Reviews

Six Four by Hideo Yokoyama

joliendelandsheer's review against another edition

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4.0

I'm not entirely sure what to rate this. I really enjoyed it, which is why I went with a 4 star rating, but I think I went into this book with the wrong expectations.

This is a very intriguing crime novel that offers insight into the Japanese police/criminal justice system. Don't go into this expecting a fast-paced thriller surrounding a kidnapping case, because that's not what the majority of the book is about. It's more of an internal look into the police department itself told through the eyes of Mikami, the press director for the Prefectural HQ, who used to be a detective.

babblinglib's review

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4.0

Six Four took me longer to do is than most police procedurals, it is a brick of a book. However, while it was never an adrenaline pumping page turner, it was fascinating. I loved the look into the modern Japanese police bureau and how the culture impacts the way a case is investigated. The main character Mikami is fantastic and layered and I want to read more about him. I hope there are more Hideo Yokoyama translations soon.

n_t_sh_'s review against another edition

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mysterious tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.25

alibi313's review

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2.0

A passable 266-page police procedural trapped in a 566-page book on Japanese police politics and media relations. Unbelievably convoluted and boring when it wasn't dealing with the kidnapping cold case supposedly at the center of the story.

marmoset737's review

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4.0

Needed to give myself some time to think about this and do it justice. While I feel like the book was marketed as the Japanese "Girl with A Dragon Tattoo" - it's not at all that, I'm not even sure I'd classify it as a "crime novel" even though it centers around a horrific crime. Instead it's an intense - and sometimes alienating/mystifying - deep delve into contemporary Japanese culture via the experiences of a press director at a local police unit. It took me a long time to read - but it wasn't necessarily because I wasn't "into" the book or riveted by it or distracted by other books (usually the reason a book might take longer than usual). It's ultimately worth the payoff though in my opinion.

kawthar114's review against another edition

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dark emotional mysterious reflective sad slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0

towercorvid's review

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challenging medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix

4.0

evadis's review against another edition

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4.0

Dit is een boek dat al jaren in mijn kast stond, maar me nooit echt trok. Maarrr ik heb (eindelijk) ontdekt dat ik The Wire een geweldige serie vind en nu dacht ik: tijd om iets te lezen wat een beetje in dat sfeertje past. Ik verwachtte namelijk eenzelfde soort combinatie van 'werkvloerpolitiek' en daadwerkelijk 'zaken oplossen'.

Dat is eigenlijk precies de combinatie die ik kreeg, met daarbovenop nog een portie mysterie en relatie-/familieproblemen, en zo nu en dan vreemd gekozen beeldspraak die iets met de natuur van doen heeft ('[hij] bleef staan kijken terwijl Ishii dodelijk vermoeid, als een ondergaande zon, bij het Secretariaat naar binnen sjokte').

Je zou niet echt verwachten dat een verhaal over het werk van een persofficier interessant is, maar op de een of andere manier was dit boek ontzettend meeslepend. Het laatste deel was zelfs puntje-van-je-stoel-waardig; ik heb gisteren 1,5 uur aan één stuk liggen lezen.

Gek genoeg heb ik desondanks geen idee of ik nog een boek van Yokoyama ga lezen. Misschien over een tijdje.

(PS Er zijn wel wat aanmerkingen, maar ik had geen zin om die uit te werken.)
(PPS Toch nog één aanmerking: de Nederlandse titel slaat nergens op; het is een beetje alsof je Harry Potter I 'De Klein Zanikem-sorteerhoed en de steen der wijzen' zou noemen. De Duffelingen wonen in Klein Zanikem en er is een sorteerhoed, maar Klein Zanikem en de sorteerhoed hebben niks met elkaar te maken en ook heel weinig met het plot.)

sophiaxlm's review against another edition

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4.0

前五分之四:警察的职场日常与其他社畜并没有什么分别,甚至可能更甚。上级与上级、下属与上级、警察与记者、前警察与现任警察……没几个人工作和生活得顺心,有正义感的人好像都过得比较艰难,偶然的反抗之后大概只有更多的妥协。几乎以为“史上最凶恶绑架撕票事件”要变成个黑色幽默的时候,最后五分之一处出现的另一起绑架案一面让人打起精神,一面偷偷地但合情理地把之前的一些不起眼的伏笔联系起来,给出了意外又情理之中的答案——但不是所有问题的答案。跟横山秀夫之前的以警察为主角的故事一样,是可以当做非类型小说来看的作品。

theciz's review

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challenging dark informative mysterious reflective sad slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.5

I’m not sure why this is listed as a thriller, as it’s really not, more of a slow burn bureaucratic intrigue, with a cold case mystery in the background. Luckily, I love that kind of thing, and I have a good grounding in Japanese police culture and relations with the press from reading Lady Joker relatively recently. A tolerance for overly earnest speeches about organisational pride also required. 

The main character is a little all over the place, but I think it’s also quite realistic, as he’s trying to navigate a hostile hierarchy while having a low grade mental breakdown. The last minute twist in the mystery story was the first that surprised me in a while, which made a nice change. The last 80 pages are a real whirlwind, while the rest is pretty slow burn.