Reviews

ZOO by Otsuichi

isobelsnotesss's review against another edition

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3.0

A really entertaining collection of short stories for those of a morbid disposition. A few of the stories felt a little juvenile hence the three star mark, but some were fantastic. Definitely worth the read.

vannhi's review against another edition

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3.0

Zoo được viết khá hơn nhiều so với Goth. Có vẻ Otsuichi hợp với phong cách viết từng truyện ngắn riêng lẻ hơn là cố viết liên kết thành một cuốn truyện. Điều ấn tượng nhất trong Zoo là thái độ dung dung không bình thường, vô cảm đến phi lý và vô nhân tính đến buồn cười. 11 câu truyện là 11 màu sắc rất riêng, mang đến những cảm xúc cũng rất khác lạ. Thật kỳ lạ và tuyệt vời khi một cuốn sách mang đến cho độc giả đủ cung bậc cảm xúc: buồn, vui, ớn lạnh, trầm ngâm, khó hiểu… hòa quyện rất tự nhiên.

Một sở thú quái lạ và ấn tượng cho bất cứ khách thăm quan nào yêu những câu truyện no-sleep.

bookvalna's review against another edition

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5.0

Odlična zbirka horor priča!

george_george's review against another edition

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adventurous dark reflective sad tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes

4.25

linhnd's review against another edition

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5.0

Just look at my rating

classine's review against another edition

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dark funny mysterious fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? N/A
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5

dee2799d's review against another edition

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5.0

After Goth and Summer, the Fireworks and My Corpse I thought I might as well read this one because there's not a lot of his work translated and I hear it was nominated for the Shirley Jackson award. Boy am I glad I actually bought this one.

There's a lot here that's absurd. In 'In a Falling Plane' we have an entrance exam re-taker (a ronin, if you will) hijaking a plane. This guy looks so unprepossessing that it would have been easy enough to overpower him even if he had a gun (as the POV character herself had pointed out) but what happens is whenever someone tries to come at him, they step on a can that keeps rolling up and down the aisle of the plane. 'Find the Blood!' is a string of unfortunate events surrounding an old man who wakes up and finds himself covered with blood. Turns out someone has stabbed him and it was only his inability to feel pain that he'd slept through the whole thing.
Or so we think.
This leads to a straight man/stupid man comedy routine with the dying old man playing the 'straight man' to the rest of his family members, who are all useless and are pretty transparent about wanting him dead so they can help themselves on the family riches.

But there's also a lot that deals with the heavy topics of divorce ('SO-far', which is one of my faves), child abuse ('Kazari and Yoko'), and that pressure that young people feel from their parents when it comes to school and conforming (mostly all over the whole collection, but the main point of 'In a Falling Plane' and 'Words of God').

Mostly a mixed bag, with the kind of plot twists that I've grown to expect from Otsuichi. Very well-crafted and 'Seven Days' was enough to make me cry because I'm a baby.

Before I end this review, I admit that I saw someone talk about 'Wardrobe' (which is another fave) and had this to say:

At the story's end, you find out that the narrator isn't who or what you thought. Then you realize that they were withholding information from the audience for no reason other than to support the twist ending. It's hard not to cry foul on that one.

Oh I think he played fair. Ichiro, Miki's husband gets mentioned all the time and yet he had no speaking lines. I think this would have been less awkward in Japanese because it's a language that allows for vagueness more than English and its, say, gendered pronouns. But I've been half-suspecting Ichiro halfway through because of sentences like 'everyone was at the table aside from Ryuji' but at the same time no one ever talks to Ichiro? Not even his own wife. There has to be a reason for this non-presence. And there was.


Overall a pretty good read. One of my faves from this year.

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