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“Black Dragon” by David Benjamin

Posted by on July 25, 2021

Copyright 2019 by David Benjamin. Published by Last Kid Books, Madison WI.

Those of you who have been paying attention know that David Benjamin is a high-school-buddy-cum-author who has mentioned me by name or included me as a character in several of his books. That flatters me, of course, but doesn’t shade my critical eye. I think I can be objective as a reviewer of literature.

This one is pretty darn good even though I am not in this one. Benjamin penned the perfect one-line summary for Black Dragon in his Chapter 27 title: “Blood and Guts. Tits and Ass.” This story has plenty of all of that, nicely packaged in a whimsical and amusing (it had me laughing out loud at times) narrative that proceeds at a brisk pace. This is a fun read that has “movie script” written all over it. Maybe it is because I just finished watching the Bourne movies, but I could easily see Matt Damon playing the part of Steve Knight, the intrepid reporter for the US Journal in Tokyo who unwittingly finds himself, like Forrest Gump, present at historical events that rock Japan.

I won’t be giving away too much to tell you that the book opens with a terrorist attack – a bombing at a right-wing political rally – that kills his long-time Japanese assistant, Kuniko Nishimura. Blood and guts. His new assistant is Kuniko’s daughter, Mie, a beautiful young recent college grad. Tits and ass.

The culprits behind the bombing – and other violent acts that follow in quick succession – belong to the Black Dragon Society, a nationalist cult determined to restore Japan to what it believes is Japan’s proper place in the world. However, a lot of blood is spilled – both in large-scale mass murder events and quiet assassinations – before the culpability of the Black Dragon Society becomes known, largely due to the investigative skills of Steve and Mie, along with some of their journalist buddies.

There are a lot of characters in this book. The casting director for this movie is going to be employing a lot of American and Japanese actors. Maybe an Australian, too. Benjamin helps out with a list of characters at the beginning. Also a lexicon of Japanese terms at the back. Both are very helpful.

But this is more than an action/adventure/mystery story; it is also a primer on Japanese culture and politics. Only a foreigner who has been immersed in Japanese society and has studied the culture and politics could have written this book. Benjamin is just such a person. He knows whereof he speaks. I felt, after finishing the book, that I know much more about Japan. This book is both educational and entertaining.

My only complaint is that the final terrorist attack is so complex, involves so many characters and is so highly dependent on the layout of the grounds surrounding the Imperial Palace that a map would have been helpful.

But that is a small stain on an otherwise perfect kimono of a book.

9 out of 10.

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