My Annihilation
(Libby/OverDrive eBook, Kindle)

Book Cover
Average Rating
Contributors
Nakamura, Fuminori Author
Bett, Sam Translator
Published
Soho Press , 2022.
Status
Available from Libby/OverDrive

Available Platforms

Libby/OverDrive
Titles may be read via Libby/OverDrive. Libby/OverDrive is a free app that allows users to borrow and read digital media from their local library, including ebooks, audiobooks, and magazines. Users can access Libby/OverDrive through the Libby/OverDrive app or online. The app is available for Android and iOS devices.
Kindle
Titles may be read using Kindle devices or with the Kindle app.

Description

What transforms a person into a killer? Can it be something as small as a suggestion?Turn this page, and you may forfeit your entire life.With My Annihilation, Fuminori Nakamura, master of literary noir, has constructed a puzzle box of a narrative in the form of a confessional diary that implicates its reader in a heinous crime. Delving relentlessly into the darkest corners of human consciousness, My Annihilation interrogates the unspeakable thoughts all humans share that can be monstrous when brought to life, revealing with disturbing honesty the psychological motives of a killer.

More Details

Format
eBook
Street Date
01/11/2022
Language
English
ISBN
9781641292733

Discover More

Excerpt

Loading Excerpt...

Author Notes

Loading Author Notes...

Similar Titles From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for titles you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
These books have the appeal factors disturbing, haunting, and unreliable narrator, and they have the genre "psychological suspense"; the subject "murder suspects"; and characters that are "twisted characters" and "unlikeable characters."
These books have the appeal factors disturbing, haunting, and unreliable narrator, and they have the subjects "memory," "psychic trauma," and "paranoia."
These books have the appeal factors disturbing, haunting, and unreliable narrator, and they have the genre "psychological suspense"; and the subjects "psychic trauma," "sex crimes," and "serial murderers."
These character-driven works of literary fiction examine the human psyche, centering on the disturbing events that haunt traumatized individuals. Readers will be left pondering what to believe in these complex stories. -- Andrienne Cruz
These books have the appeal factors disturbing, creepy, and intricately plotted, and they have the genre "psychological suspense"; and the subjects "obsession" and "secrets."
These books have the appeal factors disturbing, haunting, and intricately plotted, and they have the genre "psychological suspense"; the subjects "murderers," "personal diaries," and "diary writing"; and characters that are "flawed characters."
These books have the appeal factors haunting, stylistically complex, and unnamed narrator, and they have the genre "psychological suspense"; the subjects "suicide" and "obsession"; and characters that are "flawed characters."
Men experience missing memories and hallucinations in disturbing psychological mysteries about unreliable narrators manipulated into committing violent crimes. Both translations are intricately and unconventionally plotted. Kill the Next One is set in Boston. My Annihilation takes place in Japan. -- Alicia Cavitt
These books have the appeal factors disturbing, haunting, and unreliable narrator, and they have the genres "horror" and "psychological suspense"; and the subject "serial murderers."
Waking in unfamiliar places, the men in these psychological suspense novels attempt to piece together memories of violent encounters. Both stories revolve around dreams and consciousness and feature shifting realities and unanswered questions. Annihilation is more disturbing than The Coma. -- Alicia Cavitt
These books have the appeal factors disturbing, haunting, and unreliable narrator, and they have the genres "noir fiction" and "crime fiction"; and the subjects "crime," "obsession," and "criminals."
These books have the appeal factors disturbing, intensifying, and unnamed narrator, and they have the genre "psychological suspense"; the subjects "murderers" and "serial murderers"; and characters that are "twisted characters."

