For some reason a lot of the books I discuss this year seem to feature blue a lot on their covers...
Setsuna no Natsu ("A Fleeting Summer", 2025) is a short story collection by Nanakawa Kanan. The book is named after the title story, but the five stories collected in this book are unrelated, though they all share a melancholic tone. This is my first time reading something by Nanakawa by the way, who debuted via the Ayukawa Tetsuya Award in 2008 and seems to specialize in short stories. I decided to read this book because it was shortlisted for the 2026 Honkaku Mystery Award: the winner of the award hasn't been decided yet at the time of writing this post, but by the time this post goes up, the winner should not only already have been decided, but the actual ceremony will probably have been held too. So perhaps it'll turn out this book actually won the award!
Setsuna no Natsu ("A Fleeting Summer") was originally published in 2018, and tells the story of two women who are volunteering near a recent disaster site. They're staying at a small inn, where they become acquainted with Nahoko, the daughter of the inn's owners. Nahoko tells the guests about her late uncle Ichito and one of the things he left behind: not a bottle ship, but a bottle "desk", with a book on it. A poem is written on the open pages of the book: "Honey-sweet candy / Oh those dear eyes of yours / A fleeting summer". Apparently, the poem was made in reference to an experience Ichito had when he was in middle school and the explanation is written in the rest of the book, but it's impossible to turn the pages of the book inside the bottle and he would never explain more about the poem to his niece. Nahoko did learn more about what had happened to his uncle in the past. After his father's death, he and his mother moved back to his mother's paternal home village as soon as Ichito finished middle school. His maternal family is related to the Amikura family, who are the most prominent family in the village, owning much land in around nature-rich countryside village. While Ichito initially has trouble blending in with the other children in the village, it's his friendship with Mizuha that soon helps him get used to live here in the countryside with the other kids. Mizuha is a distant cousin, who due to deaths and childless marriages, was taken in (together with her little brother) by the Amikuras as the future heir of the family. The two slowly become closer over the course of the summer, until a faithful day. One day, Mizuha and the local gang of boys were playing in a boat on the lake, when Ichito pushed Mizuha in the water. She became angry, so she swam to the nearby small island owned by the Amikuras. She went into the small lookout house there and sent the boys away, telling them angry to keep away from her property. The boys eventually returned home, but when Ichito learned Mizuha hadn't returned by the evening, he became worried and rowed to the island, to find Mizuha safely there. While they were there however, a tsunami occured, keeping them stuck on the island. The tsunami become more powerful, and by the following day, the village had been flooded and there had even been casualties. But what about this event had prompted Ichito to write a poem about it?
This is by far the longest story in the collection, taking about one-third of the whole book, but it's a very interesting set-up. The flashback scene is by far the longest section and tells a coming-of-age story of a boy who basically falls in love with a girl he meets in the countryside over the course of the summer, until a tragedy hits the village, forcing the girl to grow up and step up as the future heir of the Amimuras. There isn't a clearly defined mystery here for a long time, even if we hear about some casualties of the tsunami. The framing story then brings us Nahoko and her two guests, who start speculating about what the poem can mean. Once they realize the poem hides a message hinting at some crime that had been committed by someone during that summer, they start to speculate about what that crime could've been. The result is a captivating trip into the nostalgic memories of the boy, with small events being used to bring clever theories about what could've happened. The deductions presented utilize clues that are both based on physical clues, but also on the personalities and characterization, and while I'm not always a huge fan of the latter type of clues, I'd say it works out really well here in this tale, and that combined with the physical evidence, I'd say this story does a great combination of these often polar opposite type of clues. The story surprisingly has room to offer multiple solutions, all which color the summer memories of Ichito in a different manner, and it's the last one that hits hardest. The atmosphere of this story is absolutely fantastic though, and that's perhaps true for all the stories in this book: a strange kind of melancholic, cozy atmosphere is present in all these stories, even though they can become quite dark.
Mahou no Apron ("The Magical Apron") is a very short story, where the town's Civil Affairs office is contacted about by a neighbor about their worries about a family of four (a mother with three children) living nearby: the children have been loud lately, and there are worries of neglicence. When the people from the office visit the house in the evening, they find the mother is gone. When they ask the oldest daughter whether their mother is working, she only answers their mother is gone to run an errand: an excuse the civil workers have heard earlier, as the family is receiving an allowance from the town, which of course has restrictions to side-earnings. These segments are interspliced with parts that follow the children's mother as she tries hard to keep the household running while earning money, and while it is hard, the love she gets from the children is what keeps her going. However, the civil servants discover that this is no usual case as they dig further. While the story on its own is pretty memorable, I can't deny the ending is a bit predictable. The misdirection isn't as effective as I would have wanted it to be, meaning the "twist" that came was the one I assumed would be the fake one. It's a good "story" but as a "detective" story, I would have loved a twist that went one step further.
