The Devil of Nanking
Books | Fiction / Mystery & Detective / International Crime & Mystery
3.7
(78)
Mo Hayder
“Exceedingly creepy . . . The diabolically gifted British author spins a fascinating mystery from the legacy of Japanese atrocities during World War II.” —Entertainment Weekly With the redolent atmosphere of Ian Rankin and the spine-chilling characters of Thomas Harris, Mo Hayder’s The Devil of Nanking takes the reader on an electrifying literary ride from the palatial apartments of yakuza kingpins to deep inside the secret history of one of the twentieth century’s most brutal events: the Nanking Massacre. A young Englishwoman obsessed with an indecipherable past, Grey comes to Tokyo seeking a lost piece of film footage of the notorious 1937 Nanking Massacre, footage some say never existed. Only one man can help Grey. A survivor of the massacre, he is now a visiting professor at a university in Tokyo. But he will have nothing to do with her. So Grey accepts a job in an upmarket nightspot, where a certain gangster may be the key to gaining the professor’s trust. An old man in a wheelchair surrounded by a terrifying entourage, the gangster is rumored to rely on a mysterious elixir for his continued health. Taut, gritty, sexy, and harrowing, The Devil of Nanking is an incomparable literary thriller set in one of the world’s most fascinating cities—Tokyo—from an internationally bestselling author. “A haunting, lyrical, disturbing, important, suspenseful, wonderfully written and beautiful book.” —Harlan Coben
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More Details:
Author
Mo Hayder
Pages
368
Publisher
Open Road + Grove/Atlantic
Published Date
2011-02-24
ISBN
0802199607 9780802199607
Ratings
Google: 3.5
Community ReviewsSee all
"😔 good read #thrillers #fiction "

Ty
"This is one of my all time favorites. It's totally unrealistic and the characters are hard to like but it's a fascinating look at a life/culture that was new to me, and probably to most of you. I had no idea, and in fact had never heard, of the events surrounding Nanking in the early part of the 20th century. This book is not for the faint of heart, if you are one of those people who constantly use the word"trigger", give this one a pass. It's disturbing, dark, violent, and perfect. I was so saddened to learn of Ms Hayder's passing, have been reading her for a long time. "