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Paperback The Earthquake Bird Book

ISBN: 0330485024

ISBN13: 9780330485029

The Earthquake Bird

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Now a major Netflix film starring Alicia Vikander and Riley Keough, a haunting psychological thriller set in Tokyo probing deep into the mind of a murder suspect The grisly headline leaves nothing to... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

eerie

This book is highly recommended for those who are fond of psychological mysteries. If you like Ruth Rendell/Barbara Vine, I am pretty sure you will like this book. Summary, no spoilers: Lucy Fly is a 34 year old Englishwoman living in Toyko. She works there as a translator. At the very beginning of the novel, Lucy is picked up by the Toyko police for questioning in the murder of her friend, Lily Bridges. The story is told from the point of view of Lucy, as she backtracks to tell us the story of her upbringing in rural England, and the reasons she now lives and works in Toyko. As Lucy narrates, we are first introduced to her boyfriend, Teiji, and then to Lily, a young Englishwoman who has reasons of her own for her recent move to Toyko. To say that Lucy is strange is to make a great understatement...and when Lucy starts referring to herself in third person you know something very weird is going on... Highly recommended. Not only is this a good psychological mystery, this novel also gives you some insights on what it's like living in Japan.

wonderful, delicate thriller

This story begins with the arrest of Lucy Fly, a translator living in modern-day Japan, for the murder of a fellow English woman. It is while sitting in her police cell that she narrates this wonderful story to us. It's written beautifully, and there is not a superfluous word. It's told simply, yet powerfully and is strangely moving at times. The depiction of modern-day Tokyo is excellent, and this is another example of a wonderfully writer who is able to breathe life into their setting and really make the place LIVE.It has touches of a Barbara Vine novel about it all, in that we never really know what truly happened, but we have ideas about what could have. All the while, the real truth is hidden, and while we may have our suspicions, the writer is still able to reveal all in a way that makes the revelation seem a great shock. The plot, matching the writing style, is simple yet engrossing, and it's told brilliantly, with a wonderful mixture of flashbacks. the narrator moves between the past and present seamlessly, telling us exactly what we want to know at exactly the right time. I loved this book. It was refreshingly different from much that i've read, and told in a wonderful style. The setting is great, the characters also. The only thing which got to me slightly was that sometimes, in her narration, Lucy referred to herself as "I" while she would occasionally she would slip into the third person and talk about herself as "Lucy". However, my brief annoyance with it was exactly that, brief. I'd reccomend this to anyone. It certainly deserved its win of the CWA Debut dagger award.

CHILLINGLY COMPELLING

Lucy Fly, the narrator and center of Susanna Jones debut novel, is a disturbing character -- and the tension with which the author builds this fact within the story is a sure indicator that there is a formidable talent at work here. Lucy, a transplanted English woman living in Tokyo, is easily seen as a bit of an oddity from the start -- the things she focuses on, the way she relates the story itself, her relationships with her (few) friends and her lover. She repeatedly refers to herself in the third person, giving an eerie feeling of detatchment to her narrative, allowing the reader to step back and watch the story unfold much like viewing a film.The mystery involved is not, I think, given away as early in the book as another reviewer opined below -- the scenario to which that review occurred to me, but others did as well, and I felt the options were all believable enough that the tension held me until the book wound to its close.The author's knowledge of Japanese language and culture added a lot of body to the story -- but she was careful not to let it overpower the plot. I felt involved in the novel as it unfolded, not like I was reading a travel book. The darkness at the heart of her narrator was palpable and real -- and she came across as both sypathetic and frightening.As I mentioned, I got a very cinematic feel from the work -- if that happens, I hope it's placed in the hands of a capable director. It could be as gripping on the screen as on the printed page.

great mini version of a ruth rendell novel

This book was incredibly readable (able to do it in one sitting) and I found it to be a very engrossing tale. Kind of like an unfleshed out version of a Ruth Rendell novel, with all of the psychological insight that implies, it truly is until the last several pages that you understand the pathos and horror of who Lucy is and how her obsessive relationship with her photographer/noodle shop worker has evolved and what terrible secrets she holds. It is a good working on the desires and obesssions and madness that can engulf even the most ordinary seeming people and the depths of the human heart and all encompassing need for love and sex we all possess. first class novel, my only feeling is that in the hands of a Ruth Rendell it could have encompassed more than it did and gone on longer. but still for a couple of hours you will really get inside the mind and emotions of the narrator and as a bonus, see for yourself what it is like to be living in Japan. excellent novel.

Exceptional first outing for a new author

I read "The Earthquake Bird" when it was first released in the UK. I normally wouldn't consider writing a review of a book that I had read months ago but in this case the distance works very well. This is a book that just gets better the more you think about it...and think about it you will.Lucy Fly is a British woman who fled England years ago to live in Japan. Lucy is an enigmatic and detached character who, although allowing us to stroll through her mind, very rarely allows us to enter her heart or her soul. During the many years she has lived in Tokyo, she has made few friends and her central relationship is her affair with Teiji, a man who lives his life through his photographs. Lily Bridges, a young woman escaping her own personal hell in England, enters the lives of these lovers. In doing so, this seemingly naive young woman is the catalyst for the "earthquake" that upsets Lucy's claustrophobic and rather controlled life. For this, it would seem that poor Lily may have paid with her life.This tightly-woven story unfolds at a slow and steady pace. While often sounding dispassionate, there is an undercurrent of electricity lurking beneath every word. Although it is a tale of passion, rage and obsession, emotions I associate with blazing colors, the story is told in muted shades of black and white. In the film noir style, there are scenes shrouded in a haze of fog, masked in gauze or with slim rays of light falling across small enclosed spaces. While there is no single stunning moment in "The Earthquake Bird," the story in itself is stunning. At first I was thinking of comparing Ms. Jones' writing to that of Minette Walters, Barbara Vine or Nicci French but, on reflection, I believe that her storytelling skills are far more subtle. This is an extraordinary first outing and I anxiously await Ms. Jones' next book.Make no mistake about it, "The Earthquake Bird" is Lucy's story and hers alone. She is the narrator and all that happens in the book is in her voice and seen through her eyes. If you want to take a walk on the dark side, I would strongly recommend that you pick up a copy of "The Earthquake Bird" and spend some time with Lucy.
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