Seicho Matsumoto (Author)
Seicho Matsumoto was born in 1909 in Fukuoka, Japan. Self-educated,
Matsumoto published his first book when he was forty years old and
he quickly established himself as a master of crime fiction. His
exploration of human psychology and Japanese post-war malaise,
coupled with the creation of twisting, dark mysteries, made him one
of the most acclaimed and best-selling writers in Japan. He
received the prestigious Akutagawa Literary Prize in 1950 and the
Kikuchi Kan Prize in 1970. He died in 1992.
Tokyo Express is an irresistible Hitchcockian gem: a
fiendishly-plotted crime novel told in crisp, elegant prose
*Paula Hawkins, author of The Girl on the Train*
Japan's Agatha Christie. A gloriously complex case of a supposed
double suicide that, at just 160 pages, you can whizz through in a
day.
*The Sunday Times*
This classic of postwar Japanese crime fiction was banned in its
day for its 'decadent western ideas'. Now, the fascinatingly
detailed investigations of Inspector Torigai echo those of
Simenon's Maigret in a pared-down narrative shot through with
political critique
*Financial Times*
A labyrinth of convincing alibis and false leads... Matsumoto's
classic status is richly deserved
*Daily Mail*
Hitchcockian… Seicho Matsumoto has been described as Japan’s Agatha
Christie for a reason. A murder-mystery whodunnit which carries the
weight and power of high literature
*Standard, Best Reads for Summer 2024*
The appearance in English of Japanese crime classics such as Seicho
Matsumoto's Tokyo Express is long overdue
*The Sunday Times, Best Crime Books of 2023*
The debut novel of bestselling writer Seicho Matsumoto, first
published in Japan in 1958 and never out of print, is an
ingeniously plotted railway mystery
*Guardian*
Seicho Matsumoto's brief and perennially popular Tokyo Express is a
masterpiece of concision and tight plotting. . . exceptionally well
paced and palpably tense, both features admirably preserved by
Jesse Kirkwood in this fresh translation
*TLS*
Wonderfully short… this excellent work begins with a lovers’
suicide on a Kyushu beach, but detective suspicions point to a
crime linked to governmental scandal… a first-rate classic by a
master of the Japanese detective novel. A very satisfying read
*Critic*
Tense, enigmatic, thrillingly weird - a glorious find
*Kevin Barry, author of Night Boat to Tangier*
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