Similar Authors From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for other authors you might want to read if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Fuminori Nakamura and James Sallis write literary noir crime novels with alienated lead characters. Their dark, violent books show the dark underbelly of their societies. The well developed characters are dysfunctional and trapped by their inability to change. The stories are fast paced, gritty, and very violent. -- Merle Jacob
These authors' works have the appeal factors disturbing and unreliable narrator, and they have the genre "psychological suspense"; the subjects "obsession," "robbery," and "criminals"; and characters that are "twisted characters," "unlikeable characters," and "brooding characters."
These authors' works have the appeal factors disturbing and gritty, and they have the genres "crime fiction" and "noir fiction"; and the subjects "robbery," "criminals," and "crime."
These authors' works have the appeal factors disturbing, spare, and unreliable narrator, and they have the genres "thrillers and suspense" and "psychological suspense"; the subject "psychopaths"; and characters that are "complex characters," "flawed characters," and "twisted characters."
These authors' works have the appeal factors disturbing, gruesome, and unreliable narrator, and they have the genres "psychological fiction" and "psychological suspense"; the subjects "obsession," "college students," and "psychopaths"; and characters that are "twisted characters" and "unlikeable characters."
These authors' works have the appeal factors spare, and they have the genres "crime fiction" and "noir fiction"; the subjects "thieves," "robbery," and "criminals"; and characters that are "twisted characters."
These authors' works have the appeal factors disturbing, bleak, and spare, and they have the genres "crime fiction" and "noir fiction"; the subjects "secrets," "robbery," and "criminals"; and characters that are "complex characters" and "flawed characters."
These authors' works have the appeal factors disturbing, stylistically complex, and intricately plotted, and they have the genres "literary fiction" and "psychological fiction"; the subjects "robbery," "criminals," and "violence"; and characters that are "complex characters."
These authors' works have the appeal factors creepy and unreliable narrator, and they have the genres "crime fiction" and "noir fiction"; and characters that are "twisted characters."
These authors' works have the appeal factors disturbing, stylistically complex, and unreliable narrator, and they have the genres "literary fiction" and "psychological fiction"; the subjects "obsession," "murder suspects," and "alienation"; and characters that are "complex characters" and "introspective characters."
These authors' works have the appeal factors disturbing, gritty, and unreliable narrator, and they have the genres "thrillers and suspense" and "noir fiction"; and the subjects "secrets" and "obsession."
These authors' works have the appeal factors disturbing, unputdownable, and unreliable narrator, and they have the genre "noir fiction"; the subjects "obsession," "murder suspects," and "fugitives"; and characters that are "complex characters" and "flawed characters."

Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Nakamura's seventeenth book focuses on what it means to be human. It is a dark, strange, violent, frightening story of how the mind can be traumatized and even transformed completely into the mind of another. A young man who endured a deeply troubled childhood has become a psychiatrist. He falls in love with Yukari, but after she is raped by two men, she kills herself. The psychiatrist is traumatized and vows to avenge her death using his psychiatric training, including high doses of shock therapy and drugs, to manipulate the minds of the two rapists. Nakamura is a gifted and highly imaginative writer. His characters and the shocking plot are bewildering and bizarre, with even the layout of the book supporting the dark, eerie theme. While this novel may not appeal to some reading tastes, it is a profound, revelatory, and deeply moving examination of the human mind, and for those willing to grapple with the tangled plot and deeply troubling themes, it will leave a lasting impression.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Powered by Syndetics

Publisher's Weekly Review

The unnamed, memory-challenged narrator of this unsettling psychological mystery from Nakamaura (Cult X) wakes up in a "cramped room in a rundown mountain lodge," where he finds various forms of identification under the name Ryodai Kozuka and a journal he's sure was written by Kozuka that starts, "Turn this page, and you may give up your entire life." In the diary are details of playing video games and growing sexual awareness in adolescence, and Kozuka gradually recalls a previous life as a doctor of psychosomatic medicine. He treated a young woman in crisis, Yukari, struggling with the burden of past traumas, who, through hypnosis, unleashed a repressed memory of a recent assault at the hands of her previous psychiatrist, Yoshimi. The narrator later leaves the lodge and uses the account of this repressed memory to initiate a romantic relationship with Yukari, which ends tragically. The stakes rise when the narrator confronts Yoshimi over his mistreatment of Yukari only to uncover more extensive abuse of patients. The narrator also sees a way to exact his revenge. Nakamura expertly mixes a look into the criminal mind with a story of doomed love. This fever-dream of a novel will long linger in the reader's memory. (Jan.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Powered by Syndetics

Library Journal Review

"Turn this page, and you may forfeit your entire life." What would you do if you read those lines? Can reading a diary implicate its interrogator in a terrible crime? Can an offhand suggestion turn someone into a murderer? These are the questions carefully weighed by award-winning Japanese author Nakamura in his latest literary noir.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Powered by Syndetics

Kirkus Book Review

A steep dive into the psyche of a man who may or may not have done some truly terrible things. The first thing Ryodai Kozuka wants you to know is that that's not his real name; he's switched identities with someone else so that he can start a new life. Nor did the narrator push his half sister off a cliff when they were children; she fell on her own once he'd taken her into the woods to get her some breathing room from the home in which her father routinely beat their mother. The narrator isn't a bit like Tsutomu Miyazaki, the Otaku Murderer of four young girls who was executed in 2008, not long after he reported being urged to commit his heinous crimes by a group of Rat Men only he could see. Instead, he's a former doctor of psychosomatic medicine whose seduction of his vulnerable patient, sex worker Yukari, was entirely therapeutic, helping her recover from the sexual memories her previous physician, Dr. Yoshimi, had implanted in her. Implanted memories, it becomes gradually clear, are at the heart of this searing novella, though it's not clear whether her treatment by the smilingly unrepentant Yoshimi or the narrator himself, who wonders if he really slept with her after all, is responsible for Yukari's suicide. Once she's hanged herself, the narrator vows to avenge himself on Kida and Mamiya, two former clients who showed her a video of herself that he's convinced is what really drove her to take her life. Working with Wakui, the cafe owner whose budding relationship with Yukari had finally seemed to promise some stability in her life, he captures the two clients and starts messing with their own heads, and vice versa. An unnerving tale that richly earns its title. By the last chapter, you won't believe a word the narrator tells you. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Powered by Syndetics

