Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Double Jeopardy

"Crime is terribly revealing. Try and vary your methods as you will, your tastes, your habits, your attitude of mind, and your soul is revealed by your actions."
"And Then There Were None

The first time I saw the cover of this book, it was a small thumbnail and I could barely make out the garbage truck on the cover, so I thought it'd be like some weird Drifting Classroom-esque Umezu Kazuo story. Things don't get that crazy. 

Hitou travels with six friends to a small private island off the coast in Kumamoto Prefecture. The island used to be inhabitated by a few people, but has now become the private property of the aunt of Urai, one of Hitou's friends. Urai's aunt had cottages built on the island so it can be opened as a resort island. There's no established means of transportation yet though, so the group is brought over to the island by a chartered fisherman's boat and the fisherman is to pick them up in about a week, while the caretaker hired by Urai's aunt also there to entertain the group during their stay. However, Hitou has other plans. He's planning to kill all other six people on the trip. For Hitou was never really their friend. Several years ago, while the six targets were still in high school, they tried out drugs and while under the influence, were about to start a fire. A boy from another school spotted them, but he was caught by them and assaulted, with the victim biting off the tip of his own tongue during an attempt to escape. One of the friends took all the blame. Hitou was a friend of the victim and he swore revenge: after graduating high school, he intentionally picked a university where the six were living and found a part-time job where one of them was working. He became friends with him and was thus slowly introduced in their circle. And now they were going on a trip together: the perfect chance to just kill all of them. Hitou's plan is simple and self-destructive: he's going to poison all of them and then commit suicide, because he realizes this would be a severe crime. He even has a full confession that will be posted online automatically in a few days, where he explains why he decided to kill these people. After they arrive on the island, where they also find the caretaker waiting for them, Hitou makes sure to sabotage the one public pay-phone on the island: the only way to communicate with the mainland.

And thus, imagine the surprise when late on the first evening, one of the friends won't respond to any calls at his cottage. They break the door down and inside find... no living friend, but a corpse,  whose face has been bashed in horribly and with the tip of his tongue cut off. Hitou however did not commit this murder. Realizing there's a murderer on the island and that they can't call for help, the would-be murderer acknowledges it'd be too dangerous to continue his plans and even tries to swim back to cancel his scheduled online confession, but the sea has become too wild for him, and he is barely saved from the raging water. The next morning, they find another corpse: this was the friend who first discovered the previous body and he too has the tip of his tongue removed. And the following day, the same thing happens again... While Hitou was planning to kill them anyway it's not like he's really sad they're gone, he knows he isn't committing all these murders, so he needs to find out who the real murderer is in order to escape the carnage.

Three years later, a young woman working at a garbage disposal facility in Osaka is out on her rounds collecting garbage, when she finds the body of an old lady among the garbage. She reports it to the police, but she is immediately put in their custody: there is a serial killer on the loose in Osaka, who each time, has been killing the person who discovered the previous body. The victims are connected by the fact they all have part of their tongues removed. This immediately reminds everyone of the horrible series of murders that occured three years ago on an island in Kumamoto, where a Hitou Kiyotsugu had killed everyone on the island and made a full confession online....

Chigereta Kusari to Hikari no Kirehashi ("Broken Chains and a Sliver of Light", 2023) is Araki Akane's second novel after making her debut the previous year by winning the Edogawa Rampo Award. The book's main feature is probably the fact it is divided in two distinct parts, the first half set in 2020 on an island, while the second half is set in 2023 and starts off in the bustling city of Osaka. The two narratives are also clearly inspired by two Agatha Christie novels, a thing that is made very apparent when the characters themselves make references to Christie in the second half.  

The first half is of course inspired by And Then There Were None, as we have a closed circle situation set on an island, where everybody is being killed one by one. In this book however, we have the added tension of knowing Hitou was planning to kill everyone himself too, only someone else managed to get to them first. But who? The murders are also all connected through two mysterious facts: the murderer cuts off the tip of the tongues of all his victims, and for some reason, the next victim is always the person who discovered the previous body. Even though this is only "half" of the book, Araki somehow manages to really pack it full to the brim. There's the locked room situation of the first body for example, but there are more mysteries like one victim having been cut, even though they threw away all the knives and other potentially dangerous objects in the sea after the first murders. Araki manages to craft a great mystery in this book: the many props allow the characters to come up with various theories, and the grand denouement scene in particular has some great Queenian theories being posed based on the evidence we've all seen and been exposed to, which are then debunked as easily again with other evidence we also saw, but simply overlooked. 

The second part is set three years later and we learn about a serial killer in Osaka who for some reason has been committing murders similar to what by now has become known as the Hitou murders: when the police arrived on the island, they found that everybody on the island was dead and Hitou missing, but he had conveniently posted a full confession online. Maria, the young woman who found the most recent victim, is put under police custody and she soon becomes friends with one of her guardians. Maria also happens to be living with a young man (not her boyfriend), who happens to have bitten off the tip of his tongue some years ago... This part of the book is more inspired by The ABC Murders, as the one of the characters comments, as they are not sure why the serial killer is linking these murders in this way, and of course, the whole connection to the Hitou murders is enigmatic. As you can guess, these events are very strongly connected to the first part of the book, and they work very well as a "continuation" of the first half, while also going in a completely different way. This is not just 'part 2 by doing the same things again", this is a "part 2 that tries different things, but by building on part 1". And it's all in one book!

While I will be the first to admit I don't care about characterization that much in my mystery novels, even I have to make a special note about how strong the characterizations are in this novel. Hitou is a great protagonist and anti-hero, who is so full of hatred towards his "friends" for what they did in the past, but at the same time, you see glimpses of him struggling with the aftermath of each murder because... perhaps he did really become friends with them while he had infiltrated their circle. Maria too has a chip on her shoulder and has finally been getting her life on rails and is enjoying her work as a garbagewoman, when the whole serial killer thing confuses things once more. The strong-minded Maria is very fun to follow, as she does struggle in life, but still tries to make the best out of everything and she isn't kind to people who look down on her for doing so (cue: the veteran policeman who will regret looking down on her just because she's a woman collecting garbage).

The strong characterization does elevate Chigereta Kusari to Hikari no Kirehashi a lot, as some of the actions taken by the characters in this book do demand for those characters to have a lot of motivation/determination to do so, so Araki's strong character writing is in fact an essential part of the mystery, much more than I had ever expected.

I had read two short stories by Araki before (here and here), but this is the first time I read a full novel by her and Chigereta Kusari to Hikari no Kirehashi. It's quite long and ambitious, providing two fully worked out narratives inspired by Christie's work all in one book, but Araki pulls it off, and does that with both competence in the mystery writing as well as characterization. Recommended material!

Original Japanese title(s):  荒木あかね『ちぎれた鎖と光の切れ端』

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

The Problem of the Ghost Woman

It is indeed, a fearful place. The torrent, swollen by the melting snow,plunges into a tremendous abyss, from which the spray rolls up like the smoke from a burning house. The shaft into which the river hurls itself is an immense chasm, lined by glistening coal-black rock, and narrowing into a creaming, boiling pit of incalculable depth, which brims over and shoots the stream onward over its jagged lip.
"The Final Problem

Now I think about it, having a waterfall right behind your school is probably not that safe. Sure, high school students aren't stupid, but still, something is bound to happen sooner or later...

