loner Life in Another World.

And for early digital we see Sword of the Demon Hunter: Kijin Gentōshō 10 and The Weakest Tamer Began a Journey to Pick Up Trash 10.

Lastly, ABLAZE reminds folks again they have the Tezuka license by boxing up four recent releases of theirs: One Hundred Tales, Shakespeare Manga Theater, Tomorrow the Birds, and Neo Faust.

ASH: Oh! I’ve been meaning to get around to most of those. Maybe it’s time.

SEAN: They also have a Horror Manga Box Set, which collects the first volumes of Gannibal, Happyland, and Crueler Than Dead.

This week proved much bigger than expected. Maybe the manga artists all had summer school?

Filed Under: FEATURES, manga the week of

The Do-Over Damsel Conquers the Dragon Emperor, Vol. 7

July 2, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Sasara Nagase and Mitsuya Fuji. Released in Japan as “Yarinaoshi Reijō wa Ryūtei Heika o Kōryaku-chū” by Kadokawa Beans Bunko. Released in North America by Cross Infinite World. Translated by piyo.

It’s sometimes very hard to separate this series, where a young woman decides to get engaged to the man who may one day try to destroy the world in order to change her own fate, and at every single turn of the page worry that she’s going to fail and the book will end with most of the cast dead and a BAD END screen, and not compare it to I’m the Villainess, So I’m Taming the Final Boss, by the same author, which has the exact same plot. And both series also have an antagonist, someone who sets herself diametrically opposite our protagonist and does everything they can do fix things. It’s just been harder to spot it in Do-Over Damsel, as Faris just hasn’t shown us much. Fortunately, in this book we get to see her dealing with a very, very useless goddess (no, not that one), and also bond with Jill over a mutual enemy. It’s sweet. Also, it makes her evil at the end hit even harder.

Jill is headed off to the Lehrsatz Duchy for a meeting with Faris, the queen of Kratos. Hadis is staying behind, with one of the candidates to be his wife handling things on his end, and being better at it than Jill, much to her chagrin. Unfortunately, when they’re flying to the duchy, Jill decides to investigate a mysterious village that may be home to the Order of the Ark, a group of religious terrorists who wants the Gods dead. As it turns out, she then manages to get accidentally abducted by those same terrorists – accidentally as the ones they really want to abduct are Raw, presumably so they can control dragons… and Faris, who they have already abducted and who is near unconscious due to the anti-magic barriers surrounding her. Can Jill break them out and manage to get to the conference? And what will Hadis do when he hears about this?

This was supposed to be the short story volume. CIW says that it is still coming, but they did this volume first. I’m assuming that, unlike, say, Re: Zero or Index, this is not causing us to miss all sorts of nuance in this current volume. Not that nuance is something Jill is good at. Her strength is indeed her strength, as well as her temper, as she realizes the best solution is to simply punch everything until it stops. Again. Her weakness is that this isn’t good enough this time, and Faris, who seems to only have the strength to break her ditzy goddess spear, is much better at crafty plans that you cannot punch your way out of. Hence the cliffhanger. There’s also the usual “Jill gets jealous and mad, Hadis panics and feeds her to make up for it” wackiness – these two know each other really well by now. That was fun.

Will we get Vol. 8 next? Or short stories? And yes, I did deliberately leave out all the reveals near the end. A great series, assuming you can get past the premise, which is still hard to get past.

Filed Under: do-over damsel conquers the dragon emperor, REVIEWS

Observation Records of My Wife: The Misadventures of a Self-Proclaimed Villainess, Vol. 1

July 1, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Shiki and Wan Hachipisu. Released in Japan as “Jishō Akuyaku Reijō na Tsuma no Kansatsu Kiroku” by Regina Books. Released in North America by Hanashi Media. Translated by Ethan Holms.

(It’s a rare series where you can see where I bought it simply by what the title and cover art are. Hanashi has changed the main title of this series… everywhere but Kindle, which is what I read it on. Hence I keep the old title.)

This series makes no bones about the fact that it is “more of the same”. Cecil and Bertia may now be married, but seemingly nothing has changed between them except they now sleep in the same bed. Bertia is still hyperactive and goofy. Cecil is still one wife away from destroying the world. Together, they fight… well, not crime, but bad communication in relationships. Here we meet two couples from a country across the sea, and we find that it turns out that being a cool tsundere doesn’t really work well when you’re a princess, and also just because childhood friends are now engaged doesn’t mean they understand love.

