The 74th of Gosho
Aoyama's Case Closed, published in Japan as Detective
Conan, begins with the conclusion to the case that closed out
vol.
73 in which an armed man with explosives strapped to his chest
takes Richard Moore, Rachel, Sera and three aspiring female mystery
novelists hostage – demanding that the famous "Sleeping Moore"
identifies the murderer of his sister. Miku Sawaguri had become one
of the youngest, bestselling novelists of Japan when she was found
dead, in a locked room, at a hot spring resort. She apparently
committed suicide, but her brother refused that explanation.
Just before she died, Miku posted
several messages online indicating she had three visitors to her
hotel room, whom she referred to as the elephant, fox and mouse, to
ask for an autograph. So one of these three visitors must be the
killer, but who and how?
Conan has to assume his original
identity and reason with the hostage taker over the phone to both
solve a murder, in record time, as well as preventing a small
bloodbath, which is done with an excellent use of the false solution
– based on the victim's superbly titled novel, The Grim Reaper's
Funeral Procession. Conan even gives a brief description of the
plot and it's a psychological thriller about a homicide cop
investigating his own murders. Anyway, the locked room-trick is
nothing special and a slight variation on an age-old trick, but the
vital clue pointing straight to the murderer was beautifully hidden
in plain sight. So, technically, a good and solid story, but nothing
to make it standout in the series.
The second story is going to be hard
to properly describe, because the plot appears to be all over the
place with recurring characters turning up or being mentioned. A
trend that runs, like a red-thread, through the entire volume.
Doc Agasa found an old pot in his shed
that he once bought at a flea market and posted a video online asking
for an appraisal, but Anita accidentally appeared in the video. Conan
is afraid that the video might lead members of the Black Organization
to their doorstep, which is exactly what seems to happen when Amy,
not Anita, is kidnapped. But the case takes a bizarre turn when they
find a cellphone with a note saying, "read the text and follow
the orders." Whatever they expected the ransom demand to be, it
certainly wasn't that!
I've said several times before that
kidnapping stories are my least favorite kind of detective story,
because they're rarely any good, but, every now and then, a truly
good one turns up and it's usually in this series – such as the
excellent second story from vol.
72. This one is even better! I thought it was very clever to
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fhfcvpvba. Normally, this would be good, if minor, entry in the
series, but then there are all the recurring characters suspiciously
sneaking around in the background or mysteriously being referred to.
Masumi Sera is asking pesky questions and obviously is up to
something. Subaru Okiya is spying and eavesdropping on Conan. A lost
cat features in the story and has a coincidental link to another
familiar face in the series. Black Organization is ominously referred
to as "Them."
Somehow, Aoyama got more out of the
plot than was originally in out with the result being an excellent
and memorable story. A story that comes highly recommended to fans of
Edward
D. Hoch. You'll know why when you learn the solution. Only
disturbing thing is how effortlessly Amy shrugged off her harrowing
kidnapping experience. Have the Junior Detective League really become
this callous and jaded?
The third story brings Harley Hartwell
(Heji Hattori) back to Tokyo, but, before he can tell Conan why,
Kazuha calls him to tell that she's detained at a restaurant where a
man had died in the bathroom – apparently after eating poisoned
candy. A foreign guy had found the body and ordered nobody to leave.
And that guy is the FBI agent, André Camel, who previously appeared
in vol.
58. Camel overheard the victim talking on his phone to someone he
called his childhood friend and admitting to have murdered a man
("I'm the one who poisoned Abe"). Then he heard a groan,
broke down the door and found the body. But did Camel correctly
understood what he heard? Masumi Sera proposes to use the case to
settle the friendly rivalry between the Great Detectives of the East
and West, Jimmy Kudo (Conan) and Harley Hartwell.
I imagine Ho-Ling
must have loved this story with its linguistic clues and plot
balanced on the differences, and nuances, between regional dialects.
And how it can even fool native Japanese speakers. A good and decent
enough story that, once again, elevated by everything playing out in
the background.
