douqi: (manhua)
[personal profile] douqi
Pre-orders have opened for the second volume of showbiz romance Jiang Yu (江鱼, originally serialised as Those Long Divided Must Soon be United (分久必合, pinyin: fen jiu bi he)) by Yu Shuang (鱼霜). Pre-orders can be made via the following bookshops:


Also open for pre-order is the second volume of high school baihe manhua Her Mountain, Her Sea (她的山她的海, pinyin: ta de shan, ta de hai) based on the novel of the same title by Fu Hua (扶华), with art by Huo He Zi (火禾子). Pre-orders can be made via the following bookshops:


The novel Her Mountain, Her Sea is currently being translated by comm member [personal profile] riverofspring here.
douqi: (she is still cute today)
[personal profile] douqi
The Vietnamese print edition of high school romance Her Mountain, Her Sea (她的山, 她的海, pinyin: ta de shan, ta de hai) by Fu Hua (扶华), published by Meibooks, is available for pre-order. The publisher announcement is here. According to the announcement, the special edition of the book comes with a bookmark, a standee, and two 'student cards' with the names and details of the two main characters, while the standard edition comes with the bookmark only. Pre-orders can be made via Shopee Vietnam.

Here's the cover design for the book:

Cover of the Vietnamese edition of Her Mountain, Her Sea


And here are, respectively, the designs for the standee, the 'student cards', and the bookmark:

Merch (standee) for the Vietnamese edition of Her Mountain, Her Sea Merch (student cards)  for the Vietnamese edition of Her Mountain, Her Sea Merch (bookmark)  for the Vietnamese edition of Her Mountain, Her Sea
douqi: (fayi)
[personal profile] douqi
High school novel Her Mountain, Her Sea (她的山, 她的海, pinyin: ta de shan, ta de hai) by Fu Hua (扶华) and showbiz romance Waiting for You (余情可待, pinyin: yuqing kedai) by Min Ran (闵然) have been licensed for Vietnamese print editions by Meibooks, which also previously licensed the tomb-raiding novel Reading the Remnants (问棺, pinyin: wen guan) by Qi Xiao Huang Shu (七小皇叔). The official announcements can be read here and here on the publisher's Facebook page. I'll be keeping an eye out for further details about the cover designs, pre-order dates, etc.
[personal profile] riverofspring
Hello everyone,
I'm delighted to announce that I have started a translation of 《她的山,她的海》/ Her Mountain, Her Sea by Fu Hua! This is a beloved work in the baihe scene and has been many people's entry point into the genre, so the fact that it was only ever MTL'd really bothered me.

For the unfamiliar, Her Mountain, Her Sea is a high school romance between top student You Yu and aloof loner Chi Tang. Fu Hua first brings their unlikely friendship together, then we get to watch as it blossoms into something more.

As it stands, I'm planning on releasing chapters every Wednesday and Sunday (Thursday/Monday if time zones are messy). Hopefully I don't fall behind schedule, especially since summer is coming soon. You may also note that I'm renting website space from [personal profile] hazevi who is also my beta for this work, and I'm just going to blame database backends for making comment systems unnecessarily difficult to code for that.

Now enjoy your links:
Translation main page
JJWXC
Carrd
Promo Tweet

If there's anything you'd like to talk about, this translation or otherwise, feel free to shoot me a comment or message on any platform. Happy reading and happy pride month!
douqi: (gong qing 2)
[personal profile] douqi
[personal profile] yuerstruly posted their 'books read in 2023' review earlier, which includes five baihe titles: Dynasty of Beasts (禽兽王朝, pinyin: qinshou wangchao) by Yao Yi Chang An (遥亿长安), Her Mountain, Her Sea (她的山,她的海, pinyin: ta de shan, ta de hai) by Fu Hua (扶华), Minister Xie (谢相, pinyin: xie xiang) by Ruo Hua Ci Shu (若花辞树), The Abandoned (弃仙, pinyin: qi xian) by Mu Feng Qing Nian (沐枫轻年) and Pat Me On the Back (帮我拍拍, pinyin: bangwo paipai) by Qi Xiao Huang Shu (七小皇叔). They were kind enough to give me permission to link it here. The review can be read here.
douqi: (gong qing 2)
[personal profile] douqi
I read 22 baihe novels (and one collection of baihe-adjacent short stories) this year, out of a total of 77 books read (including playtexts and graphic novels). Here's the full list, in order of when I read them.



So looking back, I think I've managed to catch up on some pretty classic and popular novels, mixed in with some more niche titles from subgenres I wouldn't typically be super drawn to. For 2024, I'm especially keen to read more work from Ning Yuan and Liu Yuan Chang Ning, and maybe Ruo Hua Ci Shu (despite her letting me down so terribly with the ending to Minister Xie). In fact, I'm slightly toying with the idea of making my way through as much of Ning Yuan's back catalogue as possible over the coming year, maybe at the rate of one Ning Yuan novel per every three baihe novels I read. I'm also interested in reading at least one more each by Yu Shuang and Qing Tang Shuan Xiang Cai, as I found their books unexpectedly enjoyable.
douqi: (gu qu)
[personal profile] douqi
Cover for Volume 1 of the manhua adaptation of Her Mountain, Her SeaPre-orders opened today for the print edition of the first volume of the manhua adaptation of high school baihe novel Her Mountain, Her Sea (她的山, 她的海, pinyin: ta de shan, ta de hai) by Fu Hua (扶华). As noted previously, the novel depicts the budding friendship and romance between class loner Chi Tang and top student You Yu. Pre-orders can be made on Tmall via the following bookshops:

Each copy comes with photocards, postcards and a mini cut-out standee (details here). Per usual, each bookshop has also commissioned its own shop-specific merch, though they've all chosen to use art taken from the manhua rather than commissioning their own art. The first 100 to 60 customers to order (depending on the bookshop) will receive copies signed by the manhua artist, Huo He Zi (火禾子).