Cecil and Bertia’s wedding went so well that she is now being asked for advice on how to make other noble weddings perfect. A magazine is a good idea, but it will have to wait, as her first big wedding prep event is for Princess Lysonna, who is marrying into the Kingdom of Seahealby. Unfortunately, on arriving, Bertia suddenly realizes that this city… no, it’s not from an otome game. But it is from a novel that she skimmed and half-remembered because one of the minor characters looked like Cecil. And what’s worse, she remembers that in this book, Lysonna was the villainess, due for a bad end! Clearly it’s time for Bertia to do the old villainess thing again, and bully everyone! This works about as well as it did in the previous books, but at least it amuses Cecil.

These books run on anti-suspense, and that’s fine. Honestly, the biggest threat of the series is Cecil, who is deeply in love with Bertia, and it’s shown over and over again that this is the only thing keeping him from being a sociopath who destroys the world because he’s bored. The issues of the two couples turn out to be 1) I don’t understand what my fiancee is thinking/showing love is super embarrassing, and 2) It’s not manly to do things like pay attention to your fiancee and be happy she has friends other than you. Bertia takes care of the women by just being really super nice (while thinking she’s being mean) and, of course, being gaga for Cecil. Cecil handles the male end by subterfuge, and, when he can’t do that, simply explaining it all till he gets annoyed and leaves. All this love drama is taking away from his Bertia time.

The book ends abruptly, and I suspect we’ll still be in this foreign land next time. If you liked Bakarina but wish it starred Jeord, this is the perfect book. For those who hate Jeord, it’s still pretty good anyway.

Filed Under: observation records of my fiancee

Bookshelf Briefs 6/30/25

June 30, 2025 by Sean Gaffney and Michelle Smith Leave a Comment

Choking on Love, Vol. 2 | By Keiko Iwashita| Seven Seas – The title continues to be very apt for this shoujo series, as Hibari has fallen for Gaku hard, but is unaware of her own feelings and very uncomfortable with the idea that she could love a free-spirited bad boy like him. He, on the other hand, is 100% fine with loving a girl like her, even to the point of injuring himself because he really wants to see her as soon as possible. That said, I do wish there was a bit more of her college design stuff and a bit less boy band. I sense the third volume won’t help there, as our heroes have met their competition, and not only does it crush them but one of them may know Hibari better than Gaku does. Good solid shoujo. – Sean Gaffney

Colette Decides to Die, Vol. 3 | By Alto Yukimura| Viz Media – I’m continuing to love this old-school shoujo series which screams Tokyopop circa 2008. In this omnibus, which is Vols. 5-6 of the original, we meet new gods (drunken layabout Dionysus and airheaded Demeter); Colette’s old mentor comes to help and has to fend off the fact that he is Available ™; and Those Two Apothecaries continue to exist, with Pola getting a spotlight chapter that tries (and fails, mostly) to have her be anything other than black-haired Colette, Jr. But it’s Colette and Hades that are the reason to read this, especially Colette, who will be the perfect partner for Hades if they can get over the human/god thing and she can stop working so hard she runs her body ragged… literally. Everyone needs to read this. – Sean Gaffney

Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End, Vol. 13 | By Kanehito Yamada and Tsukasa Abe | Viz Media – The joy and tragedy of Frieren is that she has realized how she and Himmel are on the same wavelength, and perfect for each other, only now that Himmel is dead. As such, it’s great to see that, even in the past with a Himmel who you would think would be less experienced than his companion, they still work perfectly together. We then get to start up the NEXT arc, which looks like a “prevent an assassination” plotline, but more importantly, gives us more of everyone’s favorite crack pairing, Ubel and Land. He can’t stand her, she’s fascinated by him, and their chemistry is off the charts. Best of all, they’re totally different from Fern and Stark. Let’s now hope they can survive till the end of this arc. Always recommended. – Sean Gaffney

Magus of the Library, Vol. 8 | By Mitsu Izumi | Kodansha Comics – The fact that this series only comes out once a year can be a real problem, as I just cannot keep up with its monstrous cast. Things are not helped by the fact that this book is mostly an action manga, as a huge spirit monster invades the city… and sits there, a distraction while someone tries to steal the book Theo has been taking care of, and a quirky masked guy is wandering around the city insisting the entire world belongs to him. Always a dangerous thing to say in a shonen manga, and his cynical take on caring for the old people in the world (his take: don’t, let them die) is contrasted by Theo’s sunny optimism. All this plus a hypnotic possession of one of the cuter members of the cast, which doesn’t sound good. I hope I remember who she is by next year. – Sean Gaffney