Shiotani Ken's Meitantei Futabi (2025) also has the English title The Return of The Great Detective (well, technically it's The Return of Great Detective) and indeed, the book is about the legend of a great detective is given new life again. The Raihen Academy for Girls offers free schooling and accomodations for the family members of those who have contributed to the school's long history, and nobody has contributed more to the safety and reputation of Raihen than the legendary great detective Tokiya Yuu: she was a student at the school in the early 1990s, who solved many incidents that occured at Raihen. While they started out as minor incidents, things soon escalated to even murder. Yuu eventually figured out there was a mastermind behind all these crimes: Yuu confronted the mastermind at the waterfall behind the school and in the subsequent struggle, both fell down, with Yuu's remains never recovered. Tokiya Shou had never heard specific stories about her great-aunt, which is why she's surprised to learn she gets to study at the prestigious Raihen Academy for free. When she arrives at the school, she's welcomed as if she were a princess, as for Raihen, Yuu was indeed a queen. In fact, the dorm director was a student at Raihen herself in the early 1990s and assisted Yuu. Shou becomes classmates with Mima Shizuka, president of the newspaper club with a knack for making up stories. Shou is first shown around the school, which has memorial plates for Yuu all over the place, commemorating the various incidents she solved, like the mystery of the unconcious student in the communal bathroom or the murder of a student in the art room. 

The rumors of Shou, a relative of Yuu, soon spreads across the school, and it doesn't take long for a student to ask Shou for help. She recently got a polaroid camera, and while playing around with it, she and her friends took risqué pictures of each other in the bathroom while getting undressed. However, after they had their bath, they found the pictures missing, and now she got a blackmail letter with one of the stolen pictures, demanding for money. The victim rather not have the police involved, which is why she wants Shou to help. The problem: Shou isn't any good as a detective. Of course, just because your great-aunt happens to be a great detective, doesn't you are, but Shou can't say no, and ends up accepting the request. Out of her wits, Shou strolls to the waterfall where her great-aunt met her end and to her great surprise.... a ghost appears! The ghost agrees to help Shou and act as an armchair detective for her, if Shou helps gather her remains and properly bury her, so her spirit can finally pass on to the life beyond. The case is soon solved, earning Shou a reputation as a great detective herself, but then more incidents start to happen at Raihen, and another figure who saw Yuu's ghost, starts plotting against Shou...

It's of course no coincidence the school's called Raihen (Reichenbach) and that the great detective and her nemesis both died falling down a waterfall. The book's not designed as a Sherlock Holmes pastische though, nor are there really meaningful references to Holmes canon beyond these ones, so you don't need any knowledge of Holmes to enjoy this book. The book is structured as a connected short story collection, where Shou is confronted with ever-escalating cases during her time studying at Raihen, culminating in a grand finale involving both her great-aunt and her nemesis. One thing I have to mention first is how different this book is than Hakushaku to Mittsu no Hitsugi ("The Count and the Three Coffins"), the only other book by Shiotani Ken I have read at this point. That book was a historical epic with drama and tragedy like a Dumas novel, while this is a fairly light-hearted, comedic short story collection set at a girls' high school. Shiotani Ken does like using unusual settings/ideas though, and that's what we do have here too: Shou being helped by an armchair detective ghost each time, all just to maintain her reputation as a great detective herself (or as her excuse goes to keep the family name high). This device has some parallels to how Conan feeds Mouri his answers to maintain the Sleeping Kogorou's reputation high, only in this case, Shou herself wants to be fed all the answers, as she genuinely isn't smart enough to solve the crimes herself (though she does get "educated" as a great detective herself slowly but surely over the course of the book).

While I do describe this book as a short story collection, the individual mysteries are not titled as "stories", but as "chapters" in a novel, so I guess they do want to present this as a novel rather than a story collection. Anyway, the first story involves the stolen polaroids, with the mystery revolving around who could have stolen the polaroids and how: the only persons to know about the pictures are the group of four who took the pictures in the first place, but the pictures had been put in a locker while they were in the bathroom, and nobody had the pictures on them when they left, so the theft was impossible. This is a fairly short mystery, as it is also used to explain how Shou first went to the waterfall and stumbled upon the ghost, but it is a fairly well-constructed, if simple mystery, doing what you usually expect of an impossible heist story (offering multiple false solutions, offering a true solution that builds cleverly on the discarded false ones). The banter between Shou and all the other school girls is really fun though: not only with her roommate Shizuka (who's a bit insane when it comes to wanting to find a scoop and has no qualms about making things a bit more spicier in her articles), but also with her ghostly mentor, as she too is basically just a high school student who likes to chat about ordinary life (or at least, the ordinary life she saw pass by ever since she became a ghost). The second story is about an assault on an art student that occured in a classroom that could only be accessed via another classroom, that was occupied by the art club at the moment. Again, a seemingly impossible crime, and while I didn't like this mystery on its own that much, I loved how it really built on the previous story, as it showed the previous story had real consequences for the student life at Raihen Academy, making people act and think differently. 

The third story in turn has the first murder: members of the newspaper clubs of several school are invited to the house of an alumnus of one of the clubs. It's supposed to be a kind of training camp to hone the journalistic skills of the members, but Mima Shizuka, who had attended last year too, knows the organizer just uses this occassion to vent his frustrations on the current club members by completely roasting their writings. During the snowy evening, the girls sleep together in the storehouse of the manor, which can only be locked from the outside (as it's not meant to be lived in). During the night however, the organizer is found dead in the courtyard, his head bashed in. The only footprints left in the snow in the courtyard however belong to the victim, with no footprints of the murderer. The victim was furthermore found near the window of a room of the annex, where the guests were sleeping, but the windows on that side can't be opened, so the occupant of that room couldn't have hit the man either. Shou is asked to look into the case, not only because of her roommates involvement, but her uncle, a police inspector, is also on the case and has heard of the exploits of his niece. This is quite an elaborate story, that is great at using the various moving parts of the story (characters) to create a seemingly impossible mystery. The reason why the murderer ended up dead in the courtyard is a bit silly, but well-clewed and the way the culprit created the footprint mystery isn't per se that impressive method-wise, but very convincing motive-wise.

Up until this point, the stories also saw short intermezzos told from the POV of a character, who has also seen Tokiya Yuu's ghost herself, and has deduced that Shou is actually getting assistance from Yuu in solving the mysteries. This person however absolutely hates what Shou's doing, so they set a trap for Shou.

Shou, her uncle, the dorm director and some of Shou's allies have gathered, because they have realized the incidents Shou has been involved with, mirror those Tokiya Yuu solved during her time at Raihen. Yuu at the time deduced a mastermind "M" had been orchestrating all these crimes, and she died during her confrontation with M. It is now suspected a new mastermind has also been behind all the crimes Shou has been involved with. During their meeting however, Shizuka keels over after drinking her tea. A message is then delivered to the room: the tea cups have been poisoned and the door has been locked, with no way to call for help. The only way to open the door and get help for Shizuka, is if Shou drinks one of the cups: only one will not kill her. With no way to go to the waterfall to get help, can Shou manage to solve this mystery herself? The story feels a bit like a Liar Game game, where Shou has to deduce which of the cups is safe to drink (with a lot "if they think I think they think..." type of thoughts). The solution is simple yet elegant, and the story moves right to the finale, where Shou is confronted with the mastermind behind all the crimes and the truth behind the death of her great-aunt. This part of the mystery is elegantly clewed, with great foreshadowing planted throughout the various adventures to build up to this Reichenbach Falls-esque finale. Unfortunately, I already knew a bit how this finale would end up, because I happened to have met the editor of the book who kinda spoiled it to me, but despite my prior knowledge, I did think the mystery was constructed very neatly.

