Earlier
this month, I posted a review of a Japanese light novel, Seimaru
Amagi's Dennō
sansō satsujin jiken (Murder On-Line, 1996), which
can be best described to Western readers unfamiliar with anime or
manga as Young Adult novels illustrated with manga artwork. Light
novels cover a wide variety of genres and the detective story,
popular as ever in Japan, has not been overlooked.
Murder On-Line is
part of The
Kindaichi Case Files series and mentioned in my review a
number of light detective novels, such as Kazuki
Sakuraba's Gosick:
Goshikku
(Gosick: The
Novel, 2003),
but the oddest series to be translated is undoubtedly Zaregoto
– of which two titles have been published by Del Rey and were
recently reissued by Vertical. The series comprises of nine novels
that were originally published between 2002 and 2005. Hopefully,
Vertical decided to continue publishing the series.
Zaregoto
series was conceived by the palindromic "NisiOisiN," a stylized,
open penname of Nisio Isin, who debuted with Zaregoto
series: kubikiri saikuru
(Zaregoto, Book
1: The Kubikiri Cycle,
2002) and won him the 23rd Mephisto Prize at just twenty years of
age. NisiOisiN has since worked on a dozen different series
and notably penned Anazā
nōto
– Rosanzerusu BB renzoku satsujin jiken
(Death Note:
Another Note: The Los Angeles BB Murder Case,
2006). A prequel to the popular Death
Note series
expanding on the briefly mentioned murder case of the book-title.
The
Kubikiri Cycle
appears on the surface to be traditionally-structured, old-fashioned
detective novel, but the zany plot, quirky characters and sometimes
schizoid storytelling makes it standout – somewhat comparable to
Spiral:
The Bonds of Reasoning.
This is the reason why this series is so difficult to recommend to
readers who have never been exposed to mystery anime or manga series.
However,
if you're just a filthy casual, like yours truly, you'll find an
entertaining detective story in The
Kubikiri Cycle
with a couple of cleverly thought out and original impossible crimes.
Akegami
Iria is "the
black sheep granddaughter of the Akagami Foundation"
and has been exiled to Wet Crow's Feather Island, a tiny speck in the
Sea of Japan, where she has lived for five years with her four maids.
She has been forbidden to leave this "godforsaken
island" in "the middle of
nowhere" and,
to combat the encroaching loneliness and boredom, she decided to
invite the geniuses of the world to her island mansion – who
represent every imaginable discipline in science, art and beyond.
When the story opens, there are twelve people on Wet Crow's Feather
Island.
There's
a wheelchair bound painter, Ibuki Kanami, who's accompanied by her
personal attendent, Sakaki Shinya. A chef extraordinaire, Sashirono
Yayo, and famous fortune-teller, Himena Maki, who advises "bigwig
politicians and corporate clients."
Sonoyama Akane is a scholar of the highest order and member of the
ER3 System, a group of geniuses among geniuses, who has risen to the
ranks of one of the Seven Fools of ER3. Finally, there's a
blue-haired girl, Sashirono Tomo, who's a genius engineer and
ex-leader of shadowy group of hackers who appeared out of nowhere
during the 1990s. Tomo is accompanied by the narrator and reluctant
protagonist of the series, simply known as Ii-chan, but his real name
is never revealed and, while prone to downplaying his own abilities,
had been enrolled in the ER3 program for five years – before
dropping out and returning to Japan. And he's the one who solves the
baffling murders on Wet Crow's Feather Island. For the most part
anyway.
The cast is
further padded out by Akegami Iria's four maids. There are three
sisters, Akari, Hikari and Teruko Chiga, who are overseen by the head
maid of the mansion, Handa Rei.
Admittedly,
story begins rather slowly with Ii-chan interacting with the people
on the island, reflecting on his situation and peppered with the
occasional philosophical exchange. Normally, this is merely to
establish the characters and pave the way for the plot. However, the
narrator here is a little bit different and over the course of the
story a picture emerges of a cold, introverted 19-year-old student
who prefers to keep people at a distance and observe them. Not get
involved in anything. A social hermit with a distinctly dark
undercurrent. This makes him somewhat of an unreliable narrator. And,
from what I understand, the personality of the narrator is more
deeply explored in later installments.
The
inevitable murder finally happens after an unexpected earthquake
rocks the tiny island and the genius artist, Ibuki Kanami, is
discovered without her head in a locked atelier, but the earthquake
has toppled a shelf with paint cans – creating "a river of
paint." There was no way to cross this river without stepping
in the still wet paint and, forgetting the closed and locked windows
for a moment, this means the murder was committed before the
earthquake. Only one person was unable to produce a convincing alibi
for this period, Sonoyama Akane.
So our
narrator conceives a simple, but effective, plan to prevent any
further murders: isolate the prime-suspect behind the locked door of
the first-floor storage room. If Akane is the culprit, she isn't able
to commit any other murders, but if someone else happens to be the
murderer, this person is "brought
to a standstill." Or
so he thought.
Akane
is brutally murdered in the locked storage room, her head cleanly
removed from her shoulders, but the only key to the room was in
possession of Hikari Chiga. There's a window, very high up in
the wall, which would mean "a two-story dive" if the
murderer had entered, or left, through the window. So it was "virtually impossible" for someone to climb out and "even
more implausible" that someone had climbed.
A third,
quasi-impossible crime is committed when someone smashes Tomo's
computers to pieces, which had crime-scene photos on it, but everyone
present on the island was in possession of an alibi.
The
Kubikiri Cycle actually begins to resemble one of those
traditionally-structured mystery novels from the Japanese shin
honkaku school of detective fiction with alibis, sealed rooms and
a central trick, or gimmick, nearly as great as the one from Soji
Shimada's Senseijutsu
satsujinjiken (The Tokyo Zodiac Murders, 1981) –
which is where the plot draws is its strength from. Granted, the
murder in the room "sealed" by a river of paint bare of any
footprints was incredibly simple, but the beheading in the storage
room is good representation of the Japanese detective story in all
its glory.
A corpse in a
Western detective novel or short story is (usually) nothing more than
a passive, inanimate object with the plot and characters moving
around it, but in Japanese mysteries they often turn out to be
linchpin of the plot. Keigo Higashino's Yogisha
X no kenshin (The Devotion of Suspect X, 2005) is a
good example of this. Even more impressive is when a body is used to
create, what appears to be, "an uncommitable crime." And
it's simply astonishing when a victim turns out to tie everything
together: murderer's identity, a well-hidden motive and the locked
room-trick, which is exactly what NisiOisiN accomplished here. No
wonder they chugged an award at him for this.
However,
Ii-chan only puts together the bare bones of the plot, but it takes a
world-famous detective, Aikawa Jun, to answer the last, unresolved
questions and exposes another plot-layer, or two, in the process.
Absolutely brilliant!
All in all,
The Kubikiri Cycle was an incredibly clever, ingeniously
constructed locked room mystery told in the style of an
anime-detective series with manga aesthetics. The result is a very
unusual, but original, piece of crime fiction. Now that I have
finally reread The Kubikiri Cycle, I can move on to Zaregoto
series: kubishime romanchisuto (Zaregoto, Book 2: The
Kubishime Romanticist, 2002), but don't worry. My next post will
be a return to the Western detective story.
By the way,
Vertigo has reprinted these two Zaregoto titles as
Decapitation: Kubikiri Cycle and Strangulation: Kubishime
Romanticist. They were reprinted 2017 and 2018. So maybe we can
expect the first translation of the third book this year. Here's
hoping!