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Showing posts with label demon love spell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label demon love spell. Show all posts

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Manga Review: Demon Love Spell, Volume 2, by Mayu Shinjo



Rating (Out of 5): ~2
Publisher: VIZ Media (Shojo Beat)
Volumes: 5+
Spoilers?: Yes ('cause, rant)
Buy it here: Amazon.

Goodreads Synopsis:


Miko is a shrine maiden who has never had much success at seeing or banishing spirits. Then she meets Kagura, a sexy demon who feeds off women’s feelings of passion and love. Kagura’s insatiable appetite has left many girls at school brokenhearted, so Miko casts a spell to seal his powers. Surprisingly the spell works—sort of—but now Kagura is after her! Reads R to L (Japanese Style) for teen plus audiences.


Review:

Warning: contains cursing and ranting.

So, do you remember when I reviewed the first book of this series? And I said that it was just kind of mediocre, with very little to no offensive material? Do you remember that? Here’s another link, just in case you really wanted to go back and look. Because, within the first chapter of this volume, that completely changed. I was almost ridiculously offended. I just could not believe how bad it was, and how much of a change my thoughts went through. (Although, to be fair, I did say that I didn’t remember anything overtly offensive, but I thought there probably was something. Now, I’m sure there was something, it just didn’t leave much of an impression.)
I’m going to start with the minor plots of the volume, just to get them out of the way. Then—then I’ll get to the offensive part.
The first chapter completes the fox-demon plot line that was started in the first book. The fox is really sweet, and was starting make me wonder, but then his storyline ended with that chapter. I was not expecting that, and while I’m not going to spoil what happens, I was not very happy with his ending.
The rest of the volume is taken up with a plot regarding this one-eyed demon who is trying to save his sister from this other jerk of a demon, and the one-eyed guy ends up being a jerk and using Miko and making Kagura angry. I understood the guys reasoning for why he did what he did, but I don’t think that Miko should have been so willing to help him after what he did. She should have been pissed, not eager to help after he used her the way he did. But whatever.
Now, the offensive part. All of the offensive material centers on how the men are constantly using Miko, forcing Miko into things, and how she never fights back. She might as well not even have a voice, for how much the men are constantly forcing themselves on her, and particularly not listening to her when she blushes and says no.
And, on the topic of no… So, for one, it’s never okay for a guy to force himself on a girl, okay? Never. When she says no, then she means no, and the guy needs to back the hell off. But I also understand when a girl says no but actually doesn’t mean it, and it’s obvious to the reader just as much to the guy. There’s also the fact that Japanese women tend to say no in the midst of a sexy scene when they actually don’t want him to stop, and she’s only saying it because she’s embarrassed. I don’t understand that, but that’s beside the point here. Because neither of those instances were what happened here.
In the first chapter, Kagura starts kissing Miko, is on top of her, and she says “Stop it. Let go.”. And it actually looked like, to me, that she meant no. She was acting like she actually did not want him to be doing this to her, okay? And he said, “I hate hearing those words”. Like that excuses it? And then, not only does he keep forcing himself on her, but when she says that he never listens to her, he turns it back on her! He makes her think that she’s the one that never listens to him! Like he’s not doing that exact thing, right in that moment?! I just…
And then, his reason behind his forcing himself on her, which he openly explains before getting on top of her, is that he’s an incubus and he’s getting weak without any sexual satisfaction, seeing as how he’s given up going to any woman besides her. Which, okay, I get that. He’s an incubus, they need sex, I understand. That doesn’t excuse him almost raping her, but I understand his explanation. She outrightly doesn’t listen to him, and when he passes out and gets a fever, she freaks out and realizes that he needs sex, as if he didn’t just tell her that, two pages ago! I just… I just don’t…
Okay, and that’s not all, either. Later on in the book (remember how that was only in the first chapter? Yea…) Kagura tries forcing himself on her again and she freaks and comes up with an excuse so he will stop: they can have one day every month solely for sex, but he can’t touch her at all aside from that one day. Mind you, that she came up with this to give her more time to find an excuse, some way, to stop him from trying to make her have sex with him (which they still haven’t done, except maybe in her dreams, when he invaded them in the first book). For some reason that I don’t understand, he agrees. I guess because he thinks she’ll be completely consensual then? I don’t know, whatever.
But anyway, throughout the whole time leading up to this day, she’s trying to think up ways to get out of it, and he’s thinking of what to do with her on that day. And up until the day before the big day, she’s adamant about getting out of it. But the night before (or of? I’m not really sure, because it seems like they don’t understand how a day works, because they also say later in the volume that it’s still that day, when several days have obviously passed), she gets all ready: she takes a bath, does her hair all pretty, to make sure that she looks and smells good for him. Practically the page before that one, she wanted out of it, and a couple pages later, she acts all shy and like she wants him to stop even though we all know she doesn’t. Again, I just don’t understand.
I really didn’t think that there were so many examples, so many things that pissed me off, but there’s one more. Near the end of the book, Kagura gets stabbed (I’m not going to explain why. I’m just… not.), and since Miko knows that he heals from sex, she, while in a classroom with another demon who just forced a kiss on her, strips down to her underwear and bra and presses up against him and tries kissing him, and once again, I just don’t understand. For several pages after this, she only has on her underwear and bra, and I just didn’t really see what the point of that was. I just didn’t. I mean, why was it necessary for her to strip? I understand that she was frantic and all, but there was another person in the room, and up until this point she has been very shy and naïve and avoided all sexual interactions.
Kagura also told Miko that he loved her and she realized she loved him, too, I think. And her parents found out that Kagura is a full-size demon who quite possibly has something going on with their daughter.
I just… I just don’t know anymore. I thought that this was going to be a guilty pleasure, drama-filled, smut-flick that I would enjoy ragging on. But instead, I was rather pissed off with this volume. And I didn’t even really mention how I don’t like Miko as a character (although maybe you got the hints?). And seeing as how I was reading this for the smut, and the smut is what's pissing me off, I just don't see the point anymore. I don’t see what people like about this series. I just don’t.
I’m thinking I might read one more volume, see if it continues to be horribly offensive or if it lightens up, or maybe just so I can talk about how horrible this series is because I’m in the mood to hate on something, but I’m in no hurry to get that volume. No hurry at all. (I am, however, still planning on reading more of Ai Ore!, although I’m a bit more wary than I was before.)

