
Mikiyo Tsuda
Author of Love Stage!!, Volume 1
About the Author
Disambiguation Notice:
Mikiyo Tsuda writes all yaoi work, including manga series and doujinshi, under the pen name Taishi Zaou.
Series
Works by Mikiyo Tsuda
Kaihou no Technique — Author — 3 copies
Purirebo 3 copies
Princess Princess : 1 2 copies
Kozouya Tokuhon EX 2 copies
アルゴリズム 2 copies
Kozouya Tokuhon R 2 copies
Princess Princess DJ: Lovers' Secret 2 copies
Mousou Love Love Show 2 copies
One Piece: Kaizoku No Susume 2 copies
DRAGON MANUAL 1 copy
Back Stage (#3) 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Tsuda, Mikiyo
- Other names
- Taishi Zaou
- Gender
- female
- Disambiguation notice
- Mikiyo Tsuda writes all yaoi work, including manga series and doujinshi, under the pen name Taishi Zaou.
Members
Reviews
Mikiyo Tsuda (and her BL pseudonym, Taishi Zaou) is my guilty pleasure. Her stories aren't exactly deep and moving. Her characters and situations may only have the most tenuous of connections to reality. However, I love her sense of humor and the way she draws her characters so much that it doesn't matter.
Family Complex isn't Tsuda's strongest work, but it takes excellent advantage of her greatest strength: her ability to draw incredibly beautiful characters. She's so good at it that she show more actually fails a bit where Akira is concerned: the only thing that makes him not good-looking is that other characters say he's not as good-looking as the rest of his family. As pure “pretty characters” eye candy, Family Complex gets an A .
Story-wise, it's not nearly so good. Actually, there isn't much of a story, period. Family Complex is very character-focused, but that doesn't mean the characters are all that deep and complex. Each family member (except Akira) has personal or internal problems caused by how incredibly beautiful they look. Harumi yearns to have real friends and maybe even a girlfriend (or possibly boyfriend – I don't think it matters to him which), rather than just servants who put him on a pedestal. Natsuru is uncomfortable with the fact that she doesn't belong with either the girls or boys her age. Fuyuki suspects she doesn't fit in with her classmates but isn't sure how to fix this. Young Hidetoshi and young Nanami just wanted to look differently than they did. Akira wants to look more like a part of his family. None of them really overcome their problems completely, although most of them do manage to find someone to be closer to – and even that statement makes Family Complex sound like it has more depth than it does. So, let me be absolutely clear: this manga has all the depth of an inflatable kiddie pool.
The humor is another area where Family Complex isn't quite up to par, compared to some of Tsuda's other works. That's not to say I didn't find this volume funny. I love how over-the-top the family is in their looks, their lives, and how much they adore Akira. Much of the humor is based on the assumption that all the world is pretty much normal, except most of the members of the Sakamoto family. I particularly enjoyed the bit during Fuyuki's chapter, when a pervert exposes himself to her (creepy and horrific in real life, but handled lightly and humorously here) and Fuyuki silently agonizes over how to respond to him before finally, casually chasing him off with a single word.
As in some (all?) of Tsuda's other works, a lot of the humor is gender- and sexuality-related. Harumi's chapter is the best example of this, as he tries to get back at his servant-friends by pretending he and Akira are dating (Harumi's friends don't know Akira is his brother). Later, Natsuru messes with Harumi's friends' heads by pretending she and Harumi are about to kiss – as far as Harumi's friends know, Natsuru is actually a good-looking guy. Neither Natsuru nor Harumi's sexuality is very clear. Natsuru is perfectly fine with having a girl harem, and Harumi doesn't seem to care who he ends up with, so long as it's someone he can be emotionally close to. Girls squeal over Natsuru, and guys worship Harumi. Then there's Hidetoshi, who met Nanami while unwillingly cross-dressing. Strangely, although I got tired of the gender/sexuality jokes in the show Baka and Test, I didn't mind them so much in Family Complex, perhaps because it was only a one-shot and wasn't long enough for the jokes to be done to death.
Family Complex's main saving grace is that it doesn't take itself all that seriously and is overall light in tone. It's brain candy of the lightest, fluffiest sort. Those who go into it not expecting much and who enjoy Tsuda's art and generally weird sense of humor may like it. Personally, I'm happy that Digital Manga Publishing released this in a nice, large size, complete with a pretty, removable dust jacket – all the better to admire Tsuda's characters.
