Suspicion by Seichō Matsumoto

Translated by Jesse Kirkwood

For this year’s Japanese Literature Challenge (hosted by Meredith at Dolce Bellezza), I wanted to read something by an author who was new to me and decided on Suspicion by Seichō Matsumoto. It turned out to be an excellent choice!

Suspicion was originally published in Japanese in 1982 and is now available from Penguin Classics in a new English translation. It’s a short novella at 112 pages, but it’s satisfying and I didn’t feel that it needed to be any longer. Loosely based on a true crime, the plot revolves around the trial of Kumako Onizuka, a woman accused of murdering her husband. She had only been married to Shirakawa for a few months when their car plunged into the sea one rainy July evening. Onizuka, who later claimed to have been in the passenger seat, managed to escape, but Shirakawa was drowned.

The story is told mainly from the perspective of the journalist Akitani, who is covering the case for the Hokuriku Daily. Akitani believes Onizuka is guilty and has written several pieces for the newspaper making his opinion very clear. Onizuka has a shady background, having already committed two or three other crimes, and the fact that she took out a large insurance policy on her husband’s life just before his death makes the whole thing look even more suspicious. Akitani is convinced that it was Onizuka and not Shirakawa who drove the car into the sea and in his newspaper articles he draws attention to her past, her character and even her name, Oni, which is associated with demons in Japanese.

However, all the evidence against Onizuka is purely circumstantial and when her original lawyer steps down due to illness, the court appoints a new one, Takukichi Sahara, who believes he’ll be able to prove her innocence. Akitani is horrified – Onizuka has links with the Yakuza (Japan’s version of the Mafia) and if she’s freed she’s sure to want revenge on everyone who has spoken out against her.

This is such a fascinating book. On one level, it works as a detective novel, with Sahara doing the ‘detecting’, looking through the evidence, considering the witness statements and trying to determine what really happened that evening in July. Then there are all the other layers: the role of the media in influencing public opinion; the way preconceived ideas can lead us to make unfair assumptions; and how personal bias can make two people interpret a situation in completely different ways. The characters don’t have much depth – and we never even really ‘meet’ Onizuka, with our knowledge of her coming mainly from other characters’ conversations – but that didn’t bother me too much in such a short book with so many other things to interest me. There’s also a twist at the end, which leaves us to decide for ourselves what probably happened next!

I would like to read more of Matsumoto’s books. It seems that Tokyo Express is considered his masterpiece, but it’s described as a mystery revolving around train timetables and alibis and I’m not sure how I would get on with that. Should I try it or can anyone recommend another one?

The House of Barbary by Isabelle Schuler

A few years ago I read Isabelle Schuler’s debut novel, Lady MacBethad, which is set in 11th century Scotland and imagines the early life of Gruoch, the ‘real’ Lady Macbeth. Her second book, The House of Barbary, is set in a very different time and place – 17th century Switzerland – and this time it’s inspired by the Bluebeard fairy tale.

Our heroine is Beatrice Barbary, the only child of Jakob Barbary, one of the two mayors of Bern. Beatrice has never known her mother, who died when she was a baby, and has had an unusual upbringing, with her father encouraging her interest in natural science, keeping her away from other children and, now that she’s a young woman, preventing her from marrying. As a result, the people of Bern think she is strange and she has no friends her own age. When Jakob is killed, brutally murdered in his own home, Beatrice is determined to find out who is responsible and why, but as she begins to investigate she becomes aware of just how vulnerable and alone she is. The only person who may be able to help is Johann Schorr, an artist who lived with the Barbary family during Beatrice’s childhood, working on a portrait of Jakob; the problem is, for some reason, Beatrice has no memory of him at all.

Beatrice’s narrative alternates with Johann’s story, which is set more than a decade earlier during his time in the Barbary household. As a Catholic in a largely Protestant city, Johann is grateful for the support and patronage of Jakob Barbary and begins to consider him a friend. However, their friendship is tested when Johann makes a gruesome discovery in Jakob’s cellar and he must decide whether he can continue working for the man or whether he should get as far away as possible, even if it means sacrificing his career and leaving Beatrice, an innocent young child, in danger.