The last story tells why Harley
traveled to Tokyo, "a letter from a dead man," who
expressed his wish to meet the young detective to confess a sin and
told him he'll be waiting at "the house of he murdered man"
on "the night of the next full moon" – enclosed is a key
and an address in Osaka. The writer is the president of design
company, Wakamatsu, who was suspected to have been killed by a
burglar at his summer villa. But when the appointment was held, they
found someone in the bathroom who inexplicably "vanished into
thin air." A message had been carved into the wall, "E-Y-E."
Harley arranged a meeting with the
victim's family to discuss the case, but they couldn't been inside
for more than 30-minutes when one of the family members is impossibly
poisoned with a slice of cake. A single slice of poisoned cake that
could not have been poisoned or have been forced upon the victim to
take. These kind of mysterious poisonings have become a staple of
Case Closed and often have solutions that are simultaneously
very simple and devilish ingenious (e.g. "The
Loan Shark Murder Case" from vol. 15), but this one was a
little too simplistic and dangerously careless with cyanide! There's
also an obliterated dying message that has to be found at the first
crime scene, which is in the hands of two other characters who had
previous appearances. Very fitting that they had to be the ones to
handle that side of the case. Finally, a second poisoning adds a
third victim to the bodycount and ends this volume on a cliffhanger.
On a whole, this was not a bad volume
at all, but all of the stories, including the splendid and original
second story, used the appearances, cameos and references to all
those recurring characters to bolster their plots. For example, the
third story would have been a very minor, forgettable case without
Agent Camel, Masumi Sera and the battle-of-wits between Conan and
Harley. But that's one of the perks of a long-running series that put
in the effort to setup an entire fictional universe. So, yeah, an
enjoyable volume for fans.
On a last, somewhat related note:
three months ago, I posted my fan theory, "Detective
Conan: Who's the Boss?," speculating on the true identity of
the B.O. leader. Ho-Ling and 8bitorne shot the poor thing to pieces
in the comments, but still like the idea of him being Conan's
Moriarty.
Aoyama has a creative mind and his cases are usually clever and original. The next volume is one of my favourites, with very ingenious murder methods.
ReplyDelete"Case Closed" ("Detective Conan" in Italy) is the serie that has introduced me to the crime fiction since I was a child. I'm really fond of it!
You're lucky to have been introduced to the genre through one of the best detective series of the modern age. Most readers of this blog have no idea what they're missing out on.
DeleteSame here buddy,I didn't even knew before what I m loving when I watched case closed in my childhood,and it's just 2 and half year since I found it again and watched all episodes,then Holmes ,Christie and heaven knows how much blessed I feel myself when I see the piles of John Dickson Carr's books in my shelf.
DeleteThe family restaurant story is one of my favorite Conan stories ever! It's incredibly funny in Japanese (I assume it's a bit less fun to read with all kinds of footnotes etc.) and makes a fantastic case for more sociolinguistics-themed mystery stories.
ReplyDeleteI'm sure the story lost a dimension in translation, which is difficult to avoid with these kind of language-based stories, but still a good and pretty fun story. I knew you loved it. It's very Ho-Ling-ish and something you would probably write, if you ever decide to try your hands at writing detective stories.
DeleteThis sounds like an entertaining volume. The resturant case sounds very interesting, and if the kidnapping story is reminiscent of Hoch, I definitely want to read it!
ReplyDeleteIt will, however, be a while until I get to this volume, as I've just started reading the series. And by that I mean that the first volume should arive this week. (Although I have read a few non-sequential volumes already.) It's a bit intimidating to start such a long series, but, on the other hand, that means I've got lots of great mysteries ahead of me!
You'll have some great detective stories ahead of you, I promise. Just keep in mind that it takes a good six volumes for the series to find its footing. After vol. 6, you see an uptick in quality beginning with "The Moon Sonata Murder Case" in vol. 7. I genuinely hope you enjoy the series!
Delete