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MURDER IN THE CROOKED HOUSE by Soji Shimada

MURDER IN THE CROOKED HOUSE

by Soji Shimada ; translated by Louise Heal Kawai

Pub Date: June 25th, 2019
ISBN: 978-1-78227-456-8
Publisher: Pushkin Press

A locked-room mystery in a uniquely built mansion is not so much a whodunit as a how-done-it…illustrated!

A list of dramatis personae, a detailed drawing of the Ice Floe Mansion, and a plummy prologue theatrically set the scene. The story is divided into four “Acts,” each of them in turn divided into “Scenes,” with the final act preceded by a challenge to the reader. The puzzle begins when oil executive Kozaburo Hamamoto invites a diverse group of eight guests to his mansion on a snowy night. He embarrasses his daughter, Eiko, by suggesting that one of the male guests might be her new husband. Once everyone has been locked into their rooms, a series of unusual events begins. In her room at the top, guest Kumi Aikura sees a threatening man appear, impossibly, at her window. It’s a snowy night, but no footprints show up anywhere around the house except when the party ventures out to see what they think is a corpse but turns out to be an antique doll Kozaburo purchased in Czechoslovakia. Whoever placed it there also decapitated it. The next morning, when guest Kazuya Ueda, the chauffeur of industrialist Eikichi Kikuoka, fails to appear for breakfast, his locked room is broken into and he’s found dead, bound to his bed frame. Enter a team of police, led by DCI Saburo Ushikoshi, who begins the methodical questioning of suspects and the (armchair) sleuthing.

The prolific Shimada (The Tokyo Zodiac Murders, 2015 deserves to have more of his work translated into English. He creates a delightfully intricate murder puzzle with retro charm, bound to tantalize readers.