So while Meitantei Futatabi is not at all like the historical epic drama that was Hakushaku to Mittsu no Hitsugi, I did greatly enjoy the book: it's a fun, light-hearted school mystery (the sometimes venomous banter between Shou and her ghostly mentor is especially a highlight) with a clear, overarching story that manages to achieve exactly what it sets out to do. The individual mysteries are often fairly short, but competently constructed and the overall storyline, with Shou slowly growing into a detective herself, is satisfying. This is a great book to read between heavier stuff.

Original Japanese title(s): 塩谷験『名探偵再び』 

Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Picture of Death

But if this ever changing world in which we live in
Makes you give in and cry,
Say live and let die!
"Live and Let Die" (Paul McCartney & Wings) 

So I didn't know anything about the actual story of this book when I got it, so simply based on the title and the cover, I was expecting this to be something set in the Middle Ages/Renaissance exploring the theme of death. It was nothing like that.

Several months ago, I discussed Kenchiku Shizai (2001), a book which also carried the English title The Builded Dead and which is considered officially Monzen Noriyuki's debut work: it was the winner of the Ayukawa Tetsuya Award, which is aimed at writers who haven't made a professional debut yet. However, Kenchiku Shizai  was not really Monzen's first work. Several years earlier, Monzen had already sent it a different manuscript for the Ayukawa Tetsuya Award and it was in fact deemed the best entry of that year by Ayukawa Tetsuya himself, but the other people on the committee did not agree, and the work didn't win.Monzen therefore decided to self-publish the book in 1997, with the title Shi no Meidai ("A Proposition of Death"). After Monzen made his professional debut in 2001, he wrote a few other novels, and then publisher Harashobo decided to revisit Shi no Meidai again: Shi no Meidai ("A Proposition of Death") was re-edited and given a new title (the shi in the title in the 2010 differs from the 1997 version), giving the book a new opportunity to reach the audience.

The book starts with the arrival of Shinohara Tsunajirou, Monoda Yoshihara and Mashime Kyouka at the Mishima residence, located in the forest surrounding Lake Ensui in the mountains near Matsumoto City in Nagano Prefecture. The two-storey building belongs to Professor Mishima Souichirou, or to be exact, his widow: the professor had started construction on his home, but he died in an accident on the lake. His widow, Otono, however had the project continued, with a large part of the house dedicated to her husband's accomplishments and his hobbies. Some time has passed since the professor's funeral,  and Otono has invited a few old friends of her husband to stay a few nights at the lake, including the aforementioned trio, who were students of the professor. Tsunajirou and Kyouoka often visited the professor and his wife and knew them privately, so they are a bit surprised Yoshihara was also invited, and it's also a bit awkward: Yoshihara was never close to the professor nor his wife, and Yoshihara and Kyouka also used to date when in university. They broke up and now Tsunajirou and Kyouka are now an engaged couple. When they arrive at the house, they learn their host is not present. The physician Miyabi Daisuke, a Mishima family friend who knows Tsunajirou and Kyouka as well, arrived earlier, and explains he found a package hanging from the door knob, which included the keys to the house, as well as a letter signed by Otono, who explains she had an accident herself and can't freely move. Because it happened only a few days ago and she knew all her guests had already made arrangements, she asks their guests to entertain themselves despite her absence: food supplies have been prepared, so they can enjoy a few days off at the lake. Everybody finds this a bit weird, including Annosawa Ikuo, a budding mystery novelist who's a patient of the doctor (he was brought for some social contact).  A late arrival is Takao Hiroshi, a salesman for a medical company who was also invited. 

As they discuss their current situation, they note that the note doesn't actually sound like it was written by Otono, and Kyouka seems eager to leave, saying they should pay the widow a visit in the hospital, but they decide to stay for at least one night, especially as it starts to snow heavily. They explore the house a bit to admire not only the late professor's collection of insect specimens, but also his collection of torture devices, including the giant guillotine standing outside the entrance of the house. The following day however, a horrible discovery is made: Kyouka is found dead in the garden, with her face having been hit with immense force. It's obvious not an accident, as the object that inflicted the damage is nowhere to be found. Meanwhile,Monoda Yoshihara can also not be found, so the others start looking for him: they find his body floating in the lake, having first been strangled and then thrown into the lake for him to drown. The police is informed, but the road conditions due to the weather prevent them from coming at once. As the survivors await the police however, more deaths occur: a poisoning, a man being split in half with the guillotine... And when the police finally arrive... they find all six guests in the house have died, with the last one apparently having committed suicide.

 It's the sister of the last person to live who visits Kumode, who runs a construction consultancy agency which double-acts as a detective agency, after earlier success in detection by Kumode. The sister naturally can't stand her brother being painted as a cold-blooded killer who killed five people and then himself, so she wants Kumode to investigate the case, which is done by an investigation of the crime scene itself (the Mishima residence), as well as the inspection of two diaries: one by the mystery author Annosawa and the other by the supposed killer: these were the last two men surviving and both men claim they were not the horrible serial killer in their respective notes. Can Kumode figure out what really happened at the lake?

Kenchiku Shizai/The Builded Dead was an interesting book as it showcased author Monzen's knowledge of architecture (which he studied): it was a very realistic book when it came to the presentation of how a building is actually constructed, and at times, the realism did hurt the presentation of the mystery a bit, but it was still a memorable experience. Shi no Meidai is surprisingly enough not at all like Kenchiku Shizai, being a far more unrealistic book, as it embraces the familar tropes of mystery fiction. The premise of the book is a classic And Then There Were None set-up: all people in the isolated house end up murdered, but by whom? Like And Then There Were None, there's a second part that follows the initial closed circle narrative, focusing on the investigation conducted by an outside party after the murders (in this case, Kumode's investigation). 

Shi no Meidai follows the familiar tropes fairly faithfully, and some characters even point out how everything feels a bit fishy, from their host not appearing herself and the selection of guests being weird. Which is why it does feel a bit strange the characters don't decide to leave at once: they're apparently somewhat savvy enough to realize not all is right, but they still stay, and that's a thing that continues throughout this book: the characters really feeling like characters in a detective novel, doing the exact things needed to get the plot going, but not really fully explaining why those characters would ever want to do that. 

The same holds for the core mystery plot: there are some cool ideas that are at play here, some honestly really memorable (and gruesome!), but many of the ideas used here are quite forced, especially if you consider them having all happened in the same story! Like, the murder of Kyouka is actually pretty interesting as an idea: it's actually an impossible crime, as the garden was covered in snow and yet only Kyouka's own footprints could be found in the snow, despite being hit from nearby with an object. I can easily imagine this part being a short story on its own as it has a memorable trick, but then you also remember the murders on the doctor and Annosawa also happened in their specific manners, and you start rolling your eyes as that's a bit too much luck/coincidence that is happening in one sequence. The murders on the doctor and Annosawa again would have been great core ideas in their own story (it's actually really good while being incredibly silly at the same time, and I love it for that), but it loses its impact here because it just becomes one small cog in a much larger machine. A far more fantastical machine than the realistic mechanism we saw in Kenchiku Shizai too. The way the murderer planned for all of this is almost farcical, as it relies on one coincidence or lucky turn after another, so taking this story in as.... one story feels a bit difficult. There are really good individual ideas, but they didn't need to be taken all together, especially as it works towards a conclusion that only strengthens this sense of forced coindence. I think if the book had been written differently, this theme could easily have worked, but the book is still told in a fairly straightforward manner that doesn't really dwell on the thematic consequences of its events, so you are never sure whether the author actually realized his book borders on a parody.

