Showing posts with label queer fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label queer fiction. Show all posts

Saturday, November 1, 2025

Omega Megaera Vol. 1 - A Review

I received a free ARC of this book from NetGalley in exchange for a fair review. I was initially going to include this in my most recent review grab bag, but I had more to say about it than I expected. My work is getting delayed thanks to a hand injury so this is about all I can get out at the moment.

Title: Omega Megaera, Vol. 1

Author/Illustrator:  Maki Marukido

Publisher: Kodansha

Street Date: November 25, 2025

Rating: 5/5

Okay, stay with me on this one. Omega Megaera is an omegaverse manga. This means it takes place in a world where human sex is divided into categories beyond male and female-- alpha, beta, and omega, which dictate their biological and social roles. This trope arose from fanfiction and in recent years has been making its way into traditional publishing. It's not for everyone, but it does bring up interesting themes we'll get to.

In this series' world, omegas are only good for one thing -- bearing children for alphas -- and those who can't, megaeras, are shunned. The story follows Saimon, a megaera tasked with tracking down an illegitimate son of his father in law. The son, Mamiya, turns out to be an omega -- so Saimon plans to pass him off as the alpha his father had hoped for. The first volume introduces the complex Hanabusa family and the structure of this three-tiered society, especially the restrictions placed on omegas. Omegas are for producing (hopefully alpha) children and nothing else, regardless of any personal skill or intelligence. When Saimon and Mamiya discuss how it's to the alpha's benefit to not suppress omegas' heats, Mamiya observes "Keep us barefoot and pregnant, huh?" -- imagery often applied to the "tradwife" archetype promoted by American conservative groups in real life. These actual groups have a very similar worldview -- that women should stay home and have children, and that is their highest purpose. The late provocateur Charlie Kirk was in particular a proponent of this ideology. I mentioned in my review of Before You Go Extinct the pro-natalist movements in Japan and the US that promote high birthrates (even if the material and social conditions are poor for raising children). These movements invariably place massive emphasis on women (or people they perceive as women) focusing only on childbirth and rearing -- instead of pursuits like education and careers. 

Works like Omega Magaera allow us to examine these issues through a fantasy lens, letting us step back and enjoy drama we don't actually want to be involved in, and keep real-world issues in the back of our minds. If you think the idea of omegas not being allowed to hold high-ranking positions in society because all they're good for is childbirth is ridiculous and bigoted, hopefully you'll see the same problems in real-world rhetoric. 

Saimon is a really likeable character, a scientist trying to make sense of the restrictive world he lives in, even as he feels his husband Seijuro really is his soulmate-- even if he failed to give Seijuro children. He has just enough selfish motivation in passing Mamiya off as an alpha to be believable. Mamiya is also shaping up to be an interesting character, forced to hide his actual sex for family politics. The art is quite nice too, and I wish we had more of it in color. 

This will appeal to fans of omegaverse fiction, but also I think to readers interested in examining social structures like gender/sex and the pressure many people feel to have children. In the afterward comic, Marukido says she likes depicting human psychology and hopes to focus on it in this series. I think the series does, as it poses questions about what happens when a society imposes limitations on people based on their birth characteristics. It's really no wonder omegaverse fiction is so popular with female and queer readers, as it examines issues that many of us face. I really look forward to the future volumes of this series.

Wednesday, June 11, 2025

NetGalley Review Grab Bag Vol. 9

 What can I say, I requested a lot of books this year. Most of my posts are going to be review collections for a while, though I do have some actual posts about other topics planned.

I received free ARCs from NetGalley and the publishers in exchange for a fair review.


Title:
Tune In to the Midnight Heart Vol. 1

Author/Illustrator: Masakumi Igarashi

Rating: 2.5/5

Published by Kodansha and available May 6, 2025, Tune In to the Midnight Heart pinged my interest in broadcasting. This new series follows Arisu, a high schooler looking for the girl behind the voice of his favorite livestreamer-- who he has tracked down to the school's broadcasting club. Which happens to be made up of four cute girls, each with a different broadcasting career goal. This setup of a guy and multiple girls is called a harem manga and it's definitely not for everyone. While I'm ambivalent about it, today I'm just here for the broadcasting. This will however appeal to fans of cute girls, dumb boys, and the interpersonal drama that comes between them. It will also resonate, I think, with anyone who has felt touched by a voice over the air, so I will keep reading.

