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Hell

Author
Yasutaka Tsutsui
Genre
Media
Book
Publisher
Alma Books Ltd
ISBN
978-184688046
Reviewer
Gareth

Synopsis

Fifty-seven-year-old Takeshi has just been involved in a traffic accident. When he wakes up, he is in a strange bar, no longer crippled as he has been for most of his life, but able to walk without crutches in his everyday business suit. Looking around, he sees a number of familiar faces - Izumi, a colleague who had died in a plane crash five years before; his childhood friend Yuzo, who had become a yakuza and had been killed by a rival gang member; and Sasaki, who had frozen to death as a homeless vagrant.This is Hell - a place where three days last as long as ten years on earth, and people are able to see events in both the future and the past. Yuzo can now see the yakuza that killed him as he harasses a friend of his. The actress Mayumi and the writer Torigai are chased by the paparazzi into an elevator that drops to floor 666 beneath ground level. The vivid depiction of afterlife portrayed in "Hell" admits the traditional horrors, but subjects them to Tsutsui's unique powers of enchantment: witty, amusing, praised for its poetic style and the wizard-like light touch of the author's shifting focus, "Hell" is a masterpiece of surrealist literature.

Review

To be honest, I think I was expecting something to rival Clive Barker in terms of the horrors of hell. But it isn't - far from it, this is a much more laid back surreal journey with the author taking a disjointed look at the lives of the people who have been sentenced to hell. However it doesn't even attempt to explain what hell actually is, or, give that much background to the characters.

The author shows a lot of potential but in my opinion he never really reaches it. As such I certainly wouldn't call it a masterpiece of surrealist literature. It is a short book, but it takes a lot to keep up with all the jumping around it does. The descriptions leave you wanting to know more - which is never delivered.

Please don't get me wrong though, it's a well written book - if anything I finished the book wanting to know more - I wanted more depth, more understanding of what hell was about. Maybe hell is in the details - or lack of them. Maybe hell is not knowing!

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