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  • Published: 15 July 2010
  • ISBN: 9781407064062
  • Imprint: Cornerstone Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 304

Who is Mr Satoshi?




Inventive and mysterious, WHO IS MR SATOSHI? introduces a major new talent to contemporary fiction.

On the day his mother dies reclusive photographer Rob Fossick - forty-one and already in the twilight of his career - finds among her belongings an unexplained package addressed to a 'Mr Satoshi'.

So begins a quest that will propel Rob, anxious and unprepared, into the urban maelstrom of Tokyo. With the help of a colourful group of new acquaintances - a vigilant octogenarian; a beautiful 'love hotel' receptionist; an ex-sumo wrestler obsessed with Dolly Parton - the scene seems set for him to unravel the secrets surrounding Mr Satoshi's identity. But until he has faced his own demons, and begun to reconnect with the world around him, the answers Rob craves will remain tantalisingly beyond his reach ...

Combining several interlocking mysteries spanning sixty years of history, Who Is Mr Satoshi? is a uniquely inventive story from a dazzling new voice in British fiction.

  • Published: 15 July 2010
  • ISBN: 9781407064062
  • Imprint: Cornerstone Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 304

About the author

Jonathan Lee

Jonathan Lee's first novel, Who is Mr Satoshi?, was nominated for the Desmond Elliott Prize and shortlisted for an MJA Open Book Award in 2011. His second novel, Joy, published in 2013, was shortlisted for the Encore Award. He lives in New York.

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Praise for Who is Mr Satoshi?

"Assured debut" is a tired old phrase, but it really does sum up this first novel...Satisfying, well-paced, just the right length for the story it's telling, Who Is Mr Satoshi? is a literary novel that also happens to be a highly accessible one...Lee skilfully and inexorably draws us into his story as the clues mount up to Mr Satoshi's identity...Lee's prose manages to maintain...a sparse elegance that does great service to the characters and setting and bodes well for his future.

The Herald

Confident, sharply-written, and refreshingly direct...Tokyo is, of course, a descriptive writer's dream and Lee is not cowed by that culture's omnipresent and exhaustive literary heritage; he instead revels in his character's conflicts...[The] dialogue is playful and well-observed...More experienced authors might milk drug-addled protagonists for all they're worth; Lee's subtlety in this regard speaks volumes of the appeal, depth and maturity of his central character, as well as his writing.

Independent

Who is Mr Satoshi? is a clever, gripping and unusual novel that provides a whole host of hugely enjoyable mysteries. It is also a sensitive portrayal of a man brought back from the brink of breakdown. Reminiscent of some of Haruki Murakami's best work, this is a debut to treasure.

Book Trust

a lyrical page-turner

Naomi Alderman

an elegant and incisive examination of how history and our perceptions of the world are partial, filtered, and continually revised...Who is Mr Satoshi? ask[s] intriguing questions about how we see, remember and narrate our lives.

Observer

Compelling, funny and beautifully written, this novel is one of those rare treats - a book you won't want to put down

Jennie Rooney, author of INSIDE THE WHALE

Funny and moving

Giles Foden

Funny and moving, Who Is Mr Satoshi? introduces another newcomer who will catch prize judges' attentions. Set in Japan, it concerns Rob Fossick, an English photographer who has been unable to work since his wife died. When his mother, too, is suddenly killed, he discovers she has left instructions that he must deliver a package to a mysterious Mr Satoshi in Tokyo. Lurching from crisis to crisis as he stumbles drunk and weeping through a strange culture, he engages the help of a pink-haired Japanese girl and a former sumo wrestler. Fossick (a great name for someone on a quest) eventually unravels a mystery stretching back to the time of the Allied occupation.

Giles Foden, author of THE LAST KING OF SCOTLAND

Funny, insightful and beautiful

Telegraph

Jonathan Lee paints an exhilarating portrait of modern day Tokyo in limpid, intelligent prose as we accompany his narrator along his wildly labyrinthine voyage through the city.

Chloe Aridjis

Lee lays the groundwork for Foss's trip with care...patiently weaving exposition into early events...Lee has a pleasingly straightforward style...spiced with metaphoric flourishes...A promising first novel.

Times Literary Supplement

There's an almost dream-like quality to the narrative...An unusual, playful and clever book.

Daily Mail