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Keigo Higashino

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'An intriguing mashup of police procedural and golden age puzzle mystery' Guardian'Detective Kaga pursues the case of a murdered woman from suspect to suspect, through a nostalgia-tinged Tokyo of family-run shops and Ginza bar girls. Clever and charming' Sunday TimesInternational bestseller Keigo Higashino returns with his latest mindbender - Newcomer - as newly transferred Tokyo Police Detective Kyochiro Kaga is assigned to a baffling murder.Detective Kyochiro Kaga of the Tokyo Police Department has just been transferred to a new precinct in the Nihonbashi area of Tokyo. Newly arrived, but with a great deal of experience, Kaga is promptly assigned to the team investigating the murder of a woman. But the more he investigates, the greater number of potential suspects emerges. It isn't long before it seems nearly all the people living and working in the business district of Nihonbashi have a motive for murder. To prevent the culprit from eluding justice, Kaga must unravel all the secrets surrounding a complicated life. Buried somewhere in the woman's past, in her family history, and the last few days of her life is the clue that will lead to the murderer.This is the second appearance in English of Police detective Kyochiro Kaga, the protagonist of the critically acclaimed Malice.

Binding Paperback
ISBN 9780349143620
Publisher Abacus
Translated by Giles Murray

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Keigo Higashino

Keigo Higashino was born in Osaka in 1958, the son of a factory owner. He studied electrical engineering at Osaka Prefecture University and worked as an engineer for several years before leaving to write full-time following his early success in mystery fiction competitions. He won the Edogawa Rampo Prize in 1985 with his debut novel, School to Commit Murder, and began publishing steadily through the late 1980s while retaining his engineering job. It was only in the 1990s that his writing career became his primary occupation, and the decade of early work — the practice runs, the genre mastery acquired before the breakthrough — is visible in the technical precision of everything that followed.

The Galileo series, beginning with Naoki's Secret in 1998, introduced physicist Manabu Yukawa, Higashino's most celebrated creation: a brilliant Teito University professor who helps his detective friend Kaoru Utsumi and subsequently Kusanagi solve crimes that have seemingly impossible elements. The series is unusual among detective fiction for the sincerity with which it engages with scientific explanation — Yukawa's methods are genuinely grounded in physics and chemistry rather than gesture toward science — while maintaining the plot mechanics and emotional accessibility of popular thriller fiction. The television adaptation, starring Masaharu Fukuyama as Yukawa, ran for multiple series and is one of the most watched Japanese crime dramas of its era.

The Devotion of Suspect X, published in 2005 and widely considered Higashino's masterpiece, is formally distinctive within detective fiction: a story in which the reader knows from the beginning who committed the crime and how, and the dramatic tension derives not from concealment but from a contest between two brilliant minds — the detective and the criminal — each aware of the other. The novel won the Naoki Prize, the Honkaku Mystery Award, and the Weekly Bunshun Mystery Best 10 in the same year, a rare triple achievement, and has been adapted into films in Japan, South Korea, and China, as well as a Hollywood version. Its influence on Japanese crime fiction is considerable.

Higashino's total sales exceed one hundred million copies — a figure achieved without significant compromise of craft. His fiction consistently uses crime as a lens for examining the social pressures of Japanese life: overwork, family obligation, economic anxiety, the gaps between public face and private experience. He writes with a readability that has made him genuinely accessible to readers who would not normally engage with literary fiction, while maintaining the structural rigor that earns him critical respect.

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