The book actually opens with a Challenge to the Reader, containing 5 'pointers' that act as a kind of tease of things to come. I think the book's fair enough to warrant a Challenge, though I'm not sure whether it works best in this position of the book (why not just before the soluton?).

 Shi no Meidai is a book I think some of the parts are better than their sum, with some good mystery ideas and tricks, that however become a bit deluded when taken all together, because all of that happening in the span of like two days feels a bit too much, especially as part of a plan by the killer. It's also completely different in terms of atmosphere from Kenchiku Shizai, despite being the same series, which might be a good or bad thing depending on what your thoughts on that book was, or vice-versa. I think that the individual elements of Shi no Meidai are far more memorable to me than Kenchiku Shizai, but I found the latter a better novel overall.

 Original Japanese title(s):  門前典之『屍の命題』

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

The Tuesday Club Murders

Sur les crédences, au salon vide: nul ptyx
"Sonnet en X

And yet I'm sure this is not the only book that's been on the 'to-read' list for over fiteen years...

The retired French literature professor Zuimon Ryuushirou is a huge fan of the poet Stéphane Mallarmé and owns a curious home which is named, and designed after meaningless word "ptyx" Mallarmé used in the poem Sonnet en X. To be exact, it follows the Japanese translation of the word, with a stem word for "shell", so the two-storey building is built like a spiral, with spiraling hallway on both floors, and a courtyard at the center of the building, that can only be reached by the stairs that are found at the very end of the hallway upstairs. Zuimon often holds gatherings at his manor to discuss literature, aptly called the Tuesday Club. In 1987, members of the Tuesday Club included, among others, an active professor in French literature and three students, a famous actor and... the great detective Mizuki Masaomi and the legally required Watson, Ayui Ikusuke, who has been chronicling all of the adventures Mizuki and he have as succesful novels. That night, after everyone has gone to sleep, a loud cry wakes everyone up and as they look for the origin of the voice, they find one of the guests lying dead in the courtyard, apparently having slipped from the stairs upstairs down onto the courtyard. But it was in fact not a natural death, and of course Mizuki promptly solves the case, allowing for Ayui to write a new book. The Ptyx House Affair is serialized in parts in magazines as always and while basically all of the story was serialized, with the case solved and perhaps only needing an epilogue, the book was never actually finished, and also never collected and published as a single, standalone release. This also marked the last of what the public would learn about Mizuki: Ayui stopped writing books and nobody heard of Mizuki again.

14 years later, the great private detective Isurugi Gisaku is contacted by a literary editor who wants Isurugi to reopen the investigation of the murder that took place at the Zuimon residence 14 years ago. The editor finds it strange Ayui never had the final book properly published and suspects there could only be one reason why Ayui had made such a drastic decision: what if in the process of writing down the adventure he had with Mizuki, he had inadvertently realized Mizuki might actually have nabbed the wrong culprit in this case? Isurugi, who is a big fan of the Mizuki Masaomi novels, accepts the request, and investigates the case by not only reading the installments of The Ptyx House Affair, but also by interviewing the real people involved in the actual case 14 years ago, and as he asks more questions, he slowly starts to notice little things in Ayui's account that bothers him too. Can he outwit the great detective Mizuki in Shunou Masayuki's Kagami no Naka wa Nichiyoubi, which also carries the German title Im Spiegel ist Sonntag ("It's Sunday in the Mirror", 2001)?  

Shunou Masayuki was an author who was only active for a very short period of time, writing about seven books in four years, but he is still well-remembered in the world of Japanese mystery fiction and you'll often find one of his titles (especially Hasami Otoko ("The Scissor Man") in 'best of' lists. I don't know why I hadn't gotten started on him yet, especially as fifteen years ago (back when we had like only three people blogging in English on Japanese mystery fiction!), I already wrote I had put this book on my 'to-be-read' list...It took me a bit of time, but I finally got around to it!

The books in the Isurugi Gisaku series are apparently all takes on familiar mystery tropes, with Kagami no Naka wa Nichiyoubi being an obvious variation on the familiar yakata-mono, murders occuring in a curiously built building like we see in Ayatsuki's House series. Here we have a house that is built in the most inconvenient manner as the house is just one giant spiral that goes up one floor, and it's of course nuts you'd need to go walk down the spiralling hallway of the first floor, go up the stairs, go down the spiralling hallway of the second floor and go out on the balcony and go down another set of stairs just to reach the courtyard, which is of course completely surrounded by walls so there's nothing to see (as there are no windows looking out into the courtyard). Houses like these are great for mysteries, not so for actual living.

That said, while the main mystery might seem to be the mysterious death in 1987 at the Ptyx house, one could argue that it is in fact another trope that is the main topic of this book: the unreliable narrator. Which might seem like a huge spoiler, but not only are we already told that Ayui apparently suspected Mizuki might have been wrong, meaning the solution presented in Ayui's book should be wrong, Kagami no Naka wa Nichiyoubi in fact opens with the most unreliable narrator we could have: a person suffering from Alzheimer in 2001. This person, closely related to the 1987 murder, does not recognize themselves, and can barely recognize people anymore by 2001. Isurugi Gisaku's investigation into the murder however stimulates the narrator in ways Isurugi could not have foreseen, and flashes of memories slowly show a glimpse of the solution awaiting at the end. The second part of the book flashes a bit back and explains how Isurugi Gisaku's investigation actually gets started and is interspersed with The Ptyx House Affair written by Ayui Ikusuke in 1987. It's here where we get another glimpse of how the 'unreliable narrator' works: while Ayui is almost fanatical in being accurate and truthtful in his account, as he thinks that is the best way to show how much of an amazing detective Mizuki was, Ayui does have to let his imagination do the work when it comes to portraying the people other than himself in his book. When in Isurugi goes interviewing the people involved in the case 14 years later, we see that Ayui often didn't get things quite right in his book, creating slight gaps between reality and his reconstruction of the case and the people involved. For example, in Ayui's book, he decided to use one of the visiting students as the main narrator, but the real "him" differs from the fictional one in quite a few ways. It's of course up to Isurugi, and the reader, to figure out whether these little discrepencies relate to what really went on 14 years ago, and whether Mizuki got the right killer or not.

