Cover Image: The Fine Art of Invisible Detection

The Fine Art of Invisible Detection

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Member Reviews

The Fine Art of Invisible Detection is the first book written by Robert Goddard that I have read and I found it a very interesting and enjoyable mystery thriller.

The two main characters Umiko Wada and Nick Miller live in different countries and don’t know each other however their backstories are linked without them realising.

The story has many twists and turns including one right at the end of the book just when you thought everything was done & dusted.

A very enjoyable book

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I have long enjoyed Robert Goddard's books and this complex tale which visited many countries was certainly up to his usual standard. Wada was a great character and one I would like to see pop up in other books. With thanks to Random House for the invitation to read and review and e-ARC of this book and to Netgalley for providing the platform with which to do so.

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I enjoyed the cross culture detective novel.

Umiko Wada was a great heroine- her "everywoman" qualities made her a great subject for an unlikely detective, thrust into actual detection after the death of her employer. The storyline was fairly interesting but Umiko Wada was the star, here. Resourceful, practical and strangely heartbreaking- it is her quiet nature that disarms those she investigates but it is oddly sad. I was very taken with her.

I don't think I loved it, but I didn't dislike anything. It isn't as much of a rip-roarer as some thrillers, but the quiet, contemplative nature of this book meant I enjoyed it and would like to read about Umiko Wada again.

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Wada is a secretary for a private detective in Tokyo. She does the occasional more exciting role but on the whole she runs the office. Until one day her boss asks her to take on a bigger role involving a trip to London. In London Nick Miller has some questions concerning his Father following his Mother's recent death.
I found this book quite slow to begin with. Lots of traveling around, chance encounters and people talking. However I stuck with it and the book really started to take off. The slightly dull groundwork at the beginning was necessary for what turned out to be quite a complex book.
At the bottom of this story is corporate fraud which isn't my favourite theme in a mystery book. However this was a well constructed story and I did enjoy it. The characters were interesting and three dimensional. The plot was well thought out and hung together.
On the whole I enjoyed this book. I personally prefer the subject matter of Robert Goddard's earlier work. However, regardless of the subject matter, his books are well constructed and well worth reading.
I received a free copy of this book via Netgalley.

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Unfortunately I couldn’t get into this book at all, not my style of book at all, I am sure many people really enjoyed it

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‘The world went on its way. It was business as usual. Until it wasn’t.’

Umiko Wada, widowed, works as a secretary to Kazuto Kodaka, a private detective in Tokyo. Her mother wants her to remarry, but Wada is comfortable with the current orderliness of her life: managing her boss’s diary and keeping his paperwork under control. But then Kodaka takes on a case which changes everything. He is approached by a woman, Mimori Takenaga, who believes that her father was murdered in London in 1977.

As part of the investigation, Wada leaves Tokyo for London. She is to meet an Englishman, Martin Caldwell who may have some information.

And from here, the action escalates. Kodaka is killed, Wada’s contact in London goes missing. Wada is resourceful and follows leads to Devon and then to Iceland. There is more than one secret being hidden, and more than one person who will kill to make sure that those secrets remain hidden.

This is a complex thriller with several well-developed characters, some interesting plot twists, and plenty of action. Will Wada find the answers she is seeking? A dramatic, tense climax on a beach in Cornwall brings much of the story to a conclusion. But Wada has a taste for investigating now, and there are a couple of loose ends…

I thoroughly enjoyed this novel. I hope that Wada finally finished her reread of ‘The Makioka Sisters’.

Note: My thanks to NetGalley and