WULOLIFE
"Super Murder Case" Author: [Japan] Higashino Keigo Publisher: Nankai Publishing Co., Ltd. Original title: Super Murder Case: The Suffering of Mystery Writers
"Super Murder Case" Author: [Japan] Higashino Keigo Publisher: Nankai Publishing Co., Ltd. Original title: Super Murder Case: The Suffering of Mystery Writers
Description
Introduction · · · · · ·
This book consists of 8 short stories with excellent reputation and full of black humor. With his extremely passionate love for mystery novels and extremely calm observation, Keigo Higashino depicts 8 subtle and subtle "super murder cases", satirizing the bizarre and absurd things in the writer circle, describing human nature and gaining insight into the world.
The mystery writer twisted the plot of the novel so that the protagonist flew from Hokkaido to Hawaii and ate beef hotpot. What was the story behind this?
The best-selling author seems to have run out of ideas and invites four editors to guess the murderer in his new work. Unexpectedly, he is mysteriously killed that night. What is the truth?
The mystery novel series was about to end, but the writer couldn't figure out the answer to the mystery. He felt chest tightness and shortness of breath, and he was at his wits' end when suddenly something went wrong.
About the Author · · · · · ·
A famous Japanese writer.
In 1985, he won the 31st Edogawa Ranpo Award for After School and began writing full-time.
In 1999, "Secret" won the 52nd Japan Mystery Writers Association Award;
Since then, "White Night Walk", "Unrequited Love", "Letter" and "Phantom Night" have been nominated for the Naoki Prize;
In 2006, The Devotion of Suspect X won the 134th Naoki Prize, the 6th Honkaku Mystery Novel Award, and the first place in the three major mystery novel rankings of the year, which was unprecedented.
In 2008, Meteor Kizuna won the 43rd New Wind Award;
In 2009, "The Newcomer" won the first place in two major mystery novel rankings.
His early works were mostly delicate and meticulous orthodox detective stories. His later works became more mature, with less embellishment in his writing, concise and fierce narration, twists and turns in the plot, and an almost unbelievable story structure. He was good at writing extremely reasonable stories from extremely unreasonable places, and his skills were so profound that people were shocked.