So, you know how supposedly there aren't any gay people in Russia?
Well, apparently there aren't too many in Japan, either.
But, somehow, a Japanese man named Ryoji becomes gay, despite the country's impeccable heterosexual record (was it contaminated green tea that did it?), and he flees to North America, the continent of the gays.
There he meets a hairy Canadian named Mike Flanagan, falls in love, gets married, then, unfortunately, dies too young.
The grief-stricken Canadian husband then travels to Japan to meet Ryoji's twin brother, Yaichi, presumably to reminisce over their shared love of Ryoji. . . but he is greeted with resistance and intolerance instead.
I will leave you with that cliffhanger and a sentence which I have never written or uttered before in my life: Wow, it turns out, I really like gay manga!
Why? Because gay manga, or at least this gay manga, features illustrations of male characters who look like Christopher Reeve as Superman and Viggo Mortensen as Aragorn. The other manga I've read so far has been illustrated by heterosexual males, all of whom seem to want to sketch women as heroine-addicted kewpie dolls who can't manage to keep their breasts in their blouses.
Honestly, the frequent appearance of the errant nipple has been the biggest setback for me in this genre, so if some gay men are willing to step up and illustrate women as normal looking and men as Viggo Mortensen looking, then, heck, meet your newest lover of manga!