Ultimately, I think the book's merits also lie in how these various narratives (Alzheimer/Isurugi/Ayui) intertwine, and the truth hidden between the web spun between these three that makes Kagami no Naka wa Nichiyoubi an interesting mystery novel, The actual murder itself, and the clues leading up to resolving that, are not as interesting as seeing what is really hiding within Ayui's The Ptyx House Affair and learning how the narrator with Alzheimer links up with Isurugi's investigation and what these threads all actually mean. It's hard to explain precisely what this book does well, because that does go a bit too much into spoiler territory, but I can safely recommend this as a well-structured mystery novel. The only caveat I could have is simply the fact I feel nothing for Stéphane Mallarmé, and obviously, they do talk about him and his work a lot in The Ptyx House Affair

The bunko pocket version of Kagami no Naka wa Nichiyoubi includes the direct sequel Shikimi/Muro ("Anise/Juniper"), originally released in 2002. These are two interconnected short stories, with an interesting title convention: if you take out the "tree" radical from the kanji of either title (Shikimi and Muro), you end up with the word misshitsu, or "locked room". And thus both stories are about locked room mysteries. Shikimi ("Anise") is a story written by Ayui Ikusuke and details a case he and Mizuki had while visiting a small town with hot springs, as they had been invited to the hotel run someone they had become acquainted during a previous adventure. Ayui and Mizuki learn about a local legend telling a Tengu (a bird-like goblin) used to live here and that he had dropped his axe: the axe is enshrined in a local shinto shrine. Lately, the priest claims he saw the Tnegu with its long nose on Tengu's Hill in the night. What sounds like a tall story, turns into a creepy seed of doubt when one night, one of the guests won't come out of his room. They try to unlock the door with the master key, but the door is latched from the inside. When they finally break into the room, they find the guest lying dead on his bed, having been hit fatally with... the Tengu's axe.

Muro ("Juniper") is set 14 years later and follows Isurugi Gisaku, as he goes visit an old friend who runs a certain hotel in a town with hot springs... Isurugi actually lived in this town for a short period fourteen years ago to prepare for his school entrance exams, though he had left the day Mizuki and Ayui solved the locked room mystery in the hotel. His friend had been working part-time in the hotel at the time, and later married the proprietor. Isurugi is glad to see his old friend, though the wife is seemingly not so happy to have her husband's friend staying at the hotel as a guest (any hopes for a discount are soon thrown away as soon as Isurugi meets the wife). History seemingly repeats itself when a student reports to the reception his professor won't respond to knocks on his door. The professor had been a guest 14 years ago too and all of this soon sparks fears into all that were here too then, so after confirming the door is indeed latched from inside, they force the door open again... only to find the room empty. The professor later appears, saying he had gone out drinking, but who then had latched his door from the inside?

Both stories feature fairly simple tricks for their locked rooms, but the way the two stories intertwine, one set in the past and the other in the present, is good. Some things in Shikimi take on a different meaning when you have read Muro, and the trick in Muro definitely benefits from having read Shikimi first. These stories do really feel like a set, and while they are short and quite lite, I did enjoy them, espcecially as an extension of Kagami no Naka wa Nichiyoubi, as it once again plays with past/present narratives.

So overall, I really enjoyed Kagami no Naka wa Nichiyoubi and its sequel Shikimi/Muro. They provide fun takes on familiar mystery tropes which allow for some pondering on the genre conventions, while at the same time, they are actually written in a very accessible manner, being very easy reads. I do recommend reading Shikimi/Muro together with Kagami no Naka wa Nichiyoubi though, as they are really too lite on their own (which would explain why they are published as one single book nowadays). Anyway, I will be reading more of Shunou soon!

Original Japanese title(s): 殊能将之『鏡の中は日曜日』/『樒 / 榁』 

Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Turnabout Memories - Part 15

 "I have to go over everything that's happened. I have to remember"  
Another Code R: Journey into Lost Memories

 

Another year has passed, so it's time for the annual recap post. It's been another hectic year, so while I have managed to keep posting my (at least) one post a week, I haven't really been able to do editorial posts, and don't get me started on game-related reviews... Fortunately, I never run out of mystery novels and short stories to discuss, so while some media may not have seen much attention on this blog, I think I've managed to highlight quite a few interesting books this year. I've also managed to have some great mystery-related experiences outside the blog this year, for example attending the Honkaku Mystery Award ceremony for the first time in my life. I have been a member for years, but never managed to actually attend the ceremony because of simply not being in Japan when the ceremony is held, but this year, I finally managed to have a look and I met a lot of authors I've been reading for so many years now like Ooyama Seiichirou, and I also managed to meet a few of the authors whose work I've translated like Imamura Masahiro and Norizuki Rintarou. I'm also happy to say the Honkaku Discord server has recently seen its third birthday, and thanks to the wonderful people there, it's grown to a place where everyone can discuss Japanese mystery fiction (and horror) and participate in community projects like book clubs and guess-the-culprit games. So come and take a look inside the server if you're interested in Japanese mystery fiction! Anyway, 2026 is coming up soon, but don't expect much to change on this blog: I'll just be writing about (mostly) Japanese detective stories here, both old and new, and with a bit of luck, sometimes also announce something about my translation work! Have a nice Christmas and a great new year!


The Best Project Outside The Blog! In 2025!

Another year, and fortunately, I was able to translate another book! The Clock House Murders by Ayatsuji Yukito is the fourth book released in English in the successful series about murders happening in strange, creepy houses designed by the same architect and it's perhaps my favorite of the series. In a way, it feels a bit like a new take on The Decagon House Murders, but with a lot more slasher horror segments added as Ayatsuji had released a few horror novels in the meantime. The grand trick behind the murders is absolutely fantastic and one of my all-time favorites. Ayatsuji is particularly proud of this book and he had wanted to see it published in English for some time now: before the English release of The Labyrinth House Murders had been decided on, he had suggested perhaps going straight to The Clock House Murders in case The Labyrinth House Murders would prove troublesome in terms of translation. Ayatsuji would win the Mystery Writers of Japan Award with this book and next February, the live-action adaptation will release on Hulu in Japan. If you haven't read the book yet, please do! While the UK release was earlier this year, readers in the US have to wait until next year though.

And as it's already listed on some sites, it's not really a secret anymore, but you can expect the next book in the series too somewhere next year... 

Best Premise! Seen in 2025!
Momiji no Nishiki ("Breathtaking Red Leaves") 

A lot of the books I read, especially of authors I haven't read yet, are picked because of some alluring premise. From the premise of witches and time travel in Minami Asov's Eigoukan Chourenzoku Satsujn Jiken - Majo wa X to Shinu Koto ni Shita ("The Super Serial Murder Case at the House of Eternity - The Witch Chose To Die With X"), a murder mystery where both the victim and the suspects has been in a thousand-year cryogenic sleep in Sennen no Whodunnit ("A Millenial Whodunnit"), to murders commited on a space station, mystic murders in medieval China, or a hospital with detectives as doctors: they all have story set-ups that sound interesting on their own. So it might surprise I picked an otherwise very "plain" story as the tale with the best premise I read this year: Maya Yutaka's Momiji no Nishiki ("Breathtaking Red Leaves") is a short story that's just about a murder that occurs in a mountain town with hot springs, which is basically the description of every other mystery story, but Maya adds a brilliant twist at the end of the first part of the story, a twist that is both soooo simple and yet so ingenious: while the premise of the story, as a guess-the-culprit scenario, is to guess who the culprit is based on the hints provided, the first part of the story does not actually show who the victim is! So the reader not only has to deduce who the culprit is, they have to deduce who the victim is first! It's such a great premise for the puzzle and Maya ends up presenting a very elegantly constructed short story. 

Most Infuriating Timetable! In 2025!
Mokusei no Ouji ("The Wooden Prince")

 

And as I just explained above, Maya Yutaka is almost never a straight-forward author. He plays with the tropes of the genre, makes fun of them and takes them to their oddest extremes. In Mokusei no Ouji, he goes far with the classic alibi-deconstruction story, presenting the reader with a devilish puzzle with not only a house with an insanely complex layout, but also an extremely detailed timetable that denotes the movements of all the suspects down to the minute as they all wander through the maze-like house. The result is a timetable that is absolutely infuriating to behold, but in a good way, as you know Maya has something in store for you by presenting you with such an odd puzzle.