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Manga Review: Demon Love Spell, Volume 1, by Mayu Shinjo



Rating (Out of 5): ~3-3.5
Publisher: VIZ Media (Shojo Beat)
Volumes: 5+
Spoilers?: Some/Minor-ish
Buy it here: Amazon.

Goodreads Synopsis:

By the creator of Ai Ore! and Sensual PhraseMiko is a shrine maiden who has never had much success at seeing or banishing spirits. Then she meets Kagura, a sexy demon who feeds off women’s feelings of passion and love. Kagura’s insatiable appetite has left many girls at school brokenhearted, so Miko casts a spell to seal his powers. Surprisingly the spell works—sort of—but now Kagura is after her!

Reads R to L (Japanese style) for teen plus audiences.

Review:

I was hesitant to start this series when I have barely even started Ai Ore!, by the same author, but decided to get it anyway (I still plan on reading more of Ai Ore!, though, so don't worry). (Also, I now have the second volume, so I must review this one.)
This volume was just kind of average. The main character, Miko, is part of a family of demon exorcists, and she works at a shrine, but she’s the only one in her family who can’t see demons. She ends up trying to exorcise this playboy at her school, trying to protect her friend from him, and the playboy actually ends up being a very powerful incubus. She turns him into this tiny little boy, about the size of a hamster, and he clings onto her because he’s now defenseless and has nowhere to go. Although, he has taken to visiting her in her dreams, where he's a fully grown, and seduces her rather easily every time. At least, he does this until her awake self finds out and puts up a barrier (using some kind of spell) so that he can't.
Miko was alright. She gets embarrassed easily, she yells a lot, resists to all sexual/romantic advances; right now, she’s a pretty average, typical heroine, and while I don’t think that will change much, I do hope she gets better. Or that I get to know her more/get used to her.
The playboy demon, Kagura, isn’t too bad. He’s generally domineering and the type of bad boy who makes girls blush, but the fact that he’s now stuck in a tiny hamster size body has definitely made him more vulnerable and adorable. I’m not very sure how I feel about him, though. Or the romance between him and Miko. He’s falling for her, which he’s made rather obvious, even though they don’t really know each other. I just don’t feel like I know him very well yet.
So far, this seems rather typical Mayu Shinjo: with a naïve, blushing heroine and a bad boy, dominant love interest. It was funny, and there wasn’t really any graphic sex, although there was a bit of kissing. I think Kagura is starting to take the role of the dominant male who comes in and saves his woman because she’s incapable of doing it herself (even if she has the reason that she doesn’t know how to get rid of demons by herself and can only see them when he's touching her), which is worthy of some eye-rolling and annoyance, although I don’t think there was anything particularly overtly offensive (I could be wrong, however, so go ahead and let me know if there was something in particular in this volume), although it’s very possible there will be something in future books.
Right now, this was just average. Nothing really stuck out to me, nothing really offended me too much. I will be sticking around for a couple more volumes, hoping that it gets better. (I might end up sticking around for a lot of it, actually, because of the sex that I’m sure is to come. I’m such a sucker for that stuff. Although, to be fair, that's kind of the best part of all of Shinjo's books.)