If you’re familiar with the Bluebeard folktale, you can probably guess what’s hidden in the cellar – and if you’re not, I won’t spoil things by telling you. It’s only a loose retelling of Bluebeard anyway and whether or not you know other versions of the story should make no difference to your enjoyment of this one. And did I enjoy it? Yes, I did, for the most part – but I felt that some of the developments in the second half of the book let it down. Beatrice, who has set out to investigate and avenge her father’s death, ends up doing things that I found disproportionate and difficult to justify, so that I lost most of the sympathy I’d had for her earlier on. The ending was not what I’d expected or hoped for either.

I’ve never been to Bern and loved the descriptions of the city, as it was in the 1650s, with its cobbled streets, sandstone arcades and famous bear pits. I’ve read very few books set in Switzerland and even less about 17th century Switzerland, so everything was new to me; it was interesting to read about the political system in place at that time, with Bern having two mayors at once – they would alternate each year, one ‘acting’ and one ‘sitting’ – and four powerful officials known as Venners, who would each oversee one district of the city. This political system is important to the story, with Beatrice’s father being one of the two mayors and all four Venners being part of his inner circle.

Schuler’s historical note at the end of the book was fascinating; I discovered that, although Beatrice is a fictional character, she’s based on the real life German entomologist and naturalist Maria Sibylla Merian, a woman I previously knew nothing about. It’s always good to learn something new!

I think the only other Bluebeard retellings I’ve read are two short stories: Angela Carter’s The Bloody Chamber and Nalo Hopkinson’s The Glass Bottle Trick. If you can recommend anything else, please let me know.

Thanks to Raven Books for providing a copy of this book for review via NetGalley.

Classics Club List #3

classicsclub I recently completed my second Classics Club list (which I wrote about last week) and am now ready to post a new one. For any of you who are not familiar with the Classics Club, the idea is to make a list of at least fifty classics and read them within a five year time period. In reality, both my first and second lists took longer than that, but five years is the aim!

As I’ve already included a lot of the better known classics on my first two lists, I’ve had to search slightly harder for books to put on this one and a lot of these are lesser known titles by classic authors. You may be questioning whether some of them are really classics, but the rules of the Classics Club allow us to define classics in any way we choose, as long as the book is at least twenty-five years old. I’ve mostly avoided re-reads apart from the two Shakespeare plays – I chose those two because I have some modern retellings on the TBR and thought it would be interesting to re-read the original play first.

Here’s my list of 50 books with an estimated finish date of 16th January 2031:

1. Dandelion Wine by Ray Bradbury
2. The Baron in the Trees by Italo Calvino
3. Shadows on the Rock by Willa Cather
4. The Evil Genius by Wilkie Collins
5. Little Dorrit by Charles Dickens
6. The Old Curiosity Shop by Charles Dickens
7. The Women’s War by Alexandre Dumas
8. Iron Gustav by Hans Fallada
9. The Dancing Bear by Frances Faviell
10. A Harp in Lowndes Square by Rachel Ferguson
11. Mary Barton by Elizabeth Gaskell
12. Brighton Rock by Graham Greene
13. The Hand of Ethelberta by Thomas Hardy
14. The Go-Between by L.P. Hartley
15. The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne
16. The Talented Mr Ripley by Patricia Highsmith
17. The Bamboo Blonde by Dorothy B. Hughes
18. The Sundial by Shirley Jackson
19. Day of the Arrow by Philip Loraine
20. The Moon and Sixpence by W Somerset Maugham
21. The Blue Castle by LM Montgomery
22. The Black Prince by Iris Murdoch
23. Lord Tony’s Wife by Baroness Orczy
24. Down and Out in Paris and London by George Orwell
25. No Fond Return of Love by Barbara Pym
26. The Persian Boy by Mary Renault
27. The Circular Staircase by Mary Roberts Rinehart
28. The Marquis of Carabas by Rafael Sabatini
29. The Hearth and Eagle by Anya Seton
30. Othello by William Shakespeare
31. King Lear by William Shakespeare
32. The Fortnight in September by R.C. Sherriff
33. A Town Like Alice by Nevil Shute
34. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie by Muriel Spark
35. The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck
36. Travels with a Donkey in the Cevennes by Robert Louis Stevenson
37. My Brother Michael by Mary Stewart
38. Judith by Noel Streatfeild
39. The Lantern Bearers by Rosemary Sutcliff
40. Mrs Palfrey at the Claremont by Elizabeth Taylor
41. Brat Farrar by Josephine Tey
42. The Duke’s Children by Anthony Trollope
43. The Way We Live Now by Anthony Trollope
44. Lolly Willowes by Sylvia Townsend Warner
45. The War of the Worlds by HG Wells
46. The Rose and the Yew Tree by Mary Westmacott
47. A Woman of No Importance by Oscar Wilde
48. The Kraken Wakes by John Wyndham
49. Trouble With Lichen by John Wyndham
50. La Curée by Émile Zola

