more BL...

Mar. 4th, 2008 09:24 pm
insaneneko: (Default)

I did not think Koi ni yottemo written by Hizaki Yuu and illustrated by Kohji Tatsuru is particularly good. I just wanted to share the pretty pic from it. ^^; Basically the book is about a seme who works at a restaurant who keeps picking up from the alley behind the restaurant a customer whose tolerance to alcohol has recently changed and keeps getting rip-roaring drunk and taking him to a place where he can rest in peace. The seme at first has no romantic/sexual interest in the customer, but it wouldn't be a BL novel if things didn't change fast. Too bad it bored me to tears...I don't remember the end. Maybe I didn't finish it. *shrugs*

Other books I read not that long ago:

Sabaku no tsuki ni dakarete written by Itou Yuki and illustrated by Sera is classic Arabian "romance." This kind of story totally drove me nuts because it's not my thing, but judging from the quantity in the market it must be popular. Anyhow, uke works at the Japanese embassy in some small oil-rich Arab country. He is approached for sex by seme, a very rich and powerful prince. I think the seme's "pick-up line" was something like "Come with me." He expects uke to obey (happily) like everyone else who's willingly spread their legs for him....and is shocked when uke turns him down scornfully. He decides he's going to teach uke a lesson and make uke his. He pulls some strings and imprisons the uke. He throws luxury and comfort at uke while forcing him to have sex with him. A lot. You know, lots of sex makes a good uke docile and happy. I think it's pretty obvious where this story is going...there's a bit of a "twist" (such as it is) thrown in because our dear prince is "cursed." The uke makes a credible escape attempt but in the end succumbs to Stockholm Syndrome masking as love. Last but not least, the art's not bad.

Renai Shoumeishou written by Sakiya Haruhi and illustrated by Machiko Madoka is a much better book than the two I talk about above...Too bad it is spoiled by a bad beginning. Basically this is about a nice gay guy and the formerly straight-divorced-father he falls in love with. It's a classic angst-fest fueled by misunderstanding and a complete lack of communication...that didn't have to be this way. The author makes the mistake of starting things off with the uke deciding to end things. He thinks his relationship with seme is some rebound fuck buddy relationship and he can't take it anymore because he's actually in love. The book then goes back and shows the past, of how they met and all that happens. It's all rather sweet, especially since the seme is a devoted father of a really cute kid (I'm such a sucker for that kind of thing). If only it wasn't overshadowed by the angsty beginning of the novel that tells us where all this sweetness is headed for. In any case, uke tries to break things off. This is when seme gets a clue (he's not the most perceptive person in the world) and things work out as expected. I wouldn't even mention this book except that in the second story the seme does such a wonderful romantic declaration of love. A sincere one. It's the kind of thing girls read romance novels for. I also did like all the characters in the book (including the seme's ex-wife, in spite of the fact that she was completely unrealistic). The uke is sweet and cheerful, with a bit of an issue of really showing how he feels due to his not so good past with men. The seme is a bit dopey but well-meaning and kind. He's not stupid or completely dense, but the combination of him and an uke who tends to suppress negative feelings ends up with (at least with this author in this book) in angst-fest. I do like this artist quite a lot, even if she does draw the men a bit too thin at times. She also gets to draw the cute son! She's the same artist who illustrated Kodomo no hitomi, a book with a sweet father-son relationship I adore (and have already squealed about previously). XD
insaneneko: (Default)
Kodomo no hitomi by Konohara Narise is a wonderfully fun book, different in tone from others I’ve read so far by this author. I didn’t even connect it to Konohara-sensei (I have this terrible tendency to NOT pay attention to authors of the books I read in general) until I saw it on a complete list of her works, it has such a different feel to it. It is about Kashiwabara Misaki, who lives very poorly in a material sense but incredibly richly in an emotional sense with his six year old son Joutarou. He had married and had a child young, but lost his wife suddenly only several years later. Though she was gone and the lingering effects of having borrowed money for her care really make it tough for him to make ends meet, he is happy. Then one day he finds that his older brother Hitoshi, who had been adopted by their paternal grandfather after the death of their parents, had been in an accident and had regressed to a six year old in mentality and in memory. Misaki hates his brother for being cold and horrible to him when he had tried to borrow money for his wife’s treatment, but ends up with Hitoshi dumped on him. Initially he is very cold to his brother, but comes to realize that Hitoshi now was no longer the adult that he had come to hate, but a helpless little boy in a big body. Hitoshi and Joutarou get along famously, and Misaki warms up to him. It...is a romance, and thus sounds really improbable and silly. Objectively, it undeniably is, but..it is still delightful to read (and when did improbable and silly ever stop a BL story anyhow?). Konohara-sensei does a wonderful job of making things flow naturally (well, as naturally as such an unnatural situation can be ^^;). I reread this quite a bit, just for the sweet family moments and the simplicity a childlike mentality can bring to a relationship. Combined with nice art, it makes for wonderful rereading material.

the story )

the pics )

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