Extras:
Mikiyo Tsuda's "Detached Retina Diary" is 15 pages long, if you count Tsuda's one-page introduction to it, and Tsuda sticks it into the volume just before the pages showing young Hidetoshi and young Nanami. It's basically Tsuda's experience with being diagnosed with and treated for a detached retina. I'm not an ophthalmologist, so I don't know how good all the information is in this section is, but it still serves as a terrifying warning to those who experience a sudden vision change: go see your doctor, and get the problem taken care of! Shojo manga creators are notorious for the strangeness of their side notes, but I think this is the longest and most detailed note I've ever seen dealing with health problems.
This volume also includes a considerably less horrific and less interesting afterword, in which Tsuda, in manga form, talks about messing up and sometimes using her pseudonym, Taishi Zaou, when she should be using her real name, Mikiyo Tsuda. She also writes about wanting to be able to draw more BL manga (the stuff she does under the name Taishi Zaou) and her fans' feelings about her works created under her two names.
There are also a couple manga pages underneath the dust jacket (one page is a behind-the-scenes look at the creation of some of the characters, while the other is a peek at Akira and the rest of the Sakamoto kids maybe 10 years into the future), plus 4 pages of 4-panel comics featuring Tsuda.
(Original review, with read-alikes and watch-alikes, posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.) show less
Family Complex isn't Tsuda's strongest work, but it takes excellent advantage of her greatest strength: her ability to draw incredibly beautiful characters. She's so good at it that she show more actually fails a bit where Akira is concerned: the only thing that makes him not good-looking is that other characters say he's not as good-looking as the rest of his family. As pure “pretty characters” eye candy, Family Complex gets an A .
Story-wise, it's not nearly so good. Actually, there isn't much of a story, period. Family Complex is very character-focused, but that doesn't mean the characters are all that deep and complex. Each family member (except Akira) has personal or internal problems caused by how incredibly beautiful they look. Harumi yearns to have real friends and maybe even a girlfriend (or possibly boyfriend – I don't think it matters to him which), rather than just servants who put him on a pedestal. Natsuru is uncomfortable with the fact that she doesn't belong with either the girls or boys her age. Fuyuki suspects she doesn't fit in with her classmates but isn't sure how to fix this. Young Hidetoshi and young Nanami just wanted to look differently than they did. Akira wants to look more like a part of his family. None of them really overcome their problems completely, although most of them do manage to find someone to be closer to – and even that statement makes Family Complex sound like it has more depth than it does. So, let me be absolutely clear: this manga has all the depth of an inflatable kiddie pool.
The humor is another area where Family Complex isn't quite up to par, compared to some of Tsuda's other works. That's not to say I didn't find this volume funny. I love how over-the-top the family is in their looks, their lives, and how much they adore Akira. Much of the humor is based on the assumption that all the world is pretty much normal, except most of the members of the Sakamoto family. I particularly enjoyed the bit during Fuyuki's chapter, when a pervert exposes himself to her (creepy and horrific in real life, but handled lightly and humorously here) and Fuyuki silently agonizes over how to respond to him before finally, casually chasing him off with a single word.
As in some (all?) of Tsuda's other works, a lot of the humor is gender- and sexuality-related. Harumi's chapter is the best example of this, as he tries to get back at his servant-friends by pretending he and Akira are dating (Harumi's friends don't know Akira is his brother). Later, Natsuru messes with Harumi's friends' heads by pretending she and Harumi are about to kiss – as far as Harumi's friends know, Natsuru is actually a good-looking guy. Neither Natsuru nor Harumi's sexuality is very clear. Natsuru is perfectly fine with having a girl harem, and Harumi doesn't seem to care who he ends up with, so long as it's someone he can be emotionally close to. Girls squeal over Natsuru, and guys worship Harumi. Then there's Hidetoshi, who met Nanami while unwillingly cross-dressing. Strangely, although I got tired of the gender/sexuality jokes in the show Baka and Test, I didn't mind them so much in Family Complex, perhaps because it was only a one-shot and wasn't long enough for the jokes to be done to death.
Family Complex's main saving grace is that it doesn't take itself all that seriously and is overall light in tone. It's brain candy of the lightest, fluffiest sort. Those who go into it not expecting much and who enjoy Tsuda's art and generally weird sense of humor may like it. Personally, I'm happy that Digital Manga Publishing released this in a nice, large size, complete with a pretty, removable dust jacket – all the better to admire Tsuda's characters.
