A Midsummer's equation

Keigo Higashino, 1958-

Book - 2016

"Manabu Yukawa, the physicist known as "Detective Galileo," has traveled to Hari Cove, a once-popular summer resort town that has fallen on hard times. He is there to speak at a conference on a planned underwater mining operation, which has sharply divided the town. One faction is against the proposed operation, concerned about the environmental impact on the area, known for its pristine waters. The other faction, seeing no future in the town as it is, believes its only hope lies in the development project. The night after the tense panel discussion, one of the resort's guests is found dead on the seashore at the base of the local cliffs. The local police at first believe it was a simple accident-that he wandered over th...e edge while walking on unfamiliar territory in the middle of the night. But when they discover that the victim was a former policeman and that the cause of death was carbon monoxide poisoning, they begin to suspect he was murdered, and his body tossed off the cliff to misdirect the police. As the police try to uncover where Tsukahara was killed and why, Yukawa finds himself enmeshed in yet another confounding case of murder. In a series of twists as complex and surprising as any in Higashino's brilliant, critically acclaimed work, Galileo uncovers the hidden relationship behind the tragic events that led to this murder"--

Saved in:

1st Floor Show me where

MYSTERY/Higashin Keigo
0 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor MYSTERY/Higashin Keigo Due May 7, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Mystery fiction
Published
New York : Minotaur Books 2016.
Language
English
Japanese
Main Author
Keigo Higashino, 1958- (author)
Other Authors
Alexander O Smith (translator)
Edition
First U.S. edition
Physical Description
358 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9781250027924
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

A conference on a controversial proposal, to mine for rare minerals underwater, draws people to the dying tourist town of Hari Cove, Japan, at the same time that fifth-grader Kyoheiis visiting the Kawahatas, his aunt and uncle who run the Green Roof Inn there. Conference attendees include Narumi, the Kawahatas' daughter, who's a passionate advocate for the ocean, and two guests at the inn: Yukawa, a crime-solving physicist who met Kyohei on the train, and the mysterious Tsukahara, whose body is found by the seawall. What seems Tsukahara's accidental death becomes complicated when he is found to be a retired Tokyo PD homicide detective apparently searching for someone he helped convict of murder 16 years earlier. When he is found to have died of carbon-monoxide poisoning and not from a fall, the case looks like murder. Tokyo detective Kusanagi, assigned to the case, calls on Yukawa for assistance, as the painstaking police investigation reaches into the past and uncovers long-held secrets. Higashino's mysteries are intellectual pursuits, with motive key to solving crime, and this one is further distinguished by its scientific bent and nuanced morality.--Leber, Michele Copyright 2016 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Edgar-finalist Higashino's excellent third whodunit featuring Manabu Yukawa (after 2012's Salvation of a Saint) takes the brilliant physicist to the dying Japanese resort town of Hari Cove, where Yukawa (aka Detective Galileo) offers his expertise at hearings on an offshore drilling proposal that promises to boost the nation's economy by providing access to rare metals. Locals who fear the effects of the resulting environmental damage, which also threatens the area's fishing industry, are against the plan. As the corporation behind the mining operation holds meetings to win over opponents, Masatsugu Tsukahara, a fellow guest at the hotel where Yukawa is lodging, is found at the base of a seaside cliff, apparently dead from an accidental fall. An autopsy reveals that Tsukahara actually died from carbon monoxide poisoning, and the mystery deepens when Yukawa learns that the dead man was a former homicide detective. Superb fair cluing and a nicely enigmatic lead will appeal to golden age fans. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

The residents of the failing Japanese resort town of Hari Cove are sharply divided by plans for an underwater mining operation; some worry that the environmental consequences could be the death blow. Physicist Manabu Yukawa (nicknamed "Detective Galileo" and introduced in Higashino's award-winning The Devotion of Suspect X) has arrived to speak on this controversial issue at a conference. After a long day of meetings and heated discussions, one of the resort's guests is found dead at the base of a cliff. What seems like an accident evolves into something sinister and unsettling. The victim is identified as a retired police detective who didn't slip and fall but died of carbon monoxide poisoning. As the police investigation digs into the lives of the locals, Yukawa discovers connections to an old case the dead detective was involved in before he retired. Verdict Filled with surprises and plot twists, this complex and riveting mystery will keep readers guessing until the final page. [See Prepub Alert, 4/13/15; library marketing.]-Ron Samul, New London, CT © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The third case for Tokyo homicide detective Shunpei Kusanagi and professor Manabu Yukawa, who teaches physics at Imperial University, takes them far away from Tokyoand far back from the present day as well. Yukawa, aka Detective Galileo, has come to the Green Rock Inn, in the little resort town of Hari Cove, to participate in a discussion of proposed undersea mining. Everyone involved agrees that Hari Cove is in danger, but some see the enemy as potential environmental disaster, while others, alarmed by the town's steep decline from its heyday, see the project as a potential economic savior. The morning after the conference, the body of Masatsugu Tsukahara, another guest of the inn, is discovered at the bottom of a sea cliff. The local police are eager to close the case as an accident, but the discovery that Tsukahara was retired from Tokyo homicide brings his former colleagues into the case, and they soon discover that he was already dead from carbon monoxide poisoning when he fell, or more likely was tossed, from the cliff. Further inquiries reveal that Tsukahara came to Hari Cove not for the mining conference but to seek out Hidetoshi Senba, a man he'd arrested 16 years earlier for the murder of an unemployed nightclub hostess. Kusanagi can't help thinking that his path would be a lot smoother if only he could locate the missing ex-convict himself or if he could at least figure out what business Tsukahara had with him. Yukawa, for his part, seems interested mainly in constructing experiments designed to teach elementary concepts in physics to Kyohei, the fifth-grader whose parents have sent him to Hari Cove to stay with his uncle, Green Rock Innkeeper Shigehiro Kawahata, his aunt Setsuko, and his cousin Narumi. But it's Yukawa, as usual (Salvation of a Saint, 2012, etc.), who'll carry off the sleuthing honors. Less playful and more labored than its predecessors but just as ingenious in working one twist after another in a case that seems absolutely twist-proof. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.