Silliest Cover! Seen in 2025!
Noto no Misshitsu - Kanazawa Hatsu 15ji 45pun no Shisha ("The Locked Room in Noto - The Dead Leaving Kanazawa at 15:45", 1992).

I mean, no contest, right? The thing is, I honestly don't see the connection between the cover and the actual contents of the book. Sure, there's a woman in the book, but I'm pretty sure there was no giant hand in the story, nor a thumb growing out of the woman's face. And it's not like the actual art is bad either. It's just that the actual topic of the picture is so... weird, and not related to the book. I mean, I would've understood it if the hand was made to look like a train, because trains play an important role in the story, but as it is now... Well, it's memorable, at least.


Best Porn Mystery! Read in 2025!

In general, I aim to discuss the mystery genre on this blog, and I don't really have any rules regarding form (medium) or hybrid genres, as log as there's an interesting mystery plot at the core. However, it was a coincidence I happened to discuss two forms of porn mystery earlier this year. Chikan Densha: Seiko no Oshiri ("Molester Train: Seiko's Tush", 1985) was a softcore porn film in a long-running series, directed by someone who would go on to win an Oscar and I had known for years it also contained a locked room murder mystery which authors like Yamaguchi Masaya and Abiko Takemaru lauded. Marina Mystery File (1997-1999) was a manga that came under my attention thanks to manga artist and critic Nemoto Shou, about a teacher who manages to solve gruesome murder cases whenever she's thoroughly stimulated. While I think the locked room murder in Seiko no Oshiri is far more original and more complex than the plots we see in Marina Mystery File, I still think the latter is better as a porn mystery, in the sense the "sex" is integrated better in the mystery plots. Not always mind you, but in Seiko no Oshiri, the locked room murder feels completely unrelated to the sexy bits, while Marina Mystery File at least has some stories where the nudity and sex is actually connected meaningfully to the mystery plot.

Best Post I Accidentally Deleted And Had To Rewrite Completely! In 2025!
No winner.

Another year without casualties! Yay! *knocks on wood*

The Just-Ten-In-No-Particular-Order-No-Comments List
Sekai de Ichiban Sukitootta Monogatari (The World's Clearest Story) (Sugii Hikaru)
- Kokumen no Kitsune ("The Black-Faced Kitsune")  Mitsuda Shinzou)
- Kami no Hikari ("The Light of God") (Kitayama Takekuni)
- Setsudantou no Satsuriku Riron (The Genocide Theories in the Mutilation Island) (Mori Akimaro)
Hakushaku to Mittsu no Hitsugi ("The Count and the Three Coffins") (Shiotani Ken)
Mokusei no Ouji ("The Wooden Prince") (Maya Yutaka)
Yogen no Shima ("The Island of the Prophecy") (Sawamura Ichi) 
Sennen no Whodunnit ("A Millenial Whodunnit") (Asane Juuji) 
- Momiji no Nishiki ("Breathtaking Red Leaves") (Maya Yutaka)
Konrondo ("The Kunlun Slave") (Koizumi Kajuu

Friday, December 19, 2025

The End of the Trail

Feel, don't think. Use your instincts.
"The Phantom Menace" 

And just as I finish writing this review, I remember I never wrote one for Staffer Case even though I finished it months ago...

Professor Martin has brought two of his students, Emma and her friend (whose name is decided on by the player), from the United States to the country of Vendreka in Europe for a research trip. On the night before they board the train back to London, a murder occurs in the hotel they are staying: a person had been shot and fell several stories down to his death. Their interests piqued, the unnamed protagonist and Emma snoop a bit around the crime scene and befriend the police detective in charge, who allows them to look a bit around. The following day, professor Martin and his pupils board the train, which will take a few days to reach London. On the second day however, Emma is baffled by a mysterious disappearance. She had befriended a fellow passenger the previous evening and promised to meet her again this second day, but the woman didn't appear. That on its own might not be cause for any concerns, but when Emma asked the staff and fellow passengers who had been in the lounge carriage too at the time about the woman, nobody seems to remember having seen such a woman and in fact, it appears Emma might have been all alone in the lounge car. At first, Emma thinks she's going crazy, but as she and the protagonist poke around a bit, they stumble upon the possibility there had indeed been a woman on board, who has now disappeared. Can the two find out what happened to the missing woman in the 2025 game Detective Instinct, Farewell My Beloved, available for PC and Switch?

When developer Armonica LLC first announced Detective Instinct, Farewell My Beloved back in 2023, it caught my attention immediately. The developers were not shy about what the main inspiration was for their baby-in-the-making: Japanese adventure games, with command-style adventures like Famicom Detective ClubGyakuten Saiban/Ace Attorney, and Nintendo DS games like Another Code and Hotel Dusk as the biggest influences. While the "visual novel" school of Japanese adventures have become popular in the Western market, the traditional command-style adventure style is emulated far less often. The initial trailers and the demo however Detective Instinct, Farewell My Beloved were incredibly promising, offering great visuals invoking classic Japanese adventures from the late eighties ~ early 2000s and music, and teasing an interesting-sounding mystery. The game was finally released late November 2025, so how does the final product hold up?

To start off with the visuals and the audio: Detective Instinct, Farewell My Beloved is a must-see (and hear) for those who love the games I mentioned above. You can feel in everything how much the developers love games like Famicom Detective Club, Ace Attorney and Policenauts. The game features the familiar "command menu on one side of the screen" layout, though unlike Famicom Detective Club, it utilizes character art that is more animated, bringing them closer to the lively characters of Ace Attorney, with their personalities being perfectly conveyed through the player through the great animations. The artwork is really good, with also occasional cut-scene-esque stills that give the game a cinematic feel and the audio too features some great tunes that accompany your investigation into the missing woman. Detective Instinct, Farewell My Beloved feels right at home next to its direct inspirations and if you had told me this had been a game during that generation, I would probably have believed you right away. I honestly have no complaints in this regard.

Gameplay-wise, the game follows Famicom Detective Club more than Ace Attorney though. You advance through the story by using commands like "Talk" and "Check" to interact with other characters or the environment, and by talking with everyone, you gather more information which allows you to talk about *other* things to characters, slowly advancing the story. Fortunately, the game also takes inspiration from the more friendlier version of Famicom Detective Club, highlighting what commands you haven't used yet as an indicator of how to advance in the game. At the end of each chapter, the protagonist and Emma recap all the events that occured that day and the discoveries they made, resulting in a series of questions that are basically just testing your memory, though it occassionally also asks you to input names manually (instead of just choosing out of a list of options). This is a 'mechanic' also seen in games like Famicom Detective Club and Another Code, and as in those games, it's not really an engaging mechanic in any manner. There's no contradiction mechanic where you have to find discrepencies between statements and evidence or any of such interactive detective gameplay, so save for two or three puzzles, Detective Instinct plays very much like Famicom Detective Club, where you're just following the story.

