SUMMER OF THE BIG BACHI, Naomi Hirahara (reviewed by Phil Abbott)
Los Angeles is arguably the birthplace of the American detective novel. The multiple opportunities for corruption, political, economic and personal, make this city an ideal locale for examining the success/failure narrative at the heart of the American Dream.
More recently, new writers have
offered revisionist accounts, still with
some marks of homage, that veer from the iconic chroniclers of LA by centering
those who were largely invisible in the early narratives. Racial and ethnic minorities were generally
given roles of house servants, gardeners, day laborers and cooks. Naomi
Hirahara’s works are certainly among the very best of this new sub-genre.
In her first novel, Summer of the Big Bachi
(2008), Hirahara’s protagonist is not a PI but a gardener, one of those
invisible people in the traditional LA novel. Mas Arai is a Japanese-American
whose childhood included a brief return to the native Hiroshima of his family.
Arai, like the traditional PI, is very much a flawed figure, an indifferent
husband and father, with gambling issues. And like the PI, he makes a living on
the margins, in this case with a dwindling set of clients many of whom have now
hired larger Mexican landscape firms. He is justifiably obsessed with “bachi,.”
a belief that some slight or larger moral wrong is inevitably swiftly paid back
by punishment.
Arai’s bachi is the arrival in LA of Joji Haneda, a childhood
friend from Hiroshima. Both survived
the atomic bomb attack in 1945. What follows is a carefully plotted thriller
involving previous wrongs, disguised identities, and, yes, political and
economic corruption. The Summer of the Bachi is a captivating and poignant novel
that not only excels as a revisionist work but independently as a novel of
considerable power.
Joe Barone, SPECIMEN SONG, Peter Bowen
Elgin Bleecker, THE ODESSA FILE, Frederick Forsyth
Brian Busby, THE MIDNIGHT QUEEN, Mrs. May Agnes Fleming
Bill Crider, AT THE END OF A DULL DAY, Massimo Carlotto
Scott Cupp, THE WONDERFUL FLIGHT TO THE MUSHROOM PLANET, Eleanor Cameron
Martin Edwards, TWICE AROUND THE BLOCK, Billie Houston
Ed Gorman, A HIDDEN PLACE, Robert Charles Wilson
Richard Horton, ALL THE STARS A STAGE, James Blish
Jerry House, STRANGERS IN TOWN, Ross Macdonald
George Kelly, ACT ONE, Moss Hart
Margot Kinberg, THE BEAST MUST DIE, Nicholas Blake
Rob Kitchin, PARADE, Suichi Yoshida
B.V. Lawson, DEATH AND THE SKY ABOVE, Paul Winterton
Steve Lewis/Barry Gardner, A WALK AMONG THE TOMBSTONES, Lawrence Block
Todd Mason, TRIQUARTERLY #49: SCIENCE FICTION edited by Jonathan Brent, David G. Hartwell, Elliott Anderson and Robert Onopa
J.F. Norris, AN AIR THAT KILLS, Margaret Millar
Matthew Paust, THE SHIFTING REALITIES OF PHILIP DICK, Lawrence Subin
James Reasoner, OUTLAW IN THE SADDLE, Tom Roan
Richard Robinson, A LETTER OF MARY, Laurie King
Kerry Smith, ONLY TIME WILL TELL, Jeffrey Archer
Kevin Tipple, MURDER IS AN ART, Bill Crider
TomCat, THE DEAD ARE BLIND, Max Aford
TracyK, BLOOD WILL TELL, George Bagby
10 comments:
I'm pretty sure I read at least one short story about the gaardener/detective by Hirahara too.
Perhaps it's time someone wrote a mystery novel featuring The Literary Abbotts.
BTW, I will offline (involuntarily) until Monday at the earliest. The public library, my only access to the Internet, is closing for the duration of the winter storm descending upon us at this very moment. I am verklempt, of course, but this, too, shall pass. Stay safe, all.
Be careful, Mathew.
After a nightmare 90 minutes of trying to access my Google account (&*%$#%!) I finally got in. My post is now complete and published:
An Air That Kills by Margaret Millar
Stay safe to all in the winter storm's path. We've got only a brief flurry shower....so far.
Nice review. From Chandler to Ellroy, LA is a great setting, lush, great weather, beautiful movie people, and so much corruption under the surface. I will have to catch up with Hirahara’s work.
Great review of SUMMER OF THE BIG BACHI. I have all the books in the series, but have only read that first one. Looking forward to reading more.
TRIQUARTERLY #49: SCIENCE FICTION edited by Jonathan Brentt, David G. Hartwell, Elliott Anderson and Robert Onopa (Northwestern University Press 1980)
finally. Thanks, Patti. Staying awake more difficult than it should be.
I've had this in my sites for a long time now. Thanks for reminding to bump it up the list.
Thanks, as ever, Patti, for compiling this and including my post!
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