Unknown Male: 'Doesnt get any darker or more twisted than this Sunday Times Crime Club
By (Author) Nicols Obregn
Penguin Books Ltd
Penguin Books Ltd
29th April 2021
29th April 2021
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.92
Paperback
400
Width 127mm, Height 198mm, Spine 27mm
276g
Inspector Kosuke Iwata returns to Japan after ten years to confront the ghosts of his past, and catch a dangerous killer With just weeks to go before the Olympics and the world's eyes firmly fixed on Tokyo the body of young British student, Skye Mackintosh, is discovered in a love hotel. Tokyo's Homicide Department enlists the help of Kosuke Iwata. But it isn't long before he discovers the darkness in the neon drenched streets as Skye, like so many others, had her own secrets. Lies and murder haunt a city where old ghosts and new whisper from its darkest of corners and the truth is always just out of sight. . .
Japan-set noir doesn't get any darker or more twisted than this * Sunday Times Crime Club *
The plotting is impressively done. It's a brilliant novel and a fitting end to a brilliant trilogy * NB Magazine *
Obregn is the most atmospheric of writers and evokes local landscapes and moods with diamond-like as well as dreamy precision and the three simultaneous plots advance with clockwork-like and relentless efficiency and won't allow the reader a moment's respite. A stunning achievement that should raise the author's profile to crime's Premier league or there is no justice in this world * Crime Time, Book of the Month *
An outstanding novel from start to finish, possibly the best book I've read this year. An entrancing thriller that lures you into the dark secrets of the neon streets of Tokyo. Riveting * The Courier, Book of the Week *
Praise for Nicols Obregn * - *
Harrowing and gripping. An astute police procedural . . . Switching between LA, Mexico and Tokyo both Iwata's present and past are cleverly interwoven in a truly heart-rending climax
* Daily Express *Sins as Scarlet is a searing LA crime story, as poetic as it is brutal, as tender as it is disturbing
* Tim Weaver *Thanks to the excellent Iwata, you get a gripping mystery with a real conscience
* Sunday Sport *In the heady tradition of Raymond Chandler and Michael Connelly, Sins as Scarlet lays bare the bruised heart and broken soul of Los Angeles. Extraordinary stuff: a diabolically clever police procedural, a wrenching character study, and a merciless chronicle of a city in decay. I'm awestruck.
-- A. J. Finn, author of international bestseller * THE WOMAN IN THE WINDOW *A dark, brutal ride through the underbelly of LA
* ANTHONY HOROWITZ *Masterpiece - that's the only way to describe Sins as Scarlet. Obregn's brilliant novel is, at once, a classic noir, a psychological thriller and a riveting examination-sometimes dark, sometime moving to the point of tears--of life in a less-than-angelic Los Angeles
* JEFFERY DEAVER *Evocative, perceptive writing
* Sunday Time Crime Club *This bleak, richly descriptive and haunting thriller walks of the wild side of Los Angeles
* Peterborough Telegraph *Obregn keeps the unpredictable plot of Sins As Scarlet churning with myriad surprises that are grounded in believability
* Mail Online *British born of a Spanish father and a French mother, Nicolas Obreg n grew up between London and Madrid. As a former travel writer, he gained extensive experience of Japan. While out there on assignment, he learned of the unsolved Miyazawa Family Murders, which informed his first novel, Blue Light Yokohama. It is also the focus of his Universal Audio true crime podcast, FACELESS. While writing his second novel, Sins As Scarlet, he volunteered in the Los Angeles youth incarceration system and underserved communities across East LA as a creative writing mentor. His short story, Colibri, features in the anthology, Both Sides- Stories From the Border, nominated for an Anthony Award, while Blue Light Yokohama was nominated for the T. Jefferson Parker Award. Nicolas is currently working on his fourth novel and writing episodes for the podcast, Scotland Yard Confidential. He lives in Madrid.