little weird book #1: in the miso soup by ryū murakami with ralph McCarthy (translator)
book description:
“It is just before New Year’s. Frank, an overweight American tourist, has hired Kenji to take him on a guided tour of Tokyo’s sleazy nightlife. But Frank’s behavior is so strange that Kenji begins to entertain a horrible suspicion – that his new client is in fact the serial killer currently terrorizing the city. It is not until later, however, that Kenji learns exactly how much he has to fear and how irrevocably his encounter with this great white whale of an American will change his life.ā
Page count: 180
āļøspoilers may abound so, tread carefully as you move forward! You’ve been warnedā¦āļø
this book was suggested to me by a friend who loves reading thrillers as well, so I decided to give it a try. I loved how small it was, and I figured after reading the synopsis on the back that it would be sort of a mystery too. I also got two of my library coworkers to read it with me so hehehe we all got to suffer! š¤Ŗš
i think I skipped the part in the description where Kenji, the main character, is literally touring this American man named Frank around the sleazy parts of Japan š
My brain was geared more towards trying to figure out if Frank was a serial killer or not!
there wasn’t a moment in this book that made me feel comfortable; Murakami wrote in such a way that kept you unsettled from the first murder of a Japanese school girl to when Kenji was bringing Frank to the bridge for New Yearās Eve. Pure paranoia. If youāre sensitive, I suggest not making this your nighttime reading before bed.
letās talk about Frankā¦
this man was hideous, inside and out. He is the main reason why this book is so unsettling, from his physical appearance to his demeanor and personality. He also has HELLA LONG MONOLOGUES where heās talking peopleās ears off, whether it be to Kenji or one of the prostitutes. I canāt lie, I had to lock in when he was speaking because I found myself drifting while reading.

his life story sort of explained why he was the way he was, but honestly, I wanted more. He does tell us why he is the way he is mentally, I guess, but likeā¦I wanted to know how his face got the way it was, and if it was because someone he was killing was trying to defend themselves, and he ended up surviving. Instead we get the story about him killing a baby goose (FOR SHAME), which ties to the end of the book (I at least wonāt spoil that for you).
now let’s talk about Kenji.
my main question to Kenji is: āBROTHER, WHY DIDNāT YOU GO TO THE POLICE?!ā He knew almost immediately that Frank was the serial killer, knew the black thing on his door was burnt. Human. Flesh. 𤢠and knew Frank put it there. WITNESSED SEVERAL MURDERS THAT FRANK COMMITTED. And heās right in front of the police box afterwards, but doesn’t say a thing. I woulda sung like a bird!!! But we realize later why it was sort of wise for Kenji not to snitchā¦
pause.
i literally just put the pieces together as I was typing this: Frankā¦might signify a sort of FRANKenstein in this book because heās honestly hella strong, doesnāt feel pain, can kill people in the most brutal ways like a monster would.
is that what this is?! A SORT OF RE-TELLING OF FRANKENSTEIN?! Now I need to ask my coworkers what they think about this, if they agree. It’s amazing what revelations you come across if you just write about something!
so, is there sex in this book?
iām honestly grateful there werenāt any actual sex scenes amidst the murder ones. Body horror is a lot on its own; if Murakami put sex on top of it, I feel like it would’ve been way too much. There is the tampon scene thoughā¦that was pretty gross DISGUSTING. Just know you’ve been warned.
okay, so what’s the verdict?
āļøāļøāļøāļøāļø rating on the weird little book scale!
simply for the fact that by the end, I was left thinking, āWhat the hell did I just read?ā I love that this was a Japanese book though, because I feel like in American media we tend to lean more towards happy endings and resolution. I’ve leaned after watching a couple of Japanese horror filmsā¦thatās not the case in every country.
i was definitely on my toes the whole time i was reading it though! I kept wanting to know what was happening next, so the thriller side of this book was perfect!
Murakami did end it well though (I wonāt spoil it). My coworker pointed out that Frank finally revealed something true about himself after all the lies he told Kenji to just get what he wanted. Youāll have to determine if thatās how you interpret the ending though!
And thatās that for my first weird little book review! Let me know in the comments if youāve become more curious about In the Miso Soup by reading this review, or if you want to stay as far away from this book as possible š
Mishy š¦šāØ
