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Sto caricando le informazioni... The Master Key (originale 1962; edizione 1986)di Masako Togawa (Autore), Togawa Masako (Autore)
Informazioni sull'operaAppartamenti per signore sole di Masako Togawa (1962)
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Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. Didn't, like, rock my world, but this Japanese mystery novel from 1962 had a cool setting and some great plot moments. Just felt a bit needlessly convoluted. ( ) This is the book that got me into Japanese lit, not just mysteries. It's a strange story, and as a mystery it won't fit easily into any category. I read it straight through. Translator did a great job! As much as I don't like "twists" and authors' "gotchyas!" in mystery writing, I have to say that this one worked for me. The rich storylines of the truly interesting characters is what hooked me. The titular key belongs to the K Apartment House, a building intended exclusively for women to live in. The building has existed since the end of the Second World War and some of the occupants have been there since the beginning. A lot of neurosis hangs in the air, and a lot of secrets lurk behind closed doors. The storytelling is, as the Goodreads summary has it, “spare” and “unembellished”, which comes through in Simon Grove’s translation. The story is told in a slightly non-linear way, beginning with the present day, when the entire apartment house is being movedm and then jumping back seven years to bring the reader up to speed on the secrets and the lives of the women who live in the building. Each chapter is clearly marked with the time (e.g., “Four months before the building is moved”) and tends to follow one occupant of the building. I found this a very quick read, and I did not anticipate how one of the storylines would play out. Recommended if you’re interested in Japanese crime fiction. * I would like to thank NetGalley and the publisher for the opportunity to review an advance copy of this book. * The K Apartments are a tower of residences reserved for single women. The young ladies in residence since the war, and the staff, have now grown to become old maids. The book's opening recounts a car accident in which someone is killed outside the K Apartments. Surprisingly the victim, dressed as a woman, turns out to be a man. What was a man doing in the K Apartments dressed as a woman? Togawa twists this initial mystery as he introduces us to a series of unhappy women who were involved in this scandal and its aftermath. Resentments and jealousies between them lead to acts which compound the scandal, all of it set against a backdrop of an impending construction project that may reveal the grim secret of the K Apartments. This is an unusual crime story. There is no central investigator character and the plot gets developed through the agency of several characters who gradually learn more about what is going on. For most of the book I felt that this was pretty mundane, but Togawa pulled off some plot twists towards the end that totally reversed my opinion. I'm definitely going to seek out more of his work. This book is being released in a new series of international crime novels from Pushkin Vertigo. I've read this one and Emma Viskic's Resurrection Bay and both were very good, so it looks like this imprint is worth keeping an eye out for. nessuna recensione | aggiungi una recensione
Premi e riconoscimenti
The K Apartments for Ladies are occupied by over a hundred unmarried women, once young and lively, now grown and old - and in some cases, evil. Their residence conceals a secret, a secret connecting the unsolved kidnapping in 1951 of four-year-old George Kraft to the clandestine burial of a child's body in the basement bath-house. So, when news comes that the building must be moved to make way for a road-building project, more than one tenant waits with apprehension for the grisly revelation that will follow. Then the master key is lost, stolen and re-stolen, and suddenly no-one feels safe. Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
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Google Books — Sto caricando le informazioni... GeneriSistema Decimale Melvil (DDC)895.6Literature Literature of other languages Asian (east and south east) languages JapaneseClassificazione LCVotoMedia:
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