The web version of the manhua can be viewed here on Kuaikan Manhua (note: due to region-based restrictions, it is possible that you will only be able to open links to Kuaikan Manhua via their app).
douqi: (fayi)
[personal profile] douqi
I'm painfully aware that (1) this comm really needs a resource post on baihe audio dramas and (2) I really don't know enough about audio dramas to be the person to write it. If anyone wants to write such a post, please please please go ahead and do it! You'll have my eternal gratitude.

Fortuitously though, Fanjiao — the specialist platform for baihe audio content, itself a spin-off from the lesbian dating app The L (formerly Rela) — celebrated its fifth anniversary a few weeks ago, with a long video featuring 49 baihe voice actresses, so I've decided to shamelessly glom on to it and provide an introduction of sorts to audio dramas via sketching out the profiles of each VA featured and listing their major works. The list is set out below in more or less alphabetical order based on pinyin. The focus will be mostly on the Fanjiao-hosted dramas which each VA has participated in, but I will provide details of their voice work on other platforms and media where I'm aware of them.



The original video can be viewed on the Fanjiao Weibo account here. For ease of embedding, I've re-uploaded it to my YouTube account. There are currently no English subtitles because I, er, already have a very large backlog of things to translate, but if anyone is interested in trying their hand at subtitling it, you're very welcome to do so, and I'm happy to provide support!

VAs A to F )

VAs G to P )

VAs Q to X )

VAs Y to Z )

I previously made an excessively long Twitter thread on this topic with less textual detail but with voice clips and images, which you can read here.
douqi: (manhua)
[personal profile] douqi
Some baihe manhua are adaptations of existing works (generally of baihe novels), while others are original. At the time of writing, the latter significantly outnumber the former. It is only fairly recently that some of the most popular novels have been licensed for adaptation as manhua.

The baihe manhua translation scene is noticeably more active than the baihe novel translation scene. Official translations into English are available in some cases, and fan translations are available for most of the major baihe manhua. In the lists of notable works that follow, I will provide links to official translations where these are available, as well as to relevant fan translations (in the case of the latter, where I can be satisfied on a balance of probabilities that they are not machine translations).

Baihe manhua and where to find them )

Notable baihe manhua (adaptations) )

Notable baihe manhua (originals) )

I would like to thank Lunaa of Zephyr Scans for her valuable insights into the baihe manhua scene, without which this post could not have been written. Check out the Zephyr Scans Discord server here! Special thanks to [personal profile] superborb for doing the thankless grunt work of proofreading and checking each link.
douqi: (tan xu ling)
[personal profile] douqi
This post is meant to provide a brief introduction to baihe as a literary genre and a starting point for those seeking to get into it. I consider baihe to be a distinct genre of its own, though I'd be hard-pressed to articulate its precise contours (or even general contours). Certainly I have a sense of baihe as being distinct from what I would classify as 'serious queer/lesbian literature', though here I'm hampered by my lack of knowledge about queer literature written in Chinese. Yan Geling's (严歌苓) novella White Snake might conceivably count as one, but I'm simply too unfamiliar with the genre as a whole to provide any sort of sensible comment. I also have a sense of baihe as being in conversation with its Japanese counterpart yuri, but again I'm woefully ignorant of yuri as a genre.

Baihe often seems to be regarded by international fandom as a sort of distaff counterpart to danmei (m/m romance), but my sense is that mainland baihe readers (and potentially other Sinophone audiences in Asia) do not really see baihe and danmei as having particularly close links beyond the fact that they deal with same-gender romance. In fact, I I've seen more mainland baihe readers say they also read yanqing (f/m romance, whose popularity runs rings around both danmei and baihe) than baihe readers say they also read danmei. There is also limited overlap between baihe and danmei in terms of their authorship. There are more authors who write yanqing+baihe than authors who write danmei+baihe, and I can think of no major danmei author who also writes baihe, or vice versa. To date, the only author I can definitively point to who writes both danmei and baihe (as well as yanqing) is Xiao Wu Jun (小吾君) who, while not unknown, is not exactly a major author. There seems to be limited overlap between baihe and danmei in terms of popular subgenres as well. Again, I'm not very familiar with danmei as a genre, but my sense is that a good number of the popular works are historical novels or xianxia novels, while a significant proportion of popular baihe novels are contemporary romances (which would, I think, be legible to a reader of Western genre romance as such). In terms of sheer audience numbers, baihe is very much regarded as a niche genre relative to danmei (quite popular) and yanqing (massively popular).

Having impressed you with my vibes-based ramblings and multiple admissions of ignorance, let's get down to what I do know about the genre. Under the headings below, you'll find information about where baihe novels are published, a list of major baihe authors (plus a few who specialise in specific niche subgenres), a list of notable works that I think provide a useful foundation for understanding the genre, and information about adaptations of baihe novels. A major caveat is that I'm focusing almost exclusively on works by mainland Chinese authors, both because these make up the greatest proportion of baihe novels and because I'm most familiar with them. There are also baihe novels by authors from elsewhere in the Sinosphere, most notably Taiwan, but I am much less familiar with them, so that will need to be the subject of another post (preferably by someone who knows the field much better than I do!)

Baihe novels and where to find them )

On the state of baihe novel translations )

Top 10 current baihe authors )

10+ baihe novels that are helpful for understanding the genre )

A note about adaptations )

I am grateful to xiaozhu for providing valuable input (and making sure I didn't say anything too obviously wrong) into this post. Read their translation of baihe showbiz tragedy Burn here. Special thanks to [personal profile] superborb for doing the thankless grunt work of proofreading and checking each link.

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