I’m looking forward to getting started with this, but I do have a question for those of you who are Classics Club members. I’m sure I’ll want to read other classics that I haven’t included here, so what do you usually do in that situation? Do you replace one of the titles on your list or do you just read it in addition to the listed titles? With my previous lists, I’ve swapped out a few books but have mainly just read lots of extra ones that weren’t listed. How much swapping do the rest of you tend to do? Maybe that’s why I never seem to finish within five years!

Have you read any of these books? What should I read first?

Penitence by Kristin Koval

Penitence is a beautifully written novel, tackling one of the darkest subjects imaginable: the murder of a teenage boy by his own younger sister.

It happens in the small town of Lodgepole, Colorado in 2016 and the murderer is thirteen-year-old Nora Sheehan, who calls the police herself to confess that she has just shot and killed her brother Nico. Before the incident, Nora had seemed depressed and withdrawn, which may or may not have been related to Nico, who was less than a year older, being diagnosed with Huntington’s disease. Huntington’s is a degenerative condition with no cure, so it’s possible that Nora may have thought she was helping her brother avoid a terrible fate – but is this true or is there another reason for what she did?

Martine Dumont, a seventy-two-year-old lawyer, is looking forward to her retirement when Nora’s parents, David and Angie Sheehan, ask her to take on one last case and defend their daughter. Martine accepts, but knows she is out of her depth and contacts her estranged son, Julian, whose speciality is criminal law. Julian has lived in New York for many years, but Angie was once his girlfriend, which makes the situation awkward. Although he agrees to return to Lodgepole and help with Nora’s case, being around Angie again brings back difficult memories for both of them.

When I first started to read, I was expecting this to be a crime novel, but that’s not really how I would describe it. The murder of Nico Sheehan is actually a relatively small part of the story; there’s never any doubt that Nora did it deliberately and it’s quite obvious why she did it, so there’s no mystery involved. We do get a lot of information on the laws surrounding the prosecution of child murderers, how they can sometimes be tried as adults rather than juveniles, and the sentences they can expect. We’re also given some insights into what life is like for Nora in the juvenile detention facility she is sent to while she’s awaiting trial.

The main focus of the novel, though, is on the topic of forgiveness and the various questions that arise from this. Why do we feel we have to assign blame when something tragic happens? How can we move on from this and find forgiveness for ourselves and others? How much penitence is enough? These things are explored not just through the story of Nico’s murder – in fact, I felt that relatively little time was spent on showing how David and Angie truly felt about one of their children killing the other – but also on the relationship between Julian and Angie and how it was affected by another tragedy decades earlier. This second storyline plays out in another timeline set in the 1990s/early 2000s and alternates with the Nora/Nico thread. However, I thought too many pages were devoted to this backstory and it made the whole book feel longer and slower than it really needed to be.

I did love the portrayal of Lodgepole, a small Colorado ski resort, and the way life there differed from Julian’s (and for a while, Angie’s) life in New York. An interesting setting, then, and an interesting subject – if only it had been more tightly plotted, it would have been an excellent book. I did like it, though, and found it quite thought-provoking. It’s Kristin Koval’s debut novel and I’ll be happy to read more.

Thanks to Simon & Schuster UK for providing a copy of this book for review via NetGalley.

Top Ten Tuesday: More books to look out for in the first half of 2026

This week’s topic for Top Ten Tuesday (hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl) is: “Most Anticipated Books Releasing in the First Half of 2026”.

I’ve already listed some of my most anticipated historical fiction releases in a recent post, which you can see here. I’m listing below another ten books that I either found out about after putting that post together or that fall into other genres – so these are not necessarily my *most* anticipated books, but are still some that I would like to read.

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1. Strange Buildings by Uketsu, tr. Jim Rion (26th February 2026) – I loved Strange Pictures and Strange Houses, so I can’t wait for this one. It seems it will be in a similar format, with clues and secrets hidden within pictures and floorplans.

