Hideo Yokoyama
Appearance
Hideo Yokoyama | |
---|---|
Native name | 横山 秀夫 |
Born | 1957 |
Occupation | Novelist |
Nationality | Japanese |
Genre | Mystery |
Notable works | Six Four |
Notable awards | Matsumoto Seicho Prize, Mystery Writers of Japan Award for Best Short Story, The Best Japanese Crime Fiction of the Year |
Hideo Yokoyama (横山 秀夫, Yokoyama Hideo, born 1957) is a Japanese novelist.
Yokoyama specializes in mystery novels. He worked constantly during the first three days of 2003, and suffered a heart attack and was subsequently hospitalized on January 4th.[1]
He repeated his Kono Mystery ga Sugoi! No. 1 ranking in 2013 with Six Four (64). and this novel is nominated for 2016 CWA International Dagger
He is known for his career as journalist for the Jomo Shimbun, the regional paper in Gunma.
Works in English translation
- Novel
- Six Four (original title: 64 Rokuyon), trans. Jonathan Lloyd-Davies (Quercus, 2016) – This is nominated for 2016 CWA International Dagger.
- Plot synopsis
- The action centres on the police headquarters in a region of Japan identified only as "Prefecture D". It follows a week in the life of a police superintendent named Mikami Yoshinobu, whose only daughter ran away a few months previously and has not been found. Formerly a detective, now reluctantly appointed as chief press officer, Mikami is caught up in two power struggles. One is with the local press committee, who are putting him and the police under pressure to reveal more information about current newsworthy cases. The other struggle is between the administrative department (where the press office is situated) and the criminal investigation department, where Mikami worked for most of his career. To achieve ascendancy, the leaders of the administrative department are trying to exploit a bungled case of kidnapping, involving the death of a seven year old girl 14 years previously, and still unsolved. (The case bears the code name "Six Four", since it occurred when the last emperor died, at the very beginning of his 64th year on the throne). The criminal investigation department in their turn are trying to thwart the administration through a campaign of concealment and obstructiveness. While seeking enough information from both sides in order to do his job of managing a hostile press, Mikami gradually uncovers troubling facts about the "Six Four" case. Increasingly, he becomes drawn into the role of detective within his own organisation, and aware of the potentially destructive effect of interdepartmental rivalries on the whole headquarters. He is also exposed to serious moral dilemmas about where his loyalties lie. At the climax of the novel, another kidnapping occurs with uncanny similarities to "Six Four". Although it is unclear at first whether this is a further abduction by the same perpetrator, a copycat crime or a hoax, its solution brings clarity about what really happened in "Six Four', and a sense that the factionalism that threatened to destroy the headquarters will now lessen. Although the book is intricate and challenging to read, with multiple interweaving plots and sub-plots, and a large cast of characters from the two departments and the press, Yokoyama manages his material tightly. There is a helpful diagram in the front flyleaf of the English edition, showing the different factions and their members, although it does not include many of the characters, including several retired officers who were part of the original investigation into "Six Four' and whom Mikami meets in the course of the book.
- Short story
- Motive (original title: Dōki), trans. Beth Cary (Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, May 2008)
Awards and nominations
- 1998 – Matsumoto Seicho Prize: Kage no Kisetsu (Season of Shadows)
- 2000 – Mystery Writers of Japan Award for Best Short Story: Motive
- 2003 – The Best Japanese Crime Fiction of the Year (Kono Mystery ga Sugoi! 2003): Han'ochi (Half a Confession)
- 2005 – Nominee for Honkaku Mystery Award for Best Fiction: Rinjō (Initial Response [2])
- 2013 – The Best Japanese Crime Fiction of the Year (Kono Mystery ga Sugoi! 2013): Six Four
Bibliography
Novels
- Deguchi no Nai Umi (出口のない海), 1996
- Han'ochi (半落ち), 2002
- Kuraimāzu hai (Climber's High) (クライマーズ・ハイ), 2003
- English translation: Seventeen, Farrar Straus and Giroux, 2018
- Rupan no Shōsoku (ルパンの消息), 2005
- Shindo Zero (震度0), 2005
- Rokuyon (64), 2012
- English translation: Six Four, Quercus, 2016
Short story collections
- Kage no Kisetsu (陰の季節), 1998
- Dōki (動機), 2000
- Kao (顔), 2002
- Fukaoi (深追い), 2002
- Shinsō (真相), 2003
- Kagefumi (影踏み), 2003
- Kanshugan (看守眼), 2004
- Rinjō (臨場), 2004
- Rinjō Special Book (臨場スペシャルブック), 2010
Film adaptations
- Half a Confession (2004) (Han'ochi)
- Deguchi no Nai Umi (2006)
- Climber's High (2008) (Kuraimāzu hai)
- Rinjō (2012)
- "Rokuyon (64) Part I" (2016)
- "Rokuyon (64) Part II" (2016)
References
- ^ "Affairs of the heart." Asia Africa Intelligence Wire. December 27, 2003. Retrieved on February 18, 2009.
- ^ J'Lit | Publications : Initial Response | Books from Japan Template:En icon
External links
- Hideo Yokoyama at J'Lit Books from Japan Template:En icon
- Doki (translated into Mandarin Chinese) – Google Books