Senyakou ("A Journey of a Thousand Nights") tells the story of Masami, a teenager, who has to stay with his aunt while his mother is travelling abroad to her boyfriend. His mother's family is, simply said, a mess: Masami's mother Eri was the second daughter to grandmother Hinata, who had three children. Divorces, new boyfriends, children running away from home and grandchildren who were adopted eventually led to a strange household. Even Masumi doesn't really understand what's going on, but his grandmother Hinata passed away some years ago (he never met her), and now he's going to live with his aunt Asano and his cousin Nonno, who's the daughter of his oldest aunt Akari, but has been officially adopted by his grandmother. During his stay, he slowly starts to learn these two family members he barely ever met before, but things slowly start to turn into a nightmare for Masumi when someone starts haunting the house: Akari, who is apparently vivid her mother Hinata took Nonno from her and now determined to get to Nonno.
By now, the 'missing father figure' device is becoming quite apparent in these stories. This story was originally published in 2021 and it's actually only this story and the title story that were originally published elsewere: the other three stories were written especially for this book. This story feels very much like a horror story, almost like Higurashi, with a young man moving to a new environment and while things seem normal at first, it slowly turns into something frightful as an unknown figure starts haunting the house. That said, I had really trouble getting into the story first because of the insanely complex family relations of the family, which also seemed a bit ridiculous at time. The story works towards a climax with a solution that... can be guessed pretty easily. I think author Nanakawa does a great job at presenting this story as a family tragedy, but the twist prepared for the reader is ultimately based on a phenomenom seen very often in real-life, which makes it easy to recognize. The writing and the atmosphere painted in the story does do a lot of heavy lifting in still making this a good story to read.
Watashi to Watashi no Imouto ("Me and my younger sister") follows a primary school teacher, who is fascinated by the school diary one of the pupils writes: Maria writes about a sister... which she isn't supposed to have. The more the teacher starts digging into why Maria would be writing about a sister who doesn't exist however, the more dangerous things become for herself... Another broken family story, because why not? Again, this story has a slight horror tone, as Maria writes extensively about talking with her younger sister, although the records show she has no living siblings.... but she does have a still-born twin sister. It's a bit of a shame that like in the second story Mahou no Apron, the story doesn't rely much on deduction: the truth is often just discovered by the narrator just appearing at the right place at the right time. In this case, the truth is absolutely horrible, and I can't even imagine why Maria would agree to do the thing she did at the end, considering the way we are also told she acted previously. The misdirection, due to an extra layer, works better in this story than in Mahou no Apron, which are both similar stories in terms of length and their focus on family bonds, though both are relatively simple tales.
The final story, Land's End, tells the story of a taciturn, attractive woman who has moved to a small factory town at the far end of Hokkaido, working in a small boxed lunch shop and living in the smallest and cheapest flat she could find. She has no hobbies, no friends, only living from day to day. She also doesn't read the newspapers, so the only news she hears, like the recent murders on women, come from the chatty boss. One day, the woman loses a broach and it's her neigbor who brings it to her: a slightly older man who is very much like her, reserved and with no apparent goal in life. It turns out both have similar interests in music though. They bond, and with every day, their relation changes: he comes buy his lunches at the shop, while she visits him in his room to chat about music. But what brought these two figures to this town, at the far edge of the world, and where will their future bring them?
The most melancholic story of the volume: the narrator seems to have no purpose in life, though we aren't told until the end why, and much of the story is about following her as she slowly starts to bond with her neighbor. It's at the end we learn there was more about these two getting to know each other, and surprisingly, we are presented some pretty decent deductions based on actual physical and otherwise Queen-esque clues. I had expected this to be more like one of those Yamada Fuutarou stories like Taiyou Kokuten where we learn "something had been brewing" beneath the surface of a different kind of story: usually those stories don't really rely on chains of deductions based on actual clues/testimonies, so it was surprising to see it utilized here, and in an effective way too. While the first part of the truth might not come as a huge surprise, I do like how Nanakawa prepared a very well-thought off conclusion based on that truth, a story conclusion that holds a few surprises of its own. The ending is absolutely perfect, not just for this story, but for the whole book itself, with a glimpse into a more hopeful future in an otherwise melancholic world.
As I said, this was the first time I read something by Nanakawa, but the book certainly piqued my interest. The stories all have a distinct vibe, feeding the reader melancholic feelings, but fortuately the stories also always end on... well, perhaps not a hopeful tone, but there's always slivers of light that make it through. Some of the stories here are mystery-wise a bit simpler than I personally like, but the actual stories/syuzhet are always captivating and the better entries in this book also contain surprisingly well-constructed chains of reasoning, while staying true to the more grounded worlds of these stories. This was a very introduction to Nanakawa's work and I expect to see more of their work on this blog in the future.