2. The Astral Library by Kate Quinn (26th February 2026) – This fantasy novel sounds very different from the other Kate Quinn books I’ve read, which were historical fiction, but I’m still interested in trying it.

3. The Infamous Gilberts by Angela Tomaski (5th March 2026) – This is a debut novel, so I’m not sure what to expect but it’s a 20th century family saga and sounds appealing.

4. Airing in a Closed Carriage by Joseph Shearing (10th March 2026) – I noticed that this is one of the upcoming titles from British Library Crime Classics in the first half of the year. I’m particularly intrigued by this one as I’ve read two other books by Joseph Shearing (a pseudonym of Marjorie Bowen).

5. The News from Dublin by Colm Tóibín (26th March 2026) – A collection of short stories about people living far from home. I’ve had mixed experiences with Tóibín’s books so I’m hoping this will be a good one!

6. Son of Nobody by Yann Martel (2nd April 2026) – I haven’t read anything by Martel apart from Life of Pi, which I liked, and this new one about the Trojan War sounds interesting.

7. A Deadly Episode by Anthony Horowitz (23rd April 2026) – This will be the sixth book in the Hawthorne and Horowitz mystery series. I’ve enjoyed all five of the others so I’m looking forward to this one.

8. The Fourth Queen by Nicola Cornick (9th May 2026) – I can’t find any information on the plot of this book yet, but Nicola Cornick is an author I usually enjoy reading. Most of her novels are historical fiction with dual timelines and a touch of the supernatural, so I’m assuming this will be similar.

9. She Walks at Night by Seishi Yokomizo, tr. Jesse Kirkwood (21st May 2026) – Another Japanese book I’ll be looking out for this year. This is the eighth book featuring the detective Kosuke Kindaichi to be published by Pushkin Press; I’ve read all of the others and they’re always fascinating!

10. Whistler by Ann Patchett (2nd June 2026) – I’m sure this one will be on other people’s lists this week too. I’ve only read two Ann Patchett books so far and loved one but not the other, so I’m curious to see what I’ll think of this one.

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Do you want to read any of these? Are there any new releases you’re looking forward to in the first half of 2026?

The Token by Sharon Bolton

Sharon Bolton’s latest novel, The Token, begins with eight people on a yacht heading for the Scilly Isles. The skipper had promised it would be an uneventful crossing, with perfect sailing conditions, but his seven passengers are growing increasingly nervous as the wind strengthens and rain starts to fall. Soon they are caught in a storm, the boat is taking in water, the electronics have stopped working and two people have been swept overboard…

And that’s where we leave them, until much later in the book. First, we have to go back several weeks to find out why this group of people have come to be on this fateful journey in the first place. We learn that each of them has received an envelope containing a token and a letter stating that the billionaire Logan Quick is leaving them a share of his huge fortune. All they need to do is keep the token safe until they hear news of his death. However, none of the seven has ever heard of Logan Quick and none of them has any idea why they’ve been chosen.

The seven token recipients come from all walks of life and seem, at least at first, to have nothing in common. There’s Holly, a single mother trying to juggle her law career with caring for her son; Robin, a wedding planner in love with his latest client; Sabri, an ambulance driver whose family are struggling financially; Tara, an artist whose ex-husband just won’t leave her alone; Craig, a fire safety consultant who is sleeping with his best friend’s girlfriend; Cheryl, who cares for her spiteful, controlling mother and has no life of her own; and Tug, a former military man suffering from PTSD.

Seven people all with interesting stories to be told, but I felt that trying to tell all of them in one book was far too much! The perspective kept switching from one to the other throughout the novel, which quickly became overwhelming. I think five main characters at the most would have been enough; Holly, Cheryl and Tug were the ones I found the most engaging.

This is also not really the exciting, fast-paced sort of thriller I’ve come to expect from Sharon Bolton. It takes a very long time to develop the stories of all seven characters and to reach the point where they come together and board the yacht for the Scilly Isles. It was only the final 30% of the book that I found truly gripping and where we were treated to some of the big plot twists and surprises that Bolton readers know and love. That doesn’t mean I didn’t enjoy the rest of the book at all, but it did definitely have a different feel from some of the other Bolton novels I’ve read, being much more character driven than plot driven.

