This collection of stories was recently brought to my attention by a fellow blogger at A Crime is Afoot. The stories are essentially mysteries, not necessarily murders. Most of them present "impossible" scenarios, with unusual/unpredictable solutions, some featuring illusions or ghosts.
THE HANGMAN OF THE DEPARTMENT STORE, 1932, debut work featuring detective Kyosuke Aoyama
THE PHANTASM OF THE STONE WALL, 1935, Kyosuke Aoyama
THE MOURNING LOCOMOTIVE, 1934
THE MONSTER OF THE LIGHTHOUSE, 1935
THE PHANTOM WIFE, 1947, published posthumously
THE MESMERISING LIGHT, 1936
THE COLD NIGHT'S CLEARING, 1936
THE THREE MADMEN, 1936
THE GUARDIAN OF THE LIGHTHOUSE, 1936
THE DEMON IN THE MINE, 1937
THE HUNGRY LETTER-BOX, 1939
THE GINZA GHOST, 1936
These stories could have been written in any language, but at the same time you are aware that the settings are a "different" culture, and notes are provided to explain Japanese weights and measures, as well as cultural terms. The ones that stick with me are THE HANGMAN OF THE DEPARTMENT STORE, where a thief is "hoist on his own petard", THE MOURNING LOCOMOTIVE, about a train that keeps killing people, and THE THREE MADMEN, which is truly horrific.