My Hero Academia, Vol. 41 | By Kohei Horikoshi | Viz Media – When we were getting the chapters week by week on the Jump app, the chapters in this volume, or at least the first half, really made a lot of fans furious. We suspected it might happen—it’s kind of thematically appropriate—but everything in this volume points to Izuku losing One for All at the end of this fight and being quirkless again. Now, I admit that is kind of a bummer, but as we see in the last half of this book, at least he’s not alone, and has friends and allies who are there to save him. Well, those friends and allies who aren’t in a coma and near death. If you had forgotten who Sato and Sero were, as most of us had, here’s the chance to see them have one last cool thing. Next time is the finale. – Sean Gaffney

The 100 Girlfriends Who Really, Really, Really, Really, REALLY Love You, Vol. 14 | By Rikito Nakamura and Yukiko Nozawa | Ghost Ship – There’s a new girlfriend in this volume, who has a great “gimmick” (violins/violence), but it’s also great to see how quickly everyone accepts her love of blood and gore and welcomes her into the group, to the point where she gets to be part of a group of four battling some jerks at a gaming/toy store. I also loved the chapter where Naddy is accused of talking in incoherent Americanisms, where it turns out that not only do Rentaro and his girlfriends understand her perfectly, but when she talks in normal Japanese, the class does WORSE. All this and lines like “take me on an oral rodeo” are why 100GF works as both a heartwarming, progressive polycule and a funny ecchi manga. – Sean Gaffney

Skip Beat!, Vol. 50 | By Yoshiki Nakamura | VIZ Media – I have been an ardent fan of Skip Beat! since 2008, so it pains me to say that this volume was boring. I assign most of the blame to the fact that we have caught up with Japan, so new releases are infrequent. In this one, Kanae travels to America to appear in a film with Cedric D. Bennett, big star whom I had entirely forgotten about, with Kyoko along as her personal assistant. We encounter Cedric’s famous grandfather, whom I had entirely forgotten about. There are possible sightings of Ren’s parents, but I’ve almost entirely forgotten about them, too. And even some of the other Japanese actors that we see more often are pretty much indistinguishable to me. It’s a bummer. However, I’m hopeful this setting might spur some revelations for Kyoko about Corn’s true identity and Ren’s past in general. We shall see. – Michelle Smith

Filed Under: Bookshelf Briefs

I Want to Be a Saint, But I Can Only Use Attack Magic!, Vol. 1

June 30, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Fuyu Aoki and Bodax. Released in Japan as “Seijo-sama ni Naritai no ni Kougeki Mahou shika Tsukaenain desu kedo!?” by GC Novels. Released in North America by Cross Infinite World. Translated by Kashi Kamitoma.

As I was about three minutes into the book, I joked that it should be called “Bocchi the Mage!”. Little did I know. There is a scene, with art to match, where Yuffie, the heroine of this novel, wears a party outfit to what turns out to be a standard noble’s ballroom party. It consists of big sunglasses, one a heart and one a star, and a T-Shirt saying Let’s Party. When you combine this with her hideous social anxiety and desire to abase herself, it’s really hard NOT to think of Bocchi. Or Monica, because she also gets invited to the student council, which feels very much like the one from Silent Witch. Unlike Monica, she’s only here to go to school and make a friend or two, if that’s possible for someone like her. Unfortunately for her, she lives in a world where magic is gender-binaried… and she’s just broken that binary.

Yuffie is a girl who lives in the middle of nowhere with her family, who aren’t abusive per se, but seem to be of the “why can’t you be like the normal children?” sort. She’s got crippling social anxiety, and her attempts to make friends have been laughably bad. When they team up for school activities, she’s always with the teacher. But she has a secret. When she was seven, she saw a saint using magic, and realized that’s what she wanted to be when she grew up. So she practiced magic. Every day. For seven years. By teaching herself. She manages to learn some healing magic… slow healing magic, but it’s there… and shows her parents, who say she should go to the magic academy! She’s delighted. Or horrified. One of those. See, she has a secret. She has immensely powerful attack spells like fireballs and lightning blasts. But… only men can use that sort of magic. It’s in their religion. Not good.

