Seventeen
A Novel
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
September 10, 2018
Based on the author’s own experiences as a reporter assigned to cover the crash of a Japanese passenger airliner, this engrossing thriller from Yokoyama (Six Four) focuses on newsroom tensions. By 1985, it has been five years since Kazumasa Yuuki, the most senior journalist at the North Kanto Times, has accepted any duties involving supervising others. He stepped off the regular career path after his chastisement of a junior staffer, Ryota Mochizuki, immediately preceded Mochizuki’s death in a traffic accident that was suspected to be a suicide. But Yuuki is thrust back into a position of authority after JAL flight 123 crashes into a mountain, and he’s assigned to coordinate his paper’s coverage and decide what angles to pursue. His struggle to place informing the public, especially the survivors of the victims, above other concerns leads to job-threatening conflict. Impressively, Yokoyama makes accessible drama out of Yuuki’s battles with his colleagues and superiors, and the introduction of an opportunity for personal redemption provides some glimmers of hope in an otherwise depressing tale. Readers will be deeply moved.
September 15, 2018
Japanese mystery novelist Yokoyama (Six Four, 2017) delivers a terse tale of journalism and tragedy.Yokoyama worked as a newspaper reporter for years before leaving to write thrillers, and here he recalls a tale straight from the headlines: the crash, then the world's deadliest, of an airplane on a mountain. As we know from The Eiger Sanction, mountains are places that can bring out noble instincts but are generally scary. Not that that keeps Kazumasa Yuuki from heading there, testing himself against the "treacherously difficult" rock as a climber, watching the memorial lists of would-be alpinists grow. A disaffected reporter-turned-editor, Yuuki takes the lead when Japan Airlines Flight 123 meets that rock, a story that pits him and his team at the provincial North Kanto Times against the airline, its executives desperate to excuse themselves from responsibility, and against the management of the newspaper itself. The former is comparatively easy to overcome as Yuuki's fellow reporters turn up evidence of corner-cutting maintenance. As for the latter--well, the bosses protect their own, as Yuuki learns when, three days into his special reports on the crash, he's told to take the story off the front page in favor of a story about a politician's visit to a local shrine. "The seeds of powerlessness had been planted in his heart," writes Yokoyama, "and they were steadily growing." Yuuki finds himself and his lost resolve in that field of corpses: He rebels, concocting a spy caper-worthy stratagem to get around the bosses. Yokoyama's tale is slow to unfold, and it's less fraught with peril than the usual mystery, but as a roman à clef it speaks to his hope, as he writes in the preface, that "the reader will witness both the positive and negative essence of human nature."A pleaser for fans of yarns about and by gumshoes on deadline, from All the President's Men to Michael Connelly's hard-boiled Harry Bosch novels. Maybe not a book to take along on a flight, though.
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June 15, 2018
Having had a hit here with Six Four, Yokoyama returns with the story of veteran reporter Kazumasa Yuuki, who recalls an air disaster in 1985 that brought terror--and newsroom in-fighting--to the very door of the newspaper office. In 2003, he finally follows up on a promise made at the time and solves a final mystery surrounding the disaster.
Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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