It's me. Hi. It's not a problem, it's fine.
#fujoshi #blmanga #queerreads #manga
It's me. Hi. It's not a problem, it's fine.
#fujoshi #blmanga #queerreads #manga
Japanese cartoonist Gengoroh Tagame said he wrote this for his 15-year-old self; a time when he would have loved a story about a gay high school student who gets the courage to come out when he meets an openly gay man who owns a café. Inner feelings are revealed via patterned backgrounds, & facial expressions are easy to decipher in this beautiful contemporary manga. Translation by Anne Ishii. #LGBTQ #comics
Friday Reads November 25 in which I talk about the books I‘ve read recently by:
Jody Wilson-Raybould;
Dawn Quigley;
Zitkala-Ša;
Mathew James Weigel;
Johnnie Christmas;
Aaron Becker; and
Gengoroh Tagame.
#IndigenousBooks #booktube #CanadianAuthors #comics #kidlit
https://youtu.be/Eg7NkZyK5t8
What animal is on this boy‘s t-shirt?
I don‘t read manga often, but I really enjoyed Tagame‘s previous work, My Brother‘s Husband. In this newest, he again looks at homophobia in Japan, but through an affecting coming-of-age/coming-out story.
In his moving Afterword, Tagame writes “1979. I didn‘t have any lovers, much less gay friends. No adults around me to whom I could come out…This is for that 15-year-old 42 years ago.”