The Gate of Sorrows
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
A series of murders shocks Tokyo’s Shinjuku ward, but Shigenori, a retired police detective, is instead obsessed with a gargoyle that seems to move. College freshman Kotaro launches a web-based investigation of the killer, and comes to find that answers may lie within an abandoned building in the center of Japan’s busiest neighborhood, and beyond the Gate of Sorrows. In this adult sequel to Miyabe’s The Book of Heroes, you will meet monsters from other worlds and ordinary horrors that surpass even supernatural threats.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Miyabe's follow-up to 2010's The Book of Heroes stands well on its own and is thematically timely, but it doesn't always take its own lessons to heart. Strange occurrences are piling up in present-day Tokyo: an unfamiliar scythe-bearing gargoyle appears to be moving of its own accord, homeless people have gone missing, and a serial killer preys on the innocent. College student Kotaro investigates the disappearance of his friend Kenji; Shigenori, a former police detective sidelined by a leg injury, looks into the gargoyle phenomenon. Both cases collide when they encounter an entity brought to this world to harvest human desire, who may be the key to stopping the killer. Translator Hubbert skillfully maintains all the grammatical nuances of the original Japanese, a key aspect of understanding the novel's themes. Miyabe has some valuable points to make about misconduct and harassment on the Web, and how online personas can't be distinguished from offline selves. But despite all her emphasis on the importance of words and avoiding their misuse, Miyabe disappointingly kills off (and misgenders) a trans character for a little bit of cheap shock value, a shameful detail in an otherwise well-crafted adventure.