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Love Making

Love Making

Yaoi

Collection of oneshots: 1. Love Making Student Shinobu loves cafeteria food and usually cleans his plate, the only thing he won't eat are carrots. When school nutritionist Tatsuya catches him throwing out food, he has to think of a creative way for Shinobu to eat his vegetables... 2. The Pigheaded Deity Keisuke's grandfather always warned him about the Tengu living on the mountain, but that was when he was a child. Keisuke's an adult now, so why is he seeing a handsome man with wings? 3. Let Me Drown in the Sea of Love! Atsushi is a failing romance novelist whose active fantasy life has wrapped itself around fish shop employee, Sakurai. Can Atsushi wake up long enough to make a move? 4. God, Give Me a Wife Kurachi Daisuke is a high school teacher with a problem: he's single. So he prays to the heavens to give him a wife, when a passing alien hears his wish and decides to help, Kurachi may have to think a little more exotically about him love life. 5. Oshikake Hunter (The Kind Hearted Roommate) Dorm head Hiroki never expected Kenta to come to his school. Hiroki always treated Kenta as a younger brother, but Kenta's feelings were far from brotherly, and he's not going to let Hiroki slip through his fingers again! 6. Dealing with Fate! High school student Tetsuya has a really bad memory, especially first thing in the morning. This leads to a mix-up on the street and Okada Aki enters his life. 7. Diary of a Fantasy Life! 8. Love Making II Tatsuya has started a new job at a college and Shinobu is lonely.

Dragon Tiger Gate

Dragon Tiger Gate

ActionFantasyMartial Arts

Oriental Heroes is a popular Hong Kong-based manhua created by Wong Yuk Long, a writer/artist responsible for also creating a number of other popular manhua titles. It was created in 1970, and it continues to be published today. The book was the first Hong Kong manhua title based on action and fighting, often borrowing from the wuxia literary world. It established a new action genre of Hong Kong manhua and spawned many imitators. The theme of its stories often revolve around brotherhood and the fight for justice. The 2006 movie Dragon Tiger Gate was based on this manhua. Oriental Heroes is the book's official English name. Its Chinese name is pronounced in Cantonese, Lùhng Fú Mùhn (simplified Chinese: 龙虎门; traditional Chinese: 龍虎門; pinyin: Lóng Hǔ Mén). This name translates as "Dragon Tiger Gate" in English, and is in reference to the name of the fictional kungfu school and organization that is a major subject matter in the book. Oriental Heroes was first published in 1970 under the title Little Rascals (traditional Chinese: 小流氓; Cantonese Yale: Síu Làuh Màhn). It featured stories about young people living in public housing estates in Hong Kong fighting gangsters and criminals. The heroes of the stories exhibited antisocial behaviours, but routinely fought for justice. In the early years of the book's run, the fighting was very graphically illustrated. Various weapons were used, where spilled blood, internal organs, guts, and bones were shown in the injuries that the characters sustained. People criticised the graphic violence depicted in Oriental Heroes and other similar action genre manhua, eventually leading to the enactment of the Indecent Publication Law in 1975, banning explicit violence in manhua. (Source: Wikipedia)