Hell

Hell

by YasutakaTsutsui (Author)

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.

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Quantity

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 300
Publisher: Alma Books Ltd
Published: 06 Aug 2008

ISBN 10: 1846880467
ISBN 13: 9781846880469

Media Reviews
The nice thing about Tsutsui is that history and modernity combine effortlessly, as do drab reality and fantasy. The Daily Telegraph
For all the deadpan simplicity of his prose, there is something rich and strange going on here . . . Imagine a manic JG Ballard, but one with an even darker past to work out . . . Another writer who springs to mind by way of comparison is Kurt Vonnegut . . . you won't have read anything quite like this. It's astonishing that no other publisher has seen fit to translate him into English. We've been missing out. Guardian
The hell in Japanese writer Yasutaka Tsutsui's surrealist novella is not the conventional fire and brimstone version. In fact this hell is not very dissimilar to the world that the inhabitants have just left. Financial Times
Author Bio
Born in Osaka, Yasutaka Tsutsui is particularly well known for his science fiction. After graduating from Doshisha University, he founded NULL, a science fiction magazine. His short story O-tasuke (Help) won him the recognition and respect of Rampo Edogawa, 'the father of Japanese mystery writing'. In 1970s Tsutsui began experimenting in a variety of styles, from slapstick and black humour to various kinds of metafiction. Winner of various awards including Izumi Kyoka Prize, Kawabata Prize and Yomiuri Literary Prize.