If seeing girls having a panic attack and debasing themselves constantly is not your thing… well, don’t skip the book, but you’ll need patience. Yuffie does get better by the end of the book, but it’s a long, painful road. She accidentally makes friends with most of the current student council. She’s trying to hide her attack magic, so the rest of the students and her teachers hate her. Oh yes, and it turns out that the demons are trying to attack humanity, starting with this school, and the only thing powerful enough to wipe them out is Yuffie. She self-taught herself magic so well she’s the most powerful attack magician in the country, and that means that it’s not – for once – just her paranoid fantasies,. she really COULD be imprisoned and experimented on. Fortunately, this school seems to mostly have good, if eccentric nobles. One seems to be a predatory lesbian, but it’s more of an “I’m taking her home with me!” cute fetish than anything sordid. Heck, even the bullying ojou-sama is almost immediately tamed by Yuffie’s apologies and delicious burdock roots.

This is not a must-read, but if you can get past Yuffie’s complete mess of a self-image, it’s a decent power fantasy, though it’s not so much a trans allegory as just another “what if I were OP as hell?” fantasy.

Filed Under: i want to be a saint but i can only use attack magic, REVIEWS

Pick of the Week: Girls, Priestesses, and Nameless Horrors

June 30, 2025 by Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Katherine Dacey, Ash Brown, MJ and Anna N Leave a Comment

SEAN: Lotsa good stuff in a busy week, but I mist admit I Wanna Be Your Girl leapt out at me as an obvious pick, despite the award winning Who Killed the Hero? and the license rescued The Twelve Kingdoms glaring at me from offstage.

MICHELLE: I am definitely interested in I Wanna Be Your Girl, but the one on this list that made me gasp and rush to pre-order it was volume two of Fushigi Yûgi: Byakko Senki. That seems like pretty strong evidence for making it my pick of the week.

KATE: I’m putting The Colour Out of Space at the top of my to-buy list; I could use a good spooky manga right now.

ASH: I’m looking forward to reading The Colour Out of Space and I Wanna Be Your Girl, too, but I’m so excited that Twelve Kingdoms is getting another chance, I’m making that my pick.

MJ: Seeing I Wanna Be Your Girl on the list has made me interested in a new manga more than I have been in years (I already pre-ordered!) so let’s hope it’s part of a trend!

ANNA: I’m extremely excited for Fushigi Yûgi: Byakko Senki, I didn’t even realize it was about to come out!

Filed Under: PICK OF THE WEEK

Heroine? Saint? No, I’m an All-Works Maid (And Proud of It)!, Vol. 3

June 29, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Atekichi and Yukiko. Released in Japan as “Heroine? Seijo? Iie, All Works Maid desu (ko)!” by TO Books. Released in North America by Airship. Translated by Matthew Jackson. Adapted by Michelle McGuinness.

This was the best volume in the series to date, mostly as a) it managed to actually get through to its heroine/saint/maid and make her realize that her “aw shucks, this is just normal maid magic” thing is absolute hogwash, and b) it actually started pushing back on her omnipotence and perfection, showing her screwing up several times over the course of the book, and also having another crisis of faith, this one even stronger than the one she had in the second book. Melody loves maids, and loves to be a maid, but at heart this is a heroine reincarnated in a fantasy world book, and nine times out of ten when that happens the main character is a workaholic. Melody does not know what to do with time off. She literally has no outfits other than maid uniforms. And, despite riding her way through an obvious event flag, she remains completely uninterested in romance. She is not here to be a romance heroine, thank you very much.

It’s summer break, and time for Luciana and her entourage of servants to go back to the main estate and tour their lands. Though this journey is thrown off slightly by the arrival of Maxwell, who is here to invite Luciana to the Summer Ball, something that absolutely flummoxes her, and she asks for time to think it over. After this, they head off on the long journey there, and watch Melody literally build a two-story mansion from scratch… and also store it in a snowglobe for later use. You know, just Melody things. Unfortunately, as they’re almost there, an earthquake rocks the land, and her family estate is totally destroyed! Even worse, the three villages that make up what remains of their domain are suffering from a blight AND a poor harvest. Will this finally be a problem even Melody can’t solve?