Extras:
Mikiyo Tsuda's "Detached Retina Diary" is 15 pages long, if you count Tsuda's one-page introduction to it, and Tsuda sticks it into the volume just before the pages showing young Hidetoshi and young Nanami. It's basically Tsuda's experience with being diagnosed with and treated for a detached retina. I'm not an ophthalmologist, so I don't know how good all the information is in this section is, but it still serves as a terrifying warning to those who experience a sudden vision change: go see your doctor, and get the problem taken care of! Shojo manga creators are notorious for the strangeness of their side notes, but I think this is the longest and most detailed note I've ever seen dealing with health problems.
This volume also includes a considerably less horrific and less interesting afterword, in which Tsuda, in manga form, talks about messing up and sometimes using her pseudonym, Taishi Zaou, when she should be using her real name, Mikiyo Tsuda. She also writes about wanting to be able to draw more BL manga (the stuff she does under the name Taishi Zaou) and her fans' feelings about her works created under her two names.
There are also a couple manga pages underneath the dust jacket (one page is a behind-the-scenes look at the creation of some of the characters, while the other is a peek at Akira and the rest of the Sakamoto kids maybe 10 years into the future), plus 4 pages of 4-panel comics featuring Tsuda.
(Original review, with read-alikes and watch-alikes, posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.) show less
Tohru Kouno is starting a new school in the middle of the semester but even under these circumstances Tohru finds his reception a little odd. Soon he discovers that the reason for this is skin deep and he is enticed into the time honored and very weird tradition of becoming a Princess of this all boys school. Along with his fellow Princesses the reluctant Mikoto and acerbic Shihoudani, Tohru takes on the task of cheering clubs and providing fan service with a flick of lace and a smile that show more would put a real princess to shame.
This is another manga that I picked up due to having watched and enjoyed the anime. Once again I was pleasantly surprised to find the storyline to be very close between and the added dimension to this cute tale provided by the manga is very enjoyable. Of course, watching the anime is certainly not a pre-requisite to reading and this is an adorable manga I'd certainly recommend. I'm looking forward to the next volume. show less
This is another manga that I picked up due to having watched and enjoyed the anime. Once again I was pleasantly surprised to find the storyline to be very close between and the added dimension to this cute tale provided by the manga is very enjoyable. Of course, watching the anime is certainly not a pre-requisite to reading and this is an adorable manga I'd certainly recommend. I'm looking forward to the next volume. show less
This book brought back memories of why it's hard for me to really get into yaoi.
First we have the super straight guy that sudden;y becomes gay because a man sexually assaults him and it felt good when he did it. I don't think it works that way.
Another thing I had forgotten is that Shogo tells Rei, and when you think they'd take it seriously, it basically dismissed that Izumi just needs to get over it. Which he does in like two seconds.
It was really gross and really killed any kind of like I show more had for the series. show less
First we have the super straight guy that sudden;y becomes gay because a man sexually assaults him and it felt good when he did it. I don't think it works that way.
Another thing I had forgotten is that Shogo tells Rei, and when you think they'd take it seriously, it basically dismissed that Izumi just needs to get over it. Which he does in like two seconds.
It was really gross and really killed any kind of like I show more had for the series. show less
Another enjoyable volume in this cute series! In this one we get to know Kouno and Shihoudani, and their respective family circumstances, a little bit better. Mikoto is basically off and running for the vacation break but not before he gets thoroughly razzed by his fellow Princesses. I actually feel quite bad for him, Kouno and Shihoudani can be a little harsh. But, they get a little karmic payback when they go out in the town to pick up girls and wind up getting hit on by some college boys. show more Another interesting family showing is Akira's who we get to meet when Kuono and Shihoudani go to spend a night during vacation.
I'm finding this manga quite delightful and am looking forward to reading the rest of this series and maybe moving on to some of this manga-ka's other work. show less
I'm finding this manga quite delightful and am looking forward to reading the rest of this series and maybe moving on to some of this manga-ka's other work. show less
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 43
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 1,902
- Popularity
- #13,533
- Rating
- 3.9
- Reviews
- 24
- ISBNs
- 94
- Languages
- 8
- Favorited
- 2











