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Rebecca Starford reviews Rendezvous at Kamakura Inn by Marshall Browne
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After twenty years in the Tokyo police, Inspector Aoki knows the ‘beeping of the excrement detector in his brain was a definite warning that shit was coming down the freeway’. His declaration is indicative of this convoluted plot. Aoki, after seventeen months heading an excruciating investigation into the corrupt ‘Fatman’, a high-profile government official, discovers that his case has been irrevocably shut down. Quicker than you can shout ‘yakuza’, his journalist associate is murdered, his father dies of heart failure, his wife commits suicide and Aoki is placed under observation in a psychiatric hospital. Suspended from duty, he is sent to recover at the Kamakura Inn, an exclusive mountain retreat outside the city. But his sojourn is far from therapeutic, and Aoki is soon wrestling both the temptation of beautiful geisha and the danger of a bloodthirsty murderer running loose through the guest house.

Book 1 Title: Rendezvous at Kamakura Inn
Book Author: Marshall Browne
Book 1 Biblio: Random House, $32.95 pb, 287 pp
Book 1 Author Type: Author
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Marshall Browne is experienced with the crime genre, and cleverly instigates the motif of the ancient Go game, with the dubious master Saito functioning as a voice for the internal strategies adopted by Aoki in both dealing with his personal tragedy and the present threat at Kamakura Inn. The Tokyo underworld, too, makes for an intriguing backdrop; Browne, a former financier, is certainly knowledgeable about the machinations of corporate and government banking.

The dialogue is clunky and at times unconvincing, and the secondary characters are about as animated as cardboard cut-outs, but when the action does heat up, Browne displays flares of magic in his employment of suspense and chase sequences. Rendezvous at Kamakura Inn is popular crime fiction in its most concentrated form, and though a thoroughly indulgent diversion, it would have read more satisfyingly had it been seventy pages shorter.

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