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Asa NonamiRezensionen

Autor von Now You're One of Us

16 Werke 301 Mitglieder 13 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 1 Lesern

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This was a fantastic collection of social horror stories. Each story focuses on a specific body part, and it does an amazing job of showing us how horrible things can get when we become obsessive on trying to achieve perfection. I loved each story but my favourite one was Blood, which is about a man who has a very creepy thing for knees.

Highly recommend checking this one out!
 
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hisghoulfriday | 1 weitere Rezension | Dec 20, 2023 |
An odd little book.

As a horror novel, it falls flat - there's just nothing scary here. Likewise, as a thriller or mystery, there's not really much going on. Probably the best way to summarize the story is "young woman joins cult", and it regrards to that, the book is much more subtle that such a description would imply.

The book was extremely easy to put down and stop reading, and the reasons for that are no doubt cultural. There is a sense of the woman's place in the family, and of how women typically behave in the face of adversity, that in the States went out with the 50s.
 
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mkfs | 6 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 7, 2023 |
Stopped at the 15%. At no point was I interested in discovering what happened next. A book about a sniper doing their last job, while writing their life story seems like an interesting enough plot, it is just so slow in getting to anything interesting.
 
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buukluvr | 6 weitere Rezensionen | Feb 14, 2023 |
this was boring and trite. japanese gothic horror. makes you think it might get horrific many times but no, everything about this book can be garnered from looking at the cover. the protagonist is weak and easily hate-able, the plot is fine but i could see the ending coming from a mile away. not impressed.½
 
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kayleearnett | 6 weitere Rezensionen | May 16, 2022 |
Okay, so this book is...odd. It's a quick read (read it just today, even with homeschool and parenting and a broken dishwasher vying for my attention) and a little cliched in spots with some questionable leaps, but I found it enjoyable. Time will tell whether I retain any of the details or if this one becomes one of the books I remember only because I've posted about it.
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ImperfectCJ | 6 weitere Rezensionen | Dec 1, 2020 |
Okay this book was completely creepy and awkward. It was interesting but it made me shudder at some parts. The main character is in denial most of the story and then the Shitos initiate her and it's....creepy. I honestly can't find another word for it. Overall it's good book. Quite taboo but good.
 
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nerobucciarati | 6 weitere Rezensionen | Jul 27, 2020 |
Because they owe someone money, Noriko's parents agree to consider an arranged marriage between her and Kazuhito Shito. Kazuhito is handsome, kind, and wealthy. The marriage's main drawback is that Noriko would be expected to move away from her small town and live with Kazuhito and multiple generations of his family in their home in Tokyo. It makes Noriko nervous, but Kazuhito is wonderful and everyone in his family seems so nice when she meets them. In the end, she agrees to the marriage.

Everything goes well, for a while. Nobody's personality suddenly changes - everyone is just as friendly as when she and Kazuhito first met. It does turn out that Kazuhito wasn't immediately forthcoming about his mentally handicapped younger brother and bedridden grandfather, which Noriko worries is a sign that she'll be roped into being their caretaker, but thankfully that isn't the case. Everyone in the family supports each other, and disagreements are resolved by the family matriarch, Great Granny Ei.

Two months after her marriage to Kazuhito, Noriko's peaceful life is interrupted by the arrival of a man from the nearby area. It turns out that the Shitos are his landlords and he hopes to get permission to pay his rent a little late this month. He also wants to tell Noriko something important but is interrupted by one of the Shitos before he gets the opportunity. After that, Noriko visits her parents for the first time since her marriage and comes back to discover that the man and his entire family died in a fire. It's arson, a suspected suicide, but Noriko begins to wonder. What had the man wanted to tell her? Did the Shitos murder him to prevent him from talking?

I wanted to read this for several reasons: the cover art was intriguingly cryptic (after finishing the book, I still have no idea what anything on the cover except maybe the little line is supposed to be), the author is a woman (it seems like most Japanese fiction translated into English is by male authors), and I had read several reviews that referred to this as Japanese gothic fiction.

I really enjoyed the bulk of this book. The mystery was intriguing, and the slightly off atmosphere was wonderful. When Noriko was at the Shito family home, it was easy to forget that this was a contemporary-set novel - it made the house ever-so-slightly claustrophobic, which intensified as Noriko's suspicions began to pile up. Were the Shitos really as pleasant as they seemed? What was the real purpose of Great Granny's private meetings with members of the nearby community? Was the relationship between Kazuhito's sister and mentally handicapped brother really as incestuously close as it seemed?

