In 1994's
Summer of the Big Bachi, Hirahara introduced an unusual amateur sleuth, an elderly Japanese American gardener and survivor of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima during World War II. Mas Arai's first case involved secrets connected to that terrible August day in 1945, and now in the seventh and final mystery (after
Sayonara Slam), he must return to a city that still holds painful memories for him. The octogenarian had come home only once before—to find a bride 50 years ago—but now Mas is delivering the ashes of his best friend Haruo (and fellow survivor) to Haruo's sister, who lives in a nursing home on a small island near Hiroshima. On the ferry to the island Mas notices a teenage boy sitting alone; the next morning he discovers that boy's body floating near a jetty. Was his death an accidental drowning, suicide, or something else? As Mas is reluctantly pulled into the investigation, he must also deal with the theft of his friend's ashes. In the process, Mas revaluates his life and his family. "This trip to Hiroshima had changed the course of his life, or what was left of it."
VERDICT Hirahara completes her Edgar Award-winning series with a quiet and melancholy mystery that explores the tragic legacy of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings. Not surprisingly, she dedicates this novel to the hibakusha, the survivors.
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