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outtiegw's review

4.0
mysterious reflective

salicat's review

3.0

There are three 5-star stories in this collection: "The Human Chair," "The Caterpillar" and "The Traveler with the Pasted Rag Picture." About the first story- if you thought a chair was just for sitting...think again. This one had a O'Henry-ish ending that I loved. "The Caterpillar" is a twisted tragedy about a woman's relationship with her veteran husband after the latter is mutilated beyond recognition in the war. The kind of story that stays with you for a long time. The third story ("Traveler") is a bittersweet tale about a man losing his brother in a very unusual way that involves binoculars.

As for the other stories in the collection...couldn't get into them. The writing seemed labored and conceptually, they just didn't measure up to the above three. "The Red Chamber" read like a long-winded Poe knock-off. Still, the collection is worth getting just for the three brilliant tales.
virginiaconaway's profile picture

virginiaconaway's review

3.25
dark mysterious slow-paced

What bizarre tales!

Edogawa Rampo is the father of modern Japan mystery, both in the detective sense and the more macabre sense. This collection features four tales of mystery and five tales of imagination.

The four tales of mystery do not follow the usual Western whodunit structure. In fact, in most of them, the culprit is the one telling the story. The tension arises from the way the story unfurls, especially regarding the way the culprit falls and exposes himself.

The five tales of imagination, though, are simply horrifying. There are no ghosts or sinister spirits here. The stories are mundane, everyday life, and it leaves the reader with the feeling that this might very well happen to you. They begin with this subtle unsettling feeling, where something is not quite right but you can't exactly say what it is. And then slowly things get more and more weird, until at the end you are left horrified at humans and their quest to satisfy their obsession.

Read this with the lights on and your back to the wall.

awwshaunyboy's review

3.75
dark mysterious medium-paced

natasha29singh's review

4.0

After reading so much literary fiction, it’s nice to read classic mystery and horror. Having some context on the process of translations made the dramatic descriptions so much more enjoyable for me. I noticed a few themes recurring across the stories, which gave me a pleasantly familiar feeling. I think this collection is curated very well – you have your ‘gotcha’ detective stories (The Psychological Test, The Twins) as well as existential horror, which leaves more up to the imagination (The Hell of Mirrors, for example, is the kind of story you can really think about later.) My favorites, however, are the deliberately satirical stories: The Red Chamber in particular, but also The Human Chair to some extent. Nice one & shout-out to Edgar Allen Poe.
lighthearted mysterious slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: No
smalefowles's profile picture

smalefowles's review

4.0

My expectations were raised a little too high by Rampo's reputation in Japan and comparisons to Poe. The comparison is apt as this collection is a mix of horror stories and detective stories, more in an Arthur Conan Doyle idiom.

The first story in the collection ("The Human Chair") is by far the best, and it's a five out of five story. If the rest of the stories were at that level, this book would be amazing. The rest of the stories are still pretty good (especially "The Pasted Rag Picture" and "The Hell of Mirrors", and I didn't like reading them alone at night.

taylamaree's review

2.0

Just not for me. Took me about 8 months to finish 9 short stories. With the exception of the first tale, The Human Chair (which was excellent), most of the stories didn’t have much to grip me. Very straightforward, and a bit slow.

Maybe it was difficult to capture the aura through translation, or maybe it wasn’t my type of story?? I’m not sure.

I do appreciate that the stories were all super cohesive in their overall feel. They were well-written.
storykotori's profile picture

storykotori's review

3.5
dark mysterious medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Complicated
Loveable characters: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated