Six Four: A Novel
Six Four: A Novel book cover

Six Four: A Novel

Paperback – February 6, 2018

Price
$13.48
Format
Paperback
Pages
576
Publisher
Picador
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1250160003
Dimensions
5.4 x 1 x 8.25 inches
Weight
15.4 ounces

Description

"A real, out-of-the-blue original. I’ve never read anything like it. Yokoyama ?[is] a master.”? ―Terrence Rafferty, The New York Times Book Review (front cover review)“Absorbing . . . Six Four is an intensely complicated work, fleshed out by dozens of well-sketched characters, filled with changing perceptions and surprising twists . . . Its rewards are commensurate: unexpected revelations and quiet instances of human connection.” ―Tom Nolan, The Wall Street Journal , The Best New Mysteries “ Six Four avoids every crime-fiction cliché. The reward is a gripping novel . . . Complex, ingenious and engrossing . . . strikingly original . . . Jonathan Lloyd-Davies has translated Six Four with unobtrusive brio . . . Yokoyama possesses that elusive trait of a first-rate novelist: the ability to grab readers’ interest and never let go.” ―Dennis Drabelle, The Washington Post “Already a bestseller in Japan and the U.K., this cinematic crime novel suffused with fascinating cultural details follows a police department reinvestigating a chilling kidnapping that stumped them 14 years earlier.” ― Entertainment Weekly , The Must List“ Six Four arrives in America as one of the most anticipated titles of the year . . . Yokoyama’s novel is a Jenga tower, each plot point and peripheral character part of an intricate balance . . . What is perhaps most striking about Six Four is the number of stories it contains.” ―Dotun Akintoye, O: The Oprah magazine “ Six Four makes its U.S. debut four years after it came out in Japan, where it was a literary blockbuster. The book sold more than a million copies and was adapted both for film and for TV. Part of its appeal was the way it illuminated the country’s deep tradition of hierarchy and control." ―Sarah Begley, Time magazine"Not only is Six Four an addictive read, it is an education about Japan, its police and its society, and simply one of the best crime novels I have ever read." ―David Peace, author of GB84 and The Damned Utd "A classic plot [which] suddenly turns into one of the most remarkable revenge dramas in modern detective fiction…[It] will leave even the most observant reader gasping." ― The Sunday Times "Epic in ambition, [ Six Four ] unfurls like a flower in the spring sunlight, steadily increasing its grip as it does so." ― Daily Mail “Hideo Yokoyama’s Six Four , translated by Jonathan Lloyd-Davies, is by no means just another mystery novel, but rather an award-winning cultural phenomenon on the scale of Stieg Larsson’s Millennium Trilogy . . . There is a lot of buzz around this book, all of it well deserved . . . Yokoyama’s prose is crisp and skillfully translated; the plot . . . is thoroughly believable and compelling.” ―Bruce Tierney, BookPage (Top Pick in Mystery)“Extremely detailed style and carefully wrought characters. Six Four succeeds on several levels: as a police procedural, an incisive character study, and a cold-case mystery.” ― Jane Murphy, Booklist “[ Six Four ] takes leisurely twists into the well-kept offices of Japan’s elite while providing a kind of informal sociological treatise on crime and punishment in Japanese society, to say nothing of an inside view of the police and their testy relationship with the media. Elaborate, but worth the effort. Think Jo Nesbø by way of Haruki Murakami, and with a most satisfying payoff.” ― Kirkus Reviews Born in 1957, Hideo Yokoyama worked for twelve years as an investigative reporter with a regional newspaper north of Tokyo, before becoming one of Japan’s most acclaimed fiction writers. His exhaustive and relentless work ethic is known to mirror the intense and obsessive behavior of his characters, and in January 2003 he was hospitalized following a heart attack brought about by working nonstop for seventy-two hours. Six Four is his sixth novel, and his first to be published in the English language, followed by Seventeen .

Features & Highlights

  • International Bestseller
  • One of
  • New York Times Book Review
  • 's 100 Notable Books of the Year
  • Winner of the Best Japanese Crime Fiction of the Year Award
  • An Award-Winning Phenomenon in Its Native Japan and Already a Critically Celebrated Top-Ten Bestseller in the United Kingdom, Hideo Yokoyama’s
  • Six Four
  • is an Unforgettable Novel by a Literary Master at the Top of His Form.
  • For five days, the parents of a seven-year-old Japanese schoolgirl sat and listened to the demands of their daughter’s kidnapper. They would never learn his identity. And they would never see their daughter alive again.Fourteen years later, the mystery remains unsolved. The police department’s press officer―Yoshinobu Mikami, a former detective who was involved in the original case and who is now himself the father of a missing daughter―is forced to revisit the botched investigation. The stigma of the case known as “Six Four” has never faded; the police’s failure remains a profound source of shame and an unending collective responsibility.Mikami does not aspire to solve the crime. He has worked in the department for his entire career, and while he has his own ambitions and loyalties, he is hoping simply to reach out to the victim’s family and to help finally put the notorious case to rest. But when he spots an anomaly in the files, he uncovers secrets he never could have imagined. He would never have even looked if he’d known what he would find.
  • “Already a bestseller in Japan and the United Kingdom, this cinematic crime novel suffused with fascinating cultural details follows a police department reinvestigating a chilling kidnapping that stumped them fourteen years earlier.”
  • Entertainment Weekly
  • 's The Must List

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(645)
★★★★
20%
(430)
★★★
15%
(322)
★★
7%
(150)
28%
(602)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Very disapppinting police bureaucracy procedural.

A very odd book. Really a police bureaucracy procedural, 95% of it is about a completely dysfunctional police departments's inter-organisational rivalry, and their war with the local press. I could write something similar based on my time in senior management with a large tech company. I finished it out of sheer determination, I was tempted to give up after 100 pages and it would have been better if I had. The style is heavy, like a very long report - don't know if that's the translator or the original. The actual crime and its solution takes up only a small fraction of the story. If and when you do finally make it to the end, the conclusion is very unsatisfactory. Most things you've been expecting to be resolved, are just left open. Don't waste your time.
4 people found this helpful
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Not a crime novel unless you consider office politics a crime

Expected a thriller or mystery or something tangible. I’m bored out of my mind as I’m 200 pages from finishing as it is so far 350 pages of office politics - this is the “best crime novel” out of Japan?! Yikes!
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This book is very very boring

I am very surprise to see so many positive review on this book. It is very boring and the plot is not as interesting as I expected to be. Maybe is a cultural thing but the all feud with the press that the main character seems to have is really difficult to understand for someone not living in Japan. Please do not waste your time and money getting this book. Simply not worth it.
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Gripping...

Hope he writes (or if he has already, I hope they translate into English) a continuation...
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Not Satisfying

I enjoyed this, but I found the book's description misleading. I thought I was getting a police procedural about a cold case, but most of the book's action is centered around the organization and interdepartmental conflicts of the prefectural police department, with the cold case as a catalyst for the events within the department. It wasn't bad, but I probably wouldn't have bought it had I realized.

The book has a satisfying resolution to the cold case, but at 566 pages I found myself skimming some in the middle because it was taking too long and I just wanted things to move forward.

Most of the treads are tied up nicely, but there is a MAJOR plot that doesn't have a real resolution and that left a bad taste in my mouth once I reached the final page.

Good translation, and an interesting look at the workings of the Japanese police, but ultimately I wouldn't reccomend it.
✓ Verified Purchase

Great mystery

Intense, very introspective.
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Japanese police procedural for the patient reader

This is a police procedural set in Japan, with Japanese police politics, organization, culture and customs. Conflict between departments. Physical altercations between police and media. The plot driver is a kidnapping with a side story of a runaway girl, daughter of one of the police officials. There is little action, much of it in the past, until the last few chapters. Confusing names, many starting with Mi. Interesting look at Japanese culture as it relates to crime.
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Very different murder mystery, set in Japan

A GoodReads friend sent me this book 1 and 1/2 years ago and I put off reading it because it is 635 pages long(643 if you count the author interview). It is more focused on Japanese society than the mystery. The first 500 pages are about infighting/power struggles within the Japanese police and their difficult relationship with the press. The unsolved kidnapping/murder of a seven year old girl is always hovering in the background, and does not come into focus until near the end for a stunning, unexpected climax. The case is known as "Six Four."
The narrator and main character is Mikami, press director for Prefecture D, a regional police headquarters. Mikami has 3 people working under him. Prefecture D has several hundred police.
By way of contrast, Buffalo, NY, with about 700 police, has 1 PR person.
Mikami is caught in the middle between competing sides in the power struggle and between the press and his superiors demand that he withhold information that the press wants.
If you like a traditional mystery, this may not be for you. I started reading this book 6 months ago, and put it down, because of the interminable infighting/press demands.
This book was a bestseller in Japan and then in the UK, where my GoodReads friend bought it. Thank You Nancy!!
3.5 stars rounded up to 4.
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Well-developedc character

Very interesting look into Japanese policing. Very well-drawn main character and plot.
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Fantastic, Brilliant and Intricate Look at Police Culture in Japan and Plenty More

An amazing absolutely top notch and unforgettable novel. I read books as often as I can, of all kinds of genre's, these include detective novels too. I don't think I've finished a detective novel in which the intricacies and thought placed on it made me admire the work this much after finishing it. Maybe I don't read enough detective novels. It certainly helps to have an interest in modern Japan: its society and policing, in order to enjoy the entire book. One gets a distinctive feeling that the officers in this book care deeply about their jobs (some due to self-interest, others due to loyalty, some mixed), and the place they have within society at large.

The political elements of this book develop rather quickly, and one is quite soon, immersed in asking, who they heck is behind these things? As the crime of Six-Four is developed into the story, there is a fantastic effect of feeling as the crime weaves into political dimensions. As you get further and further into the book, things get more interesting, not less. I never felt impatient with the novel, it was always very interesting and well crafted. But then you get to the final section, once you become aware of how the crime unravels, one can only look at the pages wide-eyed, as it becomes something quite special, at least to me: not an ordinary "killing-solved case book" (or movie, for that matter, that I can remember). Truly brilliant.

The one 'downside' to this book is that, as a westerner, the names can becoming quite confusing, especially when there are so many of them. The character list at the front of the book does not really come near to covering all the characters in the book, and one can get lost remembering quite a few names, this could have been remedied by providing a full list of names.

The above caveat mentioned, if you are interested in Japanese culture, society and are looking for a book that just keeps getting better and better, you can't go wrong here, this goes beyond policing into some very serious life considerations and general bits of wisdom. Those who are not so interested in contemporary Japan, might find some aspects of this novel hard to understand and might not enjoy it as much.

All in all, to this date, the best 'police novel' I've read, and that counts for something, to me anyway.