The story however, is where I find the game not as engaging as its presentation. While it starts off with an interesting premise, a murder at a hotel and then a disappearance of a woman, the mystery plot is ultimately fairly short, and what I found most disappointing is that the more interesting twists and turns of the story, aren't part of your investigation. Once you're on the train, the focus of your investigation is on the missing woman (the question of whether she actually exists and if so, where she has gone to) and while you can probably guess it's somehow related to the hotel murder at the start of the game, I have to say the missing woman part of the mystery is by far the least interesting aspect of the plot. The how of how she was seemingly spirited away from the train is boringly simple, while the why might be better, but again, it's by far the least interesting part of the whole plot. So where does the player learn about the more interesting parts of the plot? Well, the other characters tell you about it! The minor advancements you make in your investigation for some reason always lead to characters revealing very important plot points regarding other characters set elsewhere, revealing an interesting scheme being worked out elsewhere, but you only hear about it because it's like almost everyone on the train knows a bit about that scheme, with Emma and the protagonist being the only ones who don't know a thing. But they only learn about it, because they just happen to be looking for a missing woman and each time they discover something regarding that mystery, characters start telling them also about the more interesting plot. So until the very end, I felt I was not investigating the more appealing parts of the plot and stuck with the least engaging parts of the mystery. 

Perhaps it's a matter of the scope of this game, as while it certainly punches above its weight in terms of graphics and style, I can imagine the developers were trying to limit the scope of the story a bit to keep the development of this game manageable. But to me, the story just lacked the twists and turns to keep me truly exciting to learn more about the mystery, while at the same time I could imagine me liking the story so much better if we had been investigating this case from a completely different angle, especially with these visuals. Due the smaller scope of the story, which also leads to a smaller cast of characters however, you get to spend more time with most of the characters (especially Emma), so that will probably please the players who enjoy these characters and want to learn more about what makes them tick, but mystery-wise, I can't deny I had hoped for much more.

By the way, while this game was written in English, I ended up playing it in Japanese because I first just wanted to see how it looked, but had overlooked the (very clear) message telling me that the save games for both languages are seperate: by the time I realized that, I had already advanced enough in my Japanese save I didn't want to start all over again. The translation is really good though and really makes you feel like you're playing an old Japanese adventure game. 

So on one hand, I really liked Detective Instinct, Farewell My Beloved for what it aims to do and in certain aspects, it not only succeeds greatly, but far greatly surpasses expectations, but on the other hand, I also think it's not as succesful as many of its inspiration in using the limited command-style gameplay to present a mystery story. Not all those games have interactive mystery gameplay like Ace Attorney, but can still present engaging tales of mystery via the kind of mystery they focus on, the way the twists and turns are presented to the player and by using foreshadowing/clewing, and that's where I feel Detective Instinct, Farewell My Beloved's presentation far outpaced the story. I am interested in seeing more of this studio though if they want to make more of these games.

Tuesday, December 16, 2025

These Names Make Clues

The more that you read, the more things you will know.
"I Can Read With My Eyes Shut!

For those interested in the guess-the-culprit games as mentioed below, creative members of the Honkaku Discord  venture each month to present a guess-the-culprit scenario to their fellow members, challenging them to solve their puzzle. Come have a look in the server if you want to try solving such a scenario yourself, or if you want to write one! 

Last year, I reviewed the anthology Suiri no Jiken Desu ("It's Inference Time", 2024) and earlier this year, I discussed Anata mo Meitantei (AKA What A Great Detective You Are, 2022) and Kibun wa Meitantei ("Feeling Like the Great Detective"). The stories in all these anthologies were designed as guess-the-culprit whodunit puzzels, with the stories clearly divided in a "Problem" part and a "Solution" part: all the necessary clues to solve the problem are presented within the first part of the story, so there's often an explicit Challenge to the Reader between these two parts: "this is a fairly written mystery and you have all the clues at this point, so try and solve it!" As someone who loves the puzzle-ness of mystery fiction, I just can't get enough of these stories, so when I heard publisher Tokyo Sogensha was doing an anthology series collecting past guess-the-culprit stories from various writers, I was of course immediately intrigued. I skipped the first volume (released in August of 2025) for the moment, as I already knew a large number of the stories included, but I decided to pull the trigger on the second volume: Yokochou no Meitantei - Hanninate Shousetsu Kessakusen ("The Great Detective of the Backstreets - The Best Whodunits", 2025), which also has the simple English title The Best Whodunits 2, collects seven stories selected by editor Fukui Kenta, who also wrote the foreword in which he looks at the history of such stories and similar anthologies.

The first story in the collection is the title story, Yokochou no Meitantei ("The Great Detective of the Backstreets"), a story by Niki Etsuko and originally released in 1972. The story interestingly consists only out of dialogue between the characters (so no narration) and with the historical setting, it reminds of a rakugo play. The story seems to be set in the Edo period and starts with the discovery of a theft in a small village, so they go to the retired elder to ask him for help. A paper craftsman had finished a scroll for a client and was on his way to deliver the valuable goods when nature called. He placed the package on a rainwater bucket on the corner so he could relieve himself in the bushes, but when he came back, he found the package gone, and no sign of any thief, though there were other peddlers and salesmen walking in the vicinity, who are all called upon to testify who they saw around the time of the theft. The story is fairly amusing to read due to all the merchants chiming in, but the main mystery is simple in design, as you basically only need to identify a certain lie, though to do that, you do need to combine information from various people and the basis for pointing out the lie, is well hidden. There's not really a "trick" here done by the culprit, just the need to find out how the testiminonies of all people fit assuming everyone but the culprit tells the truth. Very decent start.

Alibi Fuseiritsu ("No Alibi", 1973) is a story by Ishizawa Eitarou, a writer I do intend to write more of because his main series is about a police detective in Fukuoka, where I once lived. Alibi Fuseiritsu too is set in that city and starts with police detective Wakumoto receiving a phone call at the police station who says Akama Gouzou is dead, and that's lying in the apartment building next to the police station. Akama Gouzou was the name a real estate swindler had adopted. He had been deceiving people by first befriending people and then offering to sell them land for a cheap price: people handed him all their savings for the dream of purchasing some land to build their own house on it. The police had been investigating Akama already, but someone got to him first, and it's likely the murderer is one of the four people who were deceived by him and had already been trying to track him down after Akama started to lay low. The police had already interviewed them earlier for the swindling case, but the four are visited once again to ask them about their alibis for the murder. However, it turns out none of them have one: each of them claims that they received a call that night by someone purporting to be someone else in the group, with the claim they had found Akama and that they'd all meet at a certain spot to catch Akama and hand him over to the police. However, the calls were fake and they had all been sent to a different lonely spot in Fukuoka, leaving them all without alibis. It seems obvious the murderer orchestrated this so nobody would have a clear alibi for the murder, so how is the reader supposed to find the murderer? Well, based on the clues of course. This is a story that has a great conclusion, but the clues actually pointing to the murderer aren't all as clever as presented. It follows the Queen tradition of having to identify a few characteristics which apply to the murder, but some of those conditions presented in the story are rather questionable, like saying people working in certain professions wouldn't know about something, while that something isn't even something that is exclusive to a profession. Other clues are better and as I said, I do like the idea of what Ishizawa was going for.

