Yusuke Kishi is on of the best horror/mystery writers that you can read nowadays, one of the best that has come from the 90s/00s Japanese generation. After "黒い家" (The Black House), I got another another one of his books, "天使の囀り"(Chirping of Angels), and, oh, was I in for a ride.
It starts quite relaxing. There is this writer, who was quite popular, but not anymore, who has decided to join a group that is going to the Amazon for some kind of research. He then sends mails to his girlfriend, Sanae, who is a psychiatrist working on a hospital in Japan, with terminal patients of AIDS. One of the last mails makes some reference to some problems with the natives and then, suddenly, he is back to Japan. But he doesn't seem to be the same person who left...
The best writers, in my opinion, are not the ones that use the most beautiful words or construct the best sentences, but those who can read human minds, who understand what makes us tick and how we interact with each other, and what our desires (specially the hidden ones) are. And Kishi is very good at that. His characters are well fleshed out, their motivations clear, and they are not perfect heroes, but people with their inner problems. He has a grip on what makes us be what we are, and he plays wonderfully with our fears.
Here he does it again, but changing to a female protagonist, from the male centered ones from him that I have read before. He does an amazing job again, and Sanae is a wonderful partner on our descent to madness, fear, and danger. The only other character that has his own space, in the middle section of the novel, is interesting too, and shows how a part of the Japanese young males see the world in these modern times. Shinichi could, probably, be taken out and the novel wouldn't suffer, but we don't regret his apparition.
The beginning of the novel, after Sanae's boyfriend comes back to Japan is the best part. Sanae knows something is wrong, but she doesn't know what can be, and why. She starts getting news from the other members of the expedition, and her fear and suspicion grows. All so while the boyfriend seems oblivious to any problem in him.
This wonderful start is difficult to keep and the pace and fun goes down a notch as the novel advances, around the middle. That doesn't mean it becomes boring, just that the amazing start couldn't be kept by Kishi throughout the novel. It still allows him for some nice twists, gruesome moments, and armchair gripping moments.
Another very interesting and thrilling read by Yusuke Kishi. Totally recommended.
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