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I successfully pimped this to at least three people last weekend, [livejournal.com profile] scribblemoose, [livejournal.com profile] new_kate and [livejournal.com profile] toscas_kiss. It's one of Tokypop's Blu titles, and I found it addictively sweet and funny.

It's about Shino, a baby faced thirty something voice actor, whose greatest creation is a squeaky voiced kids cartoon character. His seventeen year old son suddenly turns up at his door and announces that he's going to live with him. Money is tight and Shino decides he must accept boys love voice scripts (oh noes!) to make ends meet.

One of the most interesting things is the reflection of real life voice acting (not that I know anything much about it), like the dodgy jokes the casts constantly make about each other, the pairing off and the rumours. I did wonder if the manga-ka was basing her characters on actual seiyuus. I'd love to know.

I liked the pacing, overall, although it did fall down at one or two points. I felt like some plot points were rushed, like the story at that point needed a few more panels just to form a pause or a beat. It made me realise that good pacing is important to me in a manga, and actually I've never properly considered how mangaka do it.

In a story I can usually tell when an extra bit of something is needed-- either a whole scene or just an extra beat, such as making the characters simply look at each other, or having a silence, or describing some sound or bit of the environment. I noticed that, quite often, Minekura introduces the same sort of feeling by making the last panel of an arc big and expansive and roomy - lots of sky and landscape. A natural stopping place because you have a lot to look at? In any case, it introduces a pause.

I've forgotten quite a lot about the plot by now, having only read through once. But there is teenage hockey drama. Shino has two other very hot voice actors lusting after him, and the son starts having UST with his (male) hockey coach. There’s also a lot of charming stuff about Shino trying in vain to hide his yaoi tapes from his son.

Date: 2006-10-13 02:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jamjar.livejournal.com
Satosumi Takaguchi is one of the best mangaka out there. She (probably she) wrote critically acclaimed manga about yankii girls and female juvenile deliquents, before she wrote yaoi. She wrote a straight romances with a girl who dresses as, and is usually asumed to be, a guy (though she doesnt speak or pretend to be one, just dresses like one) and a male PI who dresses as a girl for cases, with scenes where the girl watches him change. She writes m/m/f threesomes and yakuza manga, and girls that play baseball, one plain and boyish, the other physically pretty girly-girl. Shout out Loud is probably her most traditional yaoi manga, in terms of character types, because in most of hers... well, how a character looks does not inform how they act, their sex and sexual preference doesn't determine personality.

Date: 2006-10-13 03:06 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I think there are definitely elements of that approach in Shout Out Loud - particularly in how Shino enters this whole new world and how he deals with this new, baffling element to his sexuality. I really like how it's all fixed in the mundane details of a voice actor's daily life, too. Those other titles you mentioned sound great, btw.

Date: 2006-10-13 03:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] louiselux.livejournal.com
Oh, that was me. Lj helpfully logged me out.

Date: 2006-10-13 03:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lisa-bee.livejournal.com
Do you happen to know the titles of any of her other work (or where I could go to look it up)?

I quite enjoyed Shout Out Loud and would love to see more of her work.

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