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Seishi Yokomizo, Louise Heal Kawai: Death on Gokumon Island (2022, Steerforth Press)

English language

Published Feb. 13, 2022 by Steerforth Press.

ISBN:
978-1-78227-741-5
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Goodreads:
59112463

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4 stars (2 reviews)

2 editions

reviewed Death on Gokumon Island by Seishi Yokomizo (Kindaichi Kosuke)

Enjoyable and Intriguing.

4 stars

This book was actually quite surprising. It was less surprising for the solution and the mystery itself, but I wasn't expecting for a mystery novel to kind of tackle the idea of 'outsiders' and the supposed suspicious nature of people within a small town while also recognising that there are different cultures within the same country that impact how we think and behave.

Rather, I was more surprised because the handling of the issue wasn't immediately structured in a way to make all the 'small town' people inherently unlikable, unintelligent, or 'beneath' the protagonist (which is something that is annoyingly common in texts that utilise this structure). This is actually something that Yokomizo's books seem to handle well because Kindaichi never seems to hold himself above the people he's around. The locals are shown to be somewhat suspicious and cautious, friendly to a point, but with some still believing that …

Not as compelling as I had hoped

3 stars

I was somewhat disappointed by Death On Gokumon Island. As a classic crime novel, it has all the necessary ingredients, but there was something about the way they were blended together which left me cold which was a shame as I had previously enjoyed The Inugami Curse and had hoped for more of the same. The well-crafted atmosphere from that previous book seemed missing from Death On Gokumon Island and I didn't feel as though as much care had been taken over the characterisations either. In fact, at one point, if we want to find out about an Inspector who appears on the scene, we are directed to go and read a previous novel! While the crime narrative itself is suitably complex and convoluted so the book did keep my interest, I found myself more casually reading rather than being absolutely gripped by the tale.

Pushkin Vertigo, the English language …