472 reviews for:

Six Four

Hideo Yokoyama

3.49 AVERAGE


Excellent.
mysterious tense medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Complicated
Loveable characters: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: No

En ciertas partes me recordó a El juego de Ripper de Isabel Allende, el cual amo, pero siento que no quedé satisfecho con como terminó la historia (?)

Purtroppo noi occidentali ci perdiamo molto del sottotesto sociale dei particolari narrativi che hanno a che fare con le relazioni lavorative e "regionali" dei vari personaggi, tutte molto giapponesi, e i giochi di potere tra le varie istituzioni, ma per il resto è un thriller godibilissimo nonostante una partenza abbastanza lenta (forse perché appunto molto ha a che fare che il suddetto sottotesto sociale).

Goes beyond the remit of a usual crime novel by meticulously detailing the politics in a Japanese prefecture. 

"The relationship was the same as that between Criminal Investigations and Administrative Affairs, Media Relations and the Press Room. They were all separate entities, but viewed from above, it became clear they inhabited the same well."

Shines a spotlight on the bureaucracy, power structures, vested interests and codified hierarchy which sometimes pushes people to breaking point. 

Thoroughly informative and engaging read. 

Six Four is a very long story that rambled on and leap-frogged through revelations and realisations before coming to a mostly unsatisfactory end.
Spoiler Despite the delicious revenge of burning the ransom money, the confusion of Mikami hurtling from one suspicion to the next, not knowing the content of the swallowed note, not having a proper ending on Six Four and not even knowing what happened to Ayumi was disappointing after plowing through 635 pages.

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.

Brings a literal interpretation to the term 'police procedural'. The bulk of the novel focuses on the internal politics and bureaucracy of a prefectural police force; the titular mystery exists in the periphery. Still weirdly compelling, but it is probably better described as a workplace drama rather than a thriller.

Super slow and the ending was unsatisfying.

A wonderful book. Not the fast-paced thriller you might be craving when you turn to the mystery shelf, but Yokoyama somehow makes the internecine strife of a local Japanese police branch gripping in and of itself. There is an overarching criminal mystery, complete with a rather ingenious twist -- but at its heart this is a novel of Japanese workplace politics -- and a great one at that.

Just finished Six Four by Hideo Yokoyama.
It was really interesting to read some crime fiction from Japan as opposed to the American and British crime fiction I'm used to and to see the cultural differences come into play. It's billed as a mystery/thriller, but was also heavily focused on inter-department politics. I really appreciated that while I didn't predict the reveal/twist at the end (something I'm usually pretty good at) it really made sense and helped the pieces come together, rather than being entirely out of left field like sometimes happens. A little too long and at times it was hard to figure out what direction it was going, but overall I thought it was well written with compelling characters and I enjoyed it.
3.5 stars.