Fumi Yoshinaga (よしなが ふみ Yoshinaga Fumi, born 1971) is a Japanese manga artist known for her shōjo and shōnen-ai works.
Fumi Yoshinaga was born in Tokyo, Japan in 1971. She attended the prestigious Keio University in Tokyo.
In an interview, she said that "I want to show the people who didn't win, whose dreams didn't come true. It is not possible for everybody to get first prize. I want my readers to understand the happiness that people can get from trying hard, going through the process, and getting frustrated."
Little is known about her personal life. She mentions that her favourite operas are those by Mozart in the author's note of Solfege.
She debuted in 1994 with The Moon and the Sandals, serialized in Hanaoto magazine, but was previously a participant in comic markets.
Of Yoshinaga's many works, several have been licensed internationally. She was also selected and exhibited as one of the "Twenty Major Manga artist Who Contributed to the World of Shōjo Manga (World War II to Present)" for Professor Masami Toku's exhibition, "Shōjo Manga: Girl Power!" at CSU-Chico.
Outside of her work with Japanese publishers, she also self-publishes original doujinshi on a regular basis, most notably for Antique Bakery. Yoshinaga has also drawn fan parodies of Slam Dunk, Rose of Versailles, and Legend of Galactic Heroes.
Can't believe I'm all caught up already! I am glad the live action is currently airing so I can keep getting my fix.
As for this volume, I love it when Shiro is sweet to Kenji, and it was so nice to see him take care of him after he got sick. Not that he wouldn't have but we know that Shiro is quite dry, lol.
I was wondering why people were disappointed with this one, and it turns out it’s (at least in some cases) because the previous volume introduces a topic that...isn’t super addressed here, and that I had 100% forgotten about because I read that one so long ago! Oh well.
Since I wasn’t really expecting this one to touch on that thing I forgot about, I ended up enjoying it a lot. There are some adorable and hilarious and sweet conversations between Shiro and Kenji, of course, some of Gilbert being tactless, Kaoko and her (also tactless) husband, and of course, lots of food!
Not a lot of note really happens in this volume, but drama is not what I’m reading this for anyway. I really just love the slice of life nature of it, and the little ways that Shiro and Kenji interact with each other.
That said, I’m certain I will go into volume 14 when it eventually comes out with just as little recollection of this volume as I had of volume 12 while reading this. And I’ll probably like it just as much too!
Imagine my delight when I saw this book on the shelf at my local used book shop! I've seen peeks of this manga here and there, and I ADORE the live-action drama, so it was just a treat to find it in the flesh, so to speak.
What Did You Eat Yesterday is so soothing, so daily life, with such a steady heartbeat pace of friends-partners-family-work-meals-weekends. The ongoing thread of story is gentle, and each recipe is delicious. It makes me want to try every meal in the book!
It's kind of crazy that Shiro and Kenji are in their 50s given the manga started with them in their 40s. Things continue to move forward and this volume touches on some of those milestones along with more nuances to their friendships with the likes of Kohinata and Gilbert along with their roles at work.
We still can't talk about things escalating or any sort of true conflict beyond maybe Kenji having trouble dealing with the reality of the progress of time.
After the disappointment of the previous volume, where Shiro genuinely considered cheating, this volume thankfully brings a close to that. However, there wasn't a lot of character development in this volume. The food, as always, looks delicious.
Lovely, as usual. I still wish Yoshinaga did less about the food and more about Kenji and Shiro, but it's a cooking manga, so all is at it should be. I just like those characters so much!
I enjoyed this one, but not as much as the past ones. It had very little story and was mostly recipes. So if you like the recipes, you will loooove this one!
I love this series. It's just comfy and cozy and I love Kenji and Shiro. And I don't care if they do nothing but say hearts at each other. I'd read about it forever.