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Title: Godzilla: Here There Be Dragons II - Sons of Giants

Author: Frank Tieri

Illustrator: Inaki Miranda

Rating: 5/5

Published by IDW Publishing and available May 20, 2025, Sons of Giants is a follow-up to 2024's series Here There Be Dragons that put Godzilla in the Elizabethan era. I absolutely love the IDW comics that recontextualize Godzilla, and the historical settings for this collection are very fun. This volume expands the lore of a secret society dedicated to the kaiju, as well as what roles the kaiju themselves have played throughout history. Grendel from Beowulf was actually Hedorah, Mothra parted the Red Sea for Moses, and Alexander Hamilton was assassinated by the kaiju society led by Thomas Jefferson. This series is so much fun and will appeal to fans of the Monsterverse and the National Treasure series.


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Title: When Devils Sing

Author: Xan Kaur

Rating: 5/5

Published by Macmillan Children's Publishing Group and available May 27, 2025, When Devils Sing was super exciting. A Southern Gothic novel about Faustian bargains, local folklore, and true crime podcasting? This is literally everything I love. I was a bit worried because the last demon-themed ARC I read was not very good (Below the Grand Hotel) but this was fantastic. A local teen goes missing and four other teens begin investigating. I'm trying to avoid spoilers since it's definitely worth reading, but I can say that the disappearance has to do with the local legend of three devils-- a legend that's integrated into the story very well and actually feels real to the reader. It's nice to see a young adult Southern Gothic horror novel, especially one with a diverse cast and an interesting twist on Faustian bargains and the creepiness inherent in local legend. My one wish is that the book would address how the folklore of the three devils and the cicadas would be affected by traditional Southern Christianity, though I suppose it isn't that important for a YA novel. It's still an amazing book and I'm really impressed and will be recommending it to fans of horror and Southern regional literature.

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Title: Search and Destroy, Vol. 2

Author/Illustrator: Atsushi Kaneko, based on work by Osamu Tezuka

Rating: 3/5

Published by Fantagraphics Books and available June 3, 2025, Search and Destroy is a retelling of Osamu Tezuka's series Dororo that reimagines the samurai story in a Soviet-tinged cyberpunk dystopia. The story follows Hyaku, a girl in this version, searching for her stolen 48 body parts in a Blade Runner-like world divided into humans (called hyoos) and androids (called creatures or kreaches). I think Tezuka would be impressed with this work-- he often recontextualized existing works, like in his Shin Takarajima (New Treasure Island, after Robert Louis Stevenson) and One Hundred Tales (based on Goethe's Faust). There are two things that keep it from rating higher with me-- first, the art, while expressive, is sometimes overwhelming and hard to parse (a problem I have with a lot of action manga, so it may be caused by my bad eyesight)-- and second, the slang terms hyoo and kreach are hard to take seriously. Other than those complaints, I think this will appeal to fans of cyberpunk, works like Akria, and fans of Tezuka. Since the series has just one more forthcoming volume, I'm considering getting it for my library's collection as a good short series.

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Title: Florenzer

Author: Phil Melanson

Rating: 4.5/5

Published by W. W. Norton & Company and available June 10, 2025, this debut novel immediately caught my attention-- I love historical fiction, especially about historical figures, and even more especially when it has a queer theme. This book follows three men in Renaissance Florence-- Lorenzo di Medici, Francesco Salviati (who you may remember from Assassin's Creed II), and Leonardo da Vinci. Many people have theorized that da Vinci was gay, and he's portrayed as such in this book. They're joined by a cast of characters so complex that the author has wisely included a list. All the historical figures and their intrigues remind me of Maurice Duron's Accursed Kings, and as that's one of my favorites, it's high praise. If you enjoy novels with a lot of historical detail, and the history of art and queerness, this is your book. It's great to see a book that demonstrates that we've always been here, regardless of how accepting society was. My only issues with this book are with the writing itself. It's written in present tense, which doesn't fit how sprawling the book is-- it's not a fast-paced action story, where present tense would be better suited. The author also often forgets to mention who the new point of view character is until well after the new chapter has begun, making it difficult to differentiate between the characters other than da Vinci. Technical complaints aside, this is really a great book and I'm going to ask our fiction selector to order it for our library. Happy Pride Month.