"These writers (with others like them) are the aristocrats of the game, the old serpents, the gambit-devisers and trap-baiters whose strokes of ingenuity make the game worth playing at all."- John Dickson Carr ("The Grandest Game in the World," from The Door to Doom and Other Detections, 1980)
In late June of this year, John Pugmire's
Locked Room International
published a translation of a landmark mystery novel from the land of the rising
sun, Yukito
Ayatsuji's, Jukkakukan
no satsujin (The Decagon House Murders, 1987), which is credited
with launching the neo-orthodox (shinhonkaku) movement – and putting an
end to the dominance of the socially conscious crime novel. If only that would
happen over here in the West.

A short introduction on the neo-orthodox
movement was penned by Soji
Shimada, author of that bloody tour-de-force known as Senseijutsu
satsujinjiken (The Tokyo Zodiac Murders, 1981), and sandwiched
between the introduction and after word is the answer to an all-important, but
rarely posed, question: what do you get when you populate Agatha
Christie's And Then There Were None (1939) with the type of
characters from Peter Lovesey's Bloodhounds
(1996)?
Tsunojima is a small, deserted island off
the coast of Japan and would've simply been one of the many, undistinguished
rocks in the island nation if it weren't for the burned down ruins of a mansion
and decagon-shaped house – which where the scene of a gruesome, quadruple
murder case less than a year before the opening of the story.
So it goes without saying that the island
is the perfect location for an excursion for the members of a certain
university mystery club.
The club-members are known throughout a
majority of the story by their adopted nicknames: "Agatha," "Carr," "Van Dine," "Ellery," "Leroux," "Orczy" and "Poe," which are, of course, names of famous
mystery writers from the past – primarily from our Golden Age. One of them was
exposed in the prologue to harbor plans to commit a small-scale massacre on the
island, but the letter promising five victims, a detective and a killer at the
end of their stay is taken as a joke or attempt at setting up a murder game.
There are also letters circulated to club
members on the mainland, which pertain to tragedy that took place on the island
several month ago and a death related to the mystery club itself.
From this
point on, the narrative alternates between the mainland investigation into the
past murders and the rising body count on the island in the present. The former
poses some interesting questions: why did the murder take several days to
murder three or four people? Why was the hand of one of the victims severed?
Where's the gardener who disappeared after the murders? Why do the current series
of murders on the island tend to mimic the ones from the past?
However, as interesting and gratifying as
the unapologetic attitude as an anti-modern crime novel might be, The
Decagon House Murders has one or two flaws that you might expect from a
debut novel – even from a (re)debut of an entire genre.
The plot is furnished with all the
classic trappings of a Golden Age mystery, but the clueing is sparse and you
need experience, combined with some intuition, to make a stab in the right
direction. You can't really play the clever and smug armchair detective, as the
story begins to unravel, but the only real drawback for me was that the story
lacked an impossible crime! There were none! Absolutely zero! And this book was
published by Locked Room International! Shocking, Watson! Shocking!
Anyhow... considering what The Decagon
House Murders has done for my beloved, classically-styled detective stories
in the East, as well as being an incredibly fun book to read, I was more than
willing to look pass these minor flaws. And I'm very grateful to both Ho-Ling
and Pugmire for tossing this one over the language barrier. May it be the first in a long row!
Finally, the legacy of The Decagon
House Murders gives me an opportunity to say to (the memory of) Julian
Symons what should've been said a long, long time ago: in your face, you
dry-mouthed fairy!