Booklist Reviews

Nakamura's seventeenth book focuses on what it means to be human. It is a dark, strange, violent, frightening story of how the mind can be traumatized and even transformed completely into the mind of another. A young man who endured a deeply troubled childhood has become a psychiatrist. He falls in love with Yukari, but after she is raped by two men, she kills herself. The psychiatrist is traumatized and vows to avenge her death using his psychiatric training, including high doses of shock therapy and drugs, to manipulate the minds of the two rapists. Nakamura is a gifted and highly imaginative writer. His characters and the shocking plot are bewildering and bizarre, with even the layout of the book supporting the dark, eerie theme. While this novel may not appeal to some reading tastes, it is a profound, revelatory, and deeply moving examination of the human mind, and for those willing to grapple with the tangled plot and deeply troubling themes, it will leave a lasting impression. Copyright 2022 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2022 Booklist Reviews.
Powered by Content Cafe

Library Journal Reviews

"Turn this page, and you may forfeit your entire life." What would you do if you read those lines? Can reading a diary implicate its interrogator in a terrible crime? Can an offhand suggestion turn someone into a murderer? These are the questions carefully weighed by award-winning Japanese author Nakamura in his latest literary noir.

Copyright 2021 Library Journal.

Copyright 2021 Library Journal.
Powered by Content Cafe

LJ Express Reviews

A man books into a mountain lodge. He's hiding there under a false name, Ryodai Kozuka. Kozuka's dead body lies folded up in his suitcase. There's an open manuscript on his desk. He begins to read. It tells of a man who murdered four young girls in one month in 1988. The young narrator (he was only a third grader at the time) can't shake off his fascination with the murderer but soon has his own issues to address, sexual and physical. He fantasizes about pushing his sister off a cliff. When she trips and falls but survives, he accepts his mother's judgment that he'd tried to kill her. His mother sends him to a treatment center, where he begins to feel that someone else, not him, is taking over his personality. A doctor hypnotizes him to replace bad memories with new. Electroshock treatment follows, leading to the breakdown of whatever personhood he'd had. The story becomes a maze of conflicting accounts, back and forth between manuscript and reader—black boxes within black boxes, memory and personality transient, even basic facts losing a foundation. VERDICT Nakamura's (The Thief) dark, elegant novel will appeal more to lovers of experimental fiction than fans of crime thrillers.—David Keymer, Cleveland

Copyright 2021 LJExpress.

Copyright 2021 LJExpress.
Powered by Content Cafe

Publishers Weekly Reviews

The unnamed, memory-challenged narrator of this unsettling psychological mystery from Nakamaura (Cult X) wakes up in a "cramped room in a rundown mountain lodge," where he finds various forms of identification under the name Ryodai Kozuka and a journal he's sure was written by Kozuka that starts, "Turn this page, and you may give up your entire life." In the diary are details of playing video games and growing sexual awareness in adolescence, and Kozuka gradually recalls a previous life as a doctor of psychosomatic medicine. He treated a young woman in crisis, Yukari, struggling with the burden of past traumas, who, through hypnosis, unleashed a repressed memory of a recent assault at the hands of her previous psychiatrist, Yoshimi. The narrator later leaves the lodge and uses the account of this repressed memory to initiate a romantic relationship with Yukari, which ends tragically. The stakes rise when the narrator confronts Yoshimi over his mistreatment of Yukari only to uncover more extensive abuse of patients. The narrator also sees a way to exact his revenge. Nakamura expertly mixes a look into the criminal mind with a story of doomed love. This fever-dream of a novel will long linger in the reader's memory. (Jan.)

Copyright 2021 Publishers Weekly.

Copyright 2021 Publishers Weekly.
Powered by Content Cafe

Reviews from GoodReads

Loading GoodReads Reviews.

Citations

APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)

Nakamura, F., & Bett, S. (2022). My Annihilation . Soho Press.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Nakamura, Fuminori and Sam Bett. 2022. My Annihilation. Soho Press.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Nakamura, Fuminori and Sam Bett. My Annihilation Soho Press, 2022.

Harvard Citation (style guide)

Nakamura, F. and Bett, S. (2022). My annihilation. Soho Press.

MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)

Nakamura, Fuminori, and Sam Bett. My Annihilation Soho Press, 2022.

Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.

Copy Details

CollectionOwnedAvailableNumber of Holds
Libby110

Staff View

Loading Staff View.