What I did find fascinating was the way the novel explores how different personalities react to the prospect of fame and fortune. The seven token recipients are all told to keep quiet and tell no one, yet some of them can’t resist and soon the whole thing has been made public and is being reported on the news. Each of them has to find a way to deal with the media attention and the difficulties of trying to keep the token safe from theft, while also trying to decide whether, despite the opportunities the inheritance would bring, they really want to become fabulously rich.

Not a personal favourite Bolton novel for me, then, but they can’t all be and I still felt more positive about this one than negative.

Thanks to Orion for providing a copy of this book for review via NetGalley.

Historical Musings #94: My Year in Historical Fiction 2025

Welcome to my monthly post on all things historical fiction. For my first Musings post of the year, as is now traditional here, I am looking back at the historical fiction I read in 2025 and have put together my usual selection of charts and lists! I have kept most of the same categories I’ve used for the previous eight years so that it should be easy to make comparisons and to see if there have been any interesting changes in my reading patterns and choices (here are my posts for 2024, 2023, 2022, 2021, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2017 and 2016).

Before I begin, just a reminder that I do actually read other genres but for the purposes of this post I haven’t included those books in these stats!

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Time periods read about in 2025:

The 19th and 20th centuries are almost always the top two periods I read about and last year I read amost an equal number of books set in each of them. A change from the previous year is that I read more books set in the 18th century than in the 17th.

I read four books with Ancient history settings last year: Fire from Heaven by Mary Renault (4th Century BC), The Hymn to Dionysus by Natasha Pulley (Ancient Greece), Glorious Exploits by Ferdia Lennon (5th Century BC) and Cleopatra by Natasha Solomons (Ancient Egypt).

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33% of the historical fiction authors I read in 2025 were new to me.

This is almost exactly the same as last year; apart from in 2019, when I read 54% new authors, I do tend to stick mainly to authors I already know and love.

Here are three historical novels I read by new-to-me authors in 2025:

The Resurrectionist by A. Rae Dunlap
The Heart in Winter by Kevin Barry
Clear by Carys Davies

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I read 1 historical novel in translation in 2025

This is a big disappointment. If I included books of all genres, however, I would have more translated novels on my list with languages ranging from Japanese to German and Norwegian.

If you’re wondering, the one historical novel I did read in translation last year was The Lily and the Lion by Maurice Druon.

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Publication dates of historical fiction read in 2025:

As usual, most of the historical fiction books I read were new releases, which I know is due to my use of NetGalley. If you factor in all the other books I read last year, including Golden Age crime, for example, the picture would look very different. I do have lots of older historical novels on my own shelves and am hoping to read more of them in 2026, but I say that every year so we’ll see!

The oldest historical fiction novel I read in 2025 was Moonfleet by John Meade Falkner (an adventure story published in 1898 and set in the 18th century).

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19% of my historical reads in 2025 were historical mysteries.

This is slightly up on the previous year. Here are three I enjoyed reading in 2025:

A Case of Life and Limb by Sally Smith
The House at Devil’s Neck by Tom Mead
Murder at Gulls Nest by Jess Kidd

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I read historical fiction set in 17 different countries in 2025:

Although England still dominates, I did read historical novels set in 17 different countries last year. I think Guatemala and St Lucia are probably completely new settings for me as well! Here are three novels I read set in countries other than my own:

The Sirens by Emilia Hart (Australia)
The Rush by Beth Lewis (Canada)
Venetian Vespers by John Banville (Italy)

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Four historical men I read about in 2025:

Thomas Wolsey (The Cardinal by Alison Weir)
Robert of Artois (The Lily and the Lion by Maurice Druon)
Anthony Pratt – and his wife, Elva (The Christmas Clue by Nicola Upson)
Alexander the Great (Fire from Heaven by Mary Renault)

Four historical women I read about in 2025:

Dorothy Forster (The Secrets of the Rose by Nicola Cornick)
Beatrice Cenci (Sinners by Elizabeth Fremantle)
Olimpia Maidalchini (These Wicked Devices by Matthew Plampin)
Mary Shelley (Love, Sex & Frankenstein by Caroline Lea)

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What about you? Did you read any good historical fiction last year? Have you read any of the books or authors I’ve mentioned here and have you noticed any patterns or trends in your own reading? Are there any other statistics you would like me to start including?