People Who Eat Darkness
Love, Grief and a Journey into Japan’s Shadows
- Published: 30 September 2012
- ISBN: 9781448155613
- Imprint: Vintage Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 416
A skilful, definitive history of one of the most notorious crimes of the past decade
Sunday Times
A skilful, definitive history of one of the most notorious crimes of the past decade
Sunday Times
A sobering affair... A true crime thriller, sensitively handled and unsparing in its quest for answers
Megan Walsh, The Times
An evenhanded investigation of a murder
New York Times
An extraordinary book, passionately and meticulously told... I read it with my breath held and found I couldn't relax, think or get on with my life until I'd finished it
Julie Myerson
An extraordinary, compulsive and brilliant book...very, very moving
David Peace
As mysterious as its title, this extraordinary true crime tale is up there with Truman Capote’s In Cold Blood
Toni & Guy Magazine (Spring 2012)
At the heart of this extraordinary and brilliant book about the search, and its aftermath, in 2000 for a 21 year old British girl, Lucie Blackman, who disappeared one summer in Tokyo, in one of the darkest stories I’ve ever read…a truly disturbing but fascinating read.I read it in one horrified gulp
Carla McKay, Daily Mail
Difficult to put down... impossible to forget
Minette Walters
Open-minded and sympathetic, despite being driven half mad by the case, Parry, former Asia correspondent for the Independent and The Times, is the best kind of narrator of a tale that isn't just a murder case but a book that sheds light on Japan, on families, on the media, and on the insidious effects of misogyny
Blake Morrison, Guardian
Parry shows a rare compassion and a refusal to judge
Jonathan Coe, Guardian, Books of the Year
Richard Lloyd Parry has produced a work not only of page-turning intensity but also of touching sensitivity and deep insight. That he could have created something almost noble from such base material is a minor miracle of literary alchemy. The book is brilliantly written
David Pilling, Financial Times
This is In Cold Blood for our times... Everyone who has ever loved someone and held that life dear should read this stunning book, and shiver
Chris Cleave
This is an extraordinary book which stands as far above the 'true crime' label as Paradise Lost does above the category 'verse'... No avenue is left unexplored, no thought is too oblique to be uttered, no psychological puzzle too disturbing to be investigated
Bel Mooney, Daily Mail