Wayama was born in 1995 in Okinawa, where she was also raised.[1] She attended Itoman Minami Elementary School for primary school, and Okinawa Shogaku High School for junior high and high school.[2] In middle school she began drawing color pencil illustrations inspired by shōjo manga (girls manga) that she would upload to the blogging site Ameba, and as a senior in high school began drawing boys' love manga (male-male romance manga, abbreviated as "BL") as a hobby.[3][4] She has used the pen name "Wayama" since middle school: initially "Wayama" mononymously for her Ameba illustrations, then "Tomoyoshi Wayama" (わやま ともよし) for her early manga. She eventually settled on "Yama Wayama" as her pen name, basing it off her high-school nickname "Yama-san", as she felt it was easier to remember than "Tomoyoshi".[3]
She decided to pursue manga as a career in her senior year of high school,[5][6] and entered the manga program at Tokyo Polytechnic University.[2] Seeking to write manga about "everyday things", Wayama initially began drawing seinen manga (men's manga), as she believed that josei manga (women's manga) would not be conducive to her style.[3] In her sophomore year she submitted her manga Yūtōsei no Mondai (優等生の問題, "Honor Student Problem") for the Chiba Tetsuya Award [ja], and won the Newcomer's Award.[2][3][7] This win led to the publication of one-shot (single chapter) manga Nagisa e Ikou (渚へいこう, "Let's Go to the Beach") in the Winter 2016 issue of the seinen magazine Weekly D Morning, her first paid job as a manga artist.[2][6] According to Wayama, attempts to publish further works with Morning "didn't work out", stating that "part of me was only creating manga to get the approval of editors, so I'd totally lost sight of what I wanted to draw".[3][6]
Doujinshi and breakthrough
After her experience at Morning, Wayama sought to create manga that she "actually liked and felt like drawing, without listening to what other people had to say."[3][6] She took a job in food service[6] and published the one-shot Ushiro no Nikaidou on the online community Pixiv to critical acclaim.[3]Ushiro no Nikaidou would become a chapter in her doujinshi (self-published manga) Captivated, by You, which she released at the doujinshi conventionComita [ja] in February 2019. An editor at the manga magazine Comic Beam acquired the doujinshi for publication as a book, which was published in August that same year.[3] The manga was a significant critical and commercial success, selling out three printings in one month[2][6] and winning the Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize in the Short Work category and the New Face Award at the Japan Media Arts Festival Awards.[1][3]
Her subsequent manga Let's Go Karaoke! was similarly published as a doujinshi before being acquired by Kadokawa for publication.[8] Wayama's first serial manga, Onna no Sono no Hoshi, began serialization in the josei manga magazine Feel Young in January 2020.[5]
Style and influences
Wayama primarily creates slice of life stories, stating that she "tr[ies] to keep an overall mellow energy" in her work.[3] She cites manga artists Usamaru Furuya, Eiji Nonaka, Junji Ito, and Makoto Kobayashi as her four primary influences. She lists Furuya as her most significant influence, stating that after she read his series Lychee Light Club while in high school, she drew her first amateur manga by imitating his art style; Furuya also influenced her orientation towards junior- and high school-aged boys as primary subjects of her manga.[6] Nonaka influenced her style of "funny manga paired with serious illustrations", while Kobayashi influenced the manner in which she draws girls.[3] While Ito's psychological horror is not overtly reflected in Wayama's manga, she has stated that she is interested in one day drawing horror manga.[2][4]
Intimate male-male relationships are a recurring motif in Wayama's works, with journalist Atsushi Takayama describing her manga as depicting "brilliant relationships between men that go beyond friendship, but not quite to the point of romance".[3] Wayama has acknowledged the influence of the boys' love (BL) genre on her work, stating that "I draw some things with BL in mind, and some things without it. I have a clear picture of that in my head, but I want each reader to interpret and enjoy my work how they want to."[3]
Works
Yūtōsei no Mondai (優等生の問題, "Honor Student Problem") (published on Moae, 2015)[9]
Nagisa e Ikou (渚へいこう, "Let's Go to the Beach") (published in Weekly D Morning, 2016)[2]
^ abマンガ大賞2021、大賞は山田鐘人・アベツカサ「葬送のフリーレン」 [Manga Grand Prize 2021, Grand Prize goes to Yamada Kaneto and Abetsukasa, "Frieren: Beyond Journey's End"]. Comic Natalie (in Japanese). Natasha, Inc. March 16, 2021. Archived from the original on April 23, 2021. Retrieved April 30, 2022.
^「マンガ大賞2024」ノミネート10作品を発表 [Announcement of 10 works nominated for Manga Taisho 2024]. Comic Natalie (in Japanese). Natasha, Inc. January 23, 2024. Archived from the original on January 23, 2024. Retrieved January 23, 2024.