Unfortunately, the mystery was somewhat ruined by Nonami telegraphing important details too soon. I spent much of the book thinking "Okay, Noriko and I both suspect that __ is going on, but since that explanation is pretty obvious, surely the truth must be something else?" Except it wasn't. There were a couple surprises, but I think the ending would have had much more of an impact if the things Noriko spent most of the book suspecting had been more different from what was actually going on.

I did find the process by which the Shitos made Noriko one of them unsettling and disturbing (content warning for on-page gaslighting and abuse, particularly emotional and mental), but that, too, didn't have as much impact on me as it should have had, not even after the fates of a couple other characters were revealed. I found important aspects of the ending to be very difficult to swallow. The more people who know a secret, the harder it should be to keep, and the Shito family secrets had reached a point where the police should have heard something and gotten involved. And yes, the family was rich, but surely they couldn't afford to bribe everyone?

This book had a lot of promise and could have been amazing, but unfortunately it fell a little flat for me in the end. Still, I enjoyed the bulk of it and don't regret reading it. I intend to try another one of the author's works at some point in the future.

(Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.)½
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Familiar_Diversions | 6 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 31, 2019 |
These stories aren't exactly body horror, but each odd little tale involves a character's fixation with an aspect of her or her own body, or that of someone else. A housewife finds herself pulled into her young daughter's plastic surgery fantasy. A repressed salary-man finds release via strangers on public transport. A man tries an experimental cure for hair loss and experiences an unfortunate side effect. A high school girl becomes obsessed with losing weight after a dorm-mate makes a casual comment about the size of her ass. And a victimized and rage-filled boy learns to fight after an encounter with a shadowy man on the street. Slice-of-life stories with a touch of the uncanny.
 
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chaosfox | 1 weitere Rezension | Feb 22, 2019 |
Ending a bit off, but a cool police procedural.
 
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chyde | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Jul 7, 2008 |
Translated from Japanese, set in Tokyo. A female motorcycle cop faces prejudices from colleagues during a bizarre murder investigation, which soon turns even more bizarre as they discover that several murders have been committed by a trained wolf-dog. This is a very memorable and intriguing story. Highly recommended.
 
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Scrabblenut | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 11, 2008 |
I picked this up after I could only find a single review of it that described it as "revolting." I was anticipating a story kind of like the Stepford Wives, or I guess what I think the Stepford Wives is since I've never read it.

A woman marries into a large family against the advice of others, and what at first seems like an idyllic situation (a rich family with extremely kind in-laws and a loving husband) sours quickly after a number of eccentricities build up over the months. The evidence builds painfully slowly and is disproved a few times over the course of the book, and my anticipation of the secret had me tearing through the pages, waiting for some hint.

I was expecting something more twisted to be revealed at the end, but what does happen is certainly pretty disturbing, and there is one scene in particular which really is... well, shocking. I kind of figured out the secret fairly early on but set it aside, thinking there would be something else on top of that, but what is revealed at the end was satisfying enough.

It was a quick read, and if you're looking for a disturbing horror story that's not too cheesy, this might work out okay.
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ConnieJo | 6 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 22, 2008 |
More of a character study than a crime novel, Nonami's Otomichi is a female detective forced to partner up with a misogynistic old-school cop during a citywide manhunt. The killer has used both combustible materials and a mysterious dog to track down and kill several people for reasons as yet unknown, and Otomichi must tolerate work-related discrimination, family issues, the memory of her recent divorce and the pressures of a grueling investigation to uncover the truth.

I absolutely loved this book. The characters are all flawed but manage to keep from becoming static, and even the grumpy old cop grew on me by the end. The methods and reasoning behind the murders (and even the victims themselves) seem almost incidental by the conclusion, vehicles used to cultivate character growth, but it didn't really seem to matter. The cops and criminals themselves are the story, and the dog one of the most interesting characters in a crime book in years.
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JackFrost | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 10, 2008 |
Do fire extinguishers and sprinklers not exist in 1990's Japan?!
 
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hsienlei | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 14, 2007 |
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