This has a classic otome game dilemma at its heart, which is that the game’s plotline wants to happen even though Melody has completely broken it. It keeps trying to ruin and kill Luciana, to the point where the poor girl is literally dreaming of the game creators discussing her death, though she has no idea who they are. We meet another love interest here, and he’s a smiling villain if ever there was one, and he also falls hard for Melody (who is uninterested, but less uninterested than she is with everyone else.) Most of all, Melody spends an exhausting night curing all the blight and poor crops… only to have it come back almost immediately. Some dark force wants this family and region destroyed, and I suspect we’ll get more of hat as the series goes on.

So while there is still a lot of ludicrous maid stuff, Melody *and* the series itself are getting more serious. Which is good, as it’s a long-runner, and you can’t get by on oblivious OP maid forever.

Filed Under: heroine? saint? no i'm an all-works maid, REVIEWS

Nia Liston: The Merciless Maiden, Vol. 7

June 28, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Umikaze Minamino and Katana Canata. Released in Japan as “Kyōran Reijō Nia Liston: Byōjaku Reijō ni Tenseishita Kami-goroshi no Bujin no Kareinaru Musō Roku” by HJ Bunko. Released in North America by J-Novel Club. Translated by okaykei.

For those people who don’t enjoy seeing me trying to wring 500 words out of a review, you may as well stop now. The book is fine. The end. For those who really love seeing me struggle, welcome to my hell. This is primarily a tournament arc. I had enough trouble writing those up when I did manga reviews here, I don’t need to have to do it with light novels. Boy, that sure was a close fight. Boy, that sure was a one-sided fight. Repeat as needed. Even Nia doesn’t really have a huge presence in this book till near the end, mostly as she is (of course) not allowed to fight. She is there to film the show for magivision, though, so we do get to see some of her fighting rage come as she tries to get fighters to sit for an interview. Oh, and to take out dangerous assassins trying to kill her student.

Now that all the money has been raised and all the preparations have been done, it’s finally time for the fighting tournament. Which is a bit bigger than everyone was expecting. There are over 10,000 entries. Winnowing this down to 300 or so finalists is thankfully not Nia’s problem. Things are helped by dividing the preliminaries into weapons and no weapons tiers, but it’s still a LOT of fights. Some folks don’t know their own strength (Gandolph). Some folks have a very tough time f it (Fressa). Some folks are being overwhelmed by having to be the celebrity poster child of the entire tournament (Lynokis). And some folks are realizing that no matter what the outcome of this tournament, they’ll likely have to flee the country and start a new life somewhere else (Anzel). Needless to say, you can guess who the assassins are after.

One of the better things I liked about this was seeing folks realize how different a fight is when it’s under the pressure of a match, and especially when you aren’t actually supposed to murder your opponent. A few really strong folks end up losing as they struggle to not kill anyone, and Fressa manages to win her fight only because of that rule. Some fighters are going to get better fast. That said, Nia’s students are clearly a cut above the rest, and it shows – the comedic highlights of the book were Gandolph accidentally breaking the leg of his opponent by just putting up a chi defense, and Lynokis realizing that the adventurer she wanted to be like growing up is really just a violent thug, and one-shotting him in horror at her past self’s shallowness. The dramatic highlight is the finale, where we see an old assassin who is very very good at killing anyone he wants to but cannot fight against the horrors of normal aging. I wonder if we’ll see him again.

The 8th volume only came out in Japan last month, so it may be a bit will we get more. Till then, punching things, yay.

Filed Under: nia liston, REVIEWS

The Manga Review: Saturday Morning Cartoons

June 28, 2025 by Katherine Dacey Leave a Comment

If you’re a teacher, librarian, or parent, this week’s newsletter is for you! To celebrate Pride Month, manga experts from around the web have been highlighting great, queer-friendly titles for young adults. The all-librarian staff at No Flying No Tights, for example, just compiled an excellent list of nine LBGTQ-friendly titles for older teens that touch on many aspects of the queer experience, from first love to gay marriage and gender dysphoria. For readers more interested in queer-friendly manga for women, Alex Henderson has a short but thoughtful list of yuri titles that run the gamut from After Hours to She Loves to Cook, and She Loves to Eat. Also worth a look is Cy Catwell’s in-depth discussion of Run Away With Me, Girl, about a pair of young women who buck societal expectations about love, marriage, and family to find their own pathway to happiness.

