One year after they published the hardcover version of Ring in the US, Vertical put out the first of several sequels. Having read and reviewed Ring already, I realized I'd never gone any further than the original novel and, of course, both the Japanese and US versions of the iconic movie. Finally, suffering from a bout of insomnia and needing something different from the standard horror I typically used to cleanse my palette before bedtime, I snagged a digital version of Spiral and started going.
Right up front, I will say this one, story-wise, isn't as good as Ring. That first book had a great dynamic between the two main characters: journalist Asakawa who has the story of a lifetime about four teenagers dying simultaneously in different parts of Japan fatefully plopped into his lap, and his buddy Ryuji, a first-class asshole whose interest in the paranormal and willingness to go anywhere and do damn near anything to answer weird questions, makes for a non-ideal but necessary relationship between protagonists. Between Ryuji's devil-may-care attitude and Asakawa's contacts and credentials, the pair can lope across the country in search of the solution to the cryptic puzzle involving a cursed video tape which promises to kill anyone who views it in seven days, unless they...
Spiral picks up mere days after the concluding pages of Ring, with Dr. Ando Mitsuo. In the middle of a painful divorce following the accidental death of his son, Ando finds himself performing an autopsy on an old classmate of his: Ryuji Takayama from the first book. The professor was found dead in his apartment by Mai Takano, his student assistant/girlfriend, and the coroner's office needs to establish a cause of death. After the grim business of determining Ryuji died due to the growth of a tumor within his coronary artery, Ando and his assistant Mayashita begin investigating further.
They start turning up evidence that makes little sense: the tumor holds a virus reminiscent of smallpox, a disease believed to be eradicated decades ago. Further digging by the pair gradually reveals the story of the first book, then builds on it by adding on new layers. Ryuji isn't the only one who died of a sudden coronary -- the symptoms were shared by everyone else who came into contact with the video tape, including all four of the original teenagers who succumbed to the curse, and Asakawa's own wife and daughter who died in the car while on their way to visit his in-laws. Asakawa himself plowed into another car upon discovering they had died in the back seat, and remains alive, although completely incoherent after the accident, in a local hospital.
Ando begins to develop a relationship with Mai, but after she misses a date with him, he visits her apartment and talks to her family. No one has seen her for several days, and unfortunately it appears she found a copy of the cursed video among Ryuji's effects and watched it herself. Prior to her disappearance, she recorded over the entire tape with hours of daytime television, thus destroying the last known copy of the video and, presumably, Sadako Yamamura's curse along with it.
If only.
What Ando and Miyashita realize as they follow up their different leads is that Sadako's original 'curse' was far too slow to replicate, and far too susceptible to being wiped out, either deliberately or accidentally. But the evidence now points to Sadako's curse evolving and mutating, the dead girl having come up with a new way to more rapidly propagate her revenge. Dubbing a copy of a tape won't save anyone this time...and what could will have devastating consequences to humanity.
While I didn't enjoy Spiral as much as I did Ring, it was still a fun read. Asakawa and Ryuji's jobs as reporter and professor gave the first book a folklore-esque vibe. Miyashita and Ando, by contrast, are scientists by profession, leading this one to read more like a Michael Crichton medical/techno thriller. There's also a lot of time devoted to code-breaking in Spiral, which left me feeling like I was reading a Japanese incarnation of The Da Vinci Code. Nothing wrong with that by itself, but the rich mystery and weird vibe of the first book took a back seat to potential scientific explanations of paranormal phenomena similar to Parasite Eve. It's a pretty significant tone shift from the original book which was all about the WTF-ness of paranormal horror.
My real problem with the story, where I had to knock off a full star from a book that otherwise should have been another 4 out of 5, were the plot twists. Not the twists themselves, but rather their setup. There are two major questions hounding Ando throughout the story. Both of these are set up well in advance of their reveals, but unfortunately the answers are more obvious than a six foot turd floating in a swimming pool. Talking about them would be spoiling the story, and I don't want to do that for anyone who might enjoy the book, but trust me, you'll figure out the answers to these two questions long before Ando and Miyashita do.
Also, in case you somehow weren't convinced Ryuji was a flaming hemorrhoid of a human being by the end of Ring, you certainly will by the time you close the covers on Spiral. Seriously, 'asshole' doesn't even begin to cover it. That's a damn impressive feat to pull off when you start the book dead, but Suzuki manages it anyway. Great gaping arseholes, the balls on this guy...!
Sequels have a tough time working, and the sequel to any story as crazy as Ring would always have its work cut out for it. However, I gotta give props to Suzuki for turning everything on its ear and making the reader question everything he or she assumed after the conclusion of the original novel. Its said the best sequels up the ante for both the protagonists and the readers, and Spiral certainly does just that. It's not as good a story as its predecessor, but as a work that completely forces the reader to reinterpret everything they took for granted about the first entry, it succeeds beyond all reasonable expectations.
Three circular viral proteins out of five.