Tatsumi Masaaki is a critic of the genre, who has written one serialized novel (which has not seen a collected release) and a handful of short stories. Umoreta Satsui ("Buried Malice") is one of those short stories and deals with an interesting problem. Yajima Tarou is an amateur detective who is asked by Handa Shinzou, a friend of his father, to assist with a problem. Handa and Sone Tamio are both looking for the son of Furuyagi Denjirou: before World War II, the Furuyagi Company was a well-known sales firm and Sone Tamio had joined the firm in his twenties. He became Denjirou's promising disciple, but business didn't go well right after the war, so it was decided to dissolve the firm for now, letting go of all the employees but Sone and Denjirou and his wife retreating to a mountain village. Sone became gravely ill just as Denjirou's wife gave birth to a child. Not wanting to be a burden, Sone gave up his position, allowing himself time to recover at a friend's place while Denjirou and his wife would go back to the city to try and start the business again. Later, Sone learnt Denjirou and his wife had passed away soon afterwards. Sone had been given the business contacts and a full recommendation by Denjirou in case he might not make it, so later on, Sone managed to set-up his own business as a successor to the once well-known Furuyagi Company. But then he later heard Denjirou had actually given up his son before he died, and that the son had been brought up by another family. Handa, the family friend of Yajima Tarou, also heard about this, and now Handa and Sone are looking for the son of Denjirou and they even use a television show to ask anyone with information to contact them. But then it turns out two men called, claiming they are the son of Furuyagi Denjirou. When later the midwife who found the adoption family for the baby is also found, they try to have the midwife identify Denjirou's child, but she's killed before she can make the identification.

I think in some way, it's fairly easy to guess who the fake one is based on the set-up of the story, but I do like some of the clues and the logic behind proving that a lot: some of the clues allow for quite some deep logical reasoning, considering the length of the story, but I think the surprise is a bit weakened because you can instinctively guess the solution to the main problem pretty easily even without those otherwise well-planted clues.

Dial 7 was written in 1979 by Awasaka Tsumao and deals with the underworld: Kitaura Shinya, boss of the Kitaura gang is found murdered in his house. As a gangster boss, he of course has many enemies, ranging from enemy gangs to people in his own gang who may have found themselves treated unfairly. The police have more than enough suspects, but can't seem to find any good clues at the crime scene until they notice the murderer must have used the phone after the murder. While the murderer was smart enough to not touch the phone directly, and used a pencil to turn the dial on the phone, the police was able to find out that the murderer called a number that did not use the numbers 8, 9 or 0. However, this was enough for the police to find the murderer. Though modern-day detectives might have problems with solving this mystery. I like the clues and set-up of this story a lot, but even if you know those old-fashioned phones with a dial, you still probably lack certain "common knowledge" information to solve this mystery, as it really isn't common knowledge now anymore. I do think it's a really clever story with subtle hints, that however is really strongly imbedded in the time/setting it was written for.

Sei Valentine Day no Satsujin ("The Murder on Valentine's Day", 1984) is a very short story by Okajima Futari, set at a baking school, where a group of nine students all made a chocolate-based sweet for Valentine's Day. The idea was to judge each other under the watchful eye of a teacher. They would all bring their creation, cover them up and the chocolates would be assigned a number. They'd then draw lots, and each person had to try out the sweet with the number they got and honestly review the sweet. The second person to try a sweet died however, as it turned out the sweet had been poisoned. But when they match the sweets to the creators, it turns out... the victim ate his own poisoned sweet. What happened here? Very short story, so the solution is also very short and simple. Neat idea, not sure if it's really suitable for this format though.

Hitori ja shinenai ("I Won't Die Alone", 1989) was originally written by Nakanishi Tomoaki as a guess-the-culprit scenario for the Kyoto University Mystery Club, but was also reprinted in a literary magazine in 1990 for a special on the Guess-the-Culprit tradition of the Mystery Club, with Ayatsuji Yukito and Norizuki Rintarou acting as the reader's guide. This is a very complex story and revolves around a group of friends, of whom most are either current or graduated members of a high school cooking club who often hang out with each other. Kouichi, a graduate, recently committed suicide, as his girlfriend Remi (a current member of the club) left him for someone else in the club. They still have gatherings where they cook together, but at the first gathering after the funeral, one of the members falls dead after consuming something: the food was poisoned, but the police thinks it's likely not murder, as no murderer could make sure one specific person would consume that food. They suspect it's suicide, but then the same thing happens again at the after-funeral gathering... If it is murder, how is the murderer making sure their intended victim dies? The answer lies in a series of intermezzos for the reader, where the murderer confesses they are just doing things randomly until their truly intended victim dies, but how is that fair to the reader? Well, it's still incredibly fair, with Nakanishi parading some clues very daringly in front of the reader, and yet, it's likely they will miss it. This is a very good example of a great guess-the-criminal story and certainly among the best in this collection. It's a bit long, but there's so much going on, it never bores and in hindsight, you'll see it's a very tightly writte story due to all the clues.

The final story, Tokeikan no Satsujin ("The Clock House Murder", 1990) by Imamura Aya has a somewhat confusing title. Ayatsuji Yukito has indeed written The Clock House Murders, known as Tokeikan no Satsujin in Japanese (disclosure: I translated the book in English!), but while both stories are pronounced the same in Japanese, they are written differently (different kanji). Both are about houses with clock collections though. In the Tokeikan no Satsujin in this anthology, an elderly man who had been many collecting clocks in his house, but his wife, thinking the house is too big for just the two of them, has them reform part of the house so it can function as a boarding house. Two clocks remain in this boarding house, though these clocks give the wrong time, because the owner likes his clocks to be 'free' and not chained to time. Ookuzu Junya, a writer of mystery stories became their first tenant, and since then, he has introduced more industry-related tenants to his landlord, like an editor and critic. The owner's nephew and niece also stay there, resulting in a rather crowded house. One winter evening, after dinner and Ookuzu has retreated upstairs, an editor arrives at the Clock House to visit Ookuzu to pick up a manuscript. When Mariko, story narrator, niece of the landlord and huge mystery buff, goes up to Ookuzu's room, she finds a letter, where Ookuzu says he's sorry he didn't his manuscript and that he will sneak out of the house and return when he's done. However, Ookuzu couldn't have left the house, as there were people in the sitting room (with a view on the entrance door) that whole evening. Ookuzu however is indeed gone. The following morning Mariko and her brother go out to make a snowman, but they find... a dead Ookuzu outside, covered in snow. How did Ookuzu leave the house, and reappear in the garden as a snowman? This is a delightful story: Mariko is so much fun as the snarky narrator badmouthing people as she sets the scene for the mystery. The mystery of how Ookuzu disappeared from his room is simple in essence, but Imamura builds on that simple concept to turn it into something much more complex, with plenty of clues that allow for some deep reasoning. What is also great is that this story also includes a bookending narrative, that adds another meta-layer to the mystery, making this perhaps my favorite of the collection.

So Yokochou no Meitantei - Hanninate Shousetsu Kessakusen is a very solid collection indeed. It collects stories from the late seventies until 1990, so most of the stories are quite a bit older than the Guess-the-Culprit stories I usually read, but some of these are really good, and I think the collection on the whole is worth a read. I have more of these books already purchased by the way, so expect more reviews about these game-like stories in the future too!

 Original Japanese title(s): 福井健太(編) 『横丁の名探偵 犯人当て小説傑作選』: 仁木悦子「横丁の名探偵」/ 石沢英太郎「アリバイ不成立」/ 巽昌章「埋もれた悪意」/ 泡坂妻夫「ダイヤル7」/ 岡嶋二人「聖バレンタインデーの殺人」/ 中西智明「ひとりじゃ死ねない」/ 今邑彩「時鐘館の殺人