NEWS AND VIEWS

File this under It’s About Time: Dark Horse announced that it will be publishing a new, deluxe edition of Lone Wolf and Cub with unflipped pages and oversize trim. Look for the first volume in March 2026. [ICv2]

In other licensing news, Graphix will publish Spider-Man: Shadow Warrior, a manga that finds Peter Parker and friends transported to feudal Japan. The title, which is aimed at elementary and middle-school readers, arrives on shelves in September. [ICv2]

What LBGTQ+ manga would you like to see make the leap from print to screen? [Anime Feminist]

Once again, Jocelyne Allen highlights a manga that isn’t available in English, but really ought to be: Cats~Yojo-han Bura Bura Bushi~. [Brain vs. Book]

Lace up your skates: Deb, David, Chip, and Christoper debate the merits of Dogsred, a melodramatic sports manga from the creator of Golden Kamuy. [Mangasplaining]

REVIEWS

The latest Reader’s Corner covers everything from seventh volume of My Girlfriend’s Child to the first installment of Kaiju No. 8: B-Side… Giovanni Stigliano gives high marks to Neighborhood Craftsmen: Stories from Kanda’s Gokura-cho… and if you have a young cat lover in your house, check out A Library Girl’s review of A Man & His Cat Picture Book: Fukumaru and the Spaceship of Happiness.

New and Noteworthy

  •  BONDS (Giovanni Stigliano, Asian Movie Pulse)
  • The Colour Out of Space (Edward Picot, Broken Frontier)
  • Guardian: Zhen Hun, Vol. 1 (A Library Girl’s Familiar Diversions)
  • Lycoris Recoil Official Comic Anthology: React (Danny Lee, Asian Movie Pulse)
  • My Death Flags Show No Sign of Ending, Vol. 1 (Demelza, Anime UK News)
  • Not So Shoujo Love Story, Vol. 1 (AJ Mack, Yatta-Tachi)
  • Otonari Complex, Vol. 1 (AJ Mack, Yatta-Tachi)
  • Silkscreen (AJ Mack, Yatta-Tachi)
  • Snegurockka of the Spring Breeze (Sara Smith, The Graphic Library)
  • Teppeki Honeymoon, Vol. 1 (Demelza, Anime UK News)
  • Watari-kun’s ****** Is About to Collapse, Vol. 1 (MrAJ Cosplay, ANN)
  • A Witch’s Life in Mongol, Vol. 1 (Claire, Beneath the Tangles)

Complete, Ongoing, and OOP Series

  • Adults’ Picture Book: New Edition, Vol. 3 (Mark Thomas, The Fandom Post)
  • Aria of the Beech Forest, Vol. 1 (Sara Smith, The Graphic Library)
  • Call of the Night, Vol. 20 (King Baby Duck, The Boston Bastard Brigade)*
  • Deadman Wonderland, Vol. 2 (Sara Smith, The Graphic Library)
  • The Gay Who Turned Kaiju (AJ Mack, Yatta-Tachi)
  • Jujutsu Kaisen, Vol. 25 (King Baby Duck, The Boston Bastard Brigade)
  • Jungle Juice, Vol. 5 (Sara Smith, The Graphic Library)
  • Kurosagi Corpse Delivery Service Omnibus Edition, Vol. 5 (SKJAM! Reviews)
  • Let’s Do It Already, Vol. 5 (Josh Piedra, The Outerhaven)
  • Oshi no Ko, Vols. 9-10 (darkstorm, Anime UK News)
  • Pink Candy Kiss, Vol. 2 (Eleanor Walker, Okazu)
  • Rainbows After Storms, Vol. 3 (Erica Friedman, Okazu)
  • The Shiunji Family Children, Vols. 2-3 (Demelza, Anime UK News)
  • A Star Brighter Than the Sun, Vol. 2 (Josh Piedra, The Outerhaven)
  • Soul Eater: The Perfect Edition, Vol. 1 (Sara Smith, The Graphic Library)
  • Suzume, Vol. 3 (Sara Smith, The Graphic Library)
  • A Terrified Teacher at Ghoul School, Vols. 15-16 (Noemi10, Anime UK News)
  • Tougen Anki: Legend of the Cursed Blood, Vol. 3 (HWR, Anime UK News)
  • The Way of the Househusband, Vol. 13 (King Baby Duck, The Boston Bastard Brigade)
  • Young Ladies Don’t Play Fighting Games, Vols. 5-6 (luce, Okazu)

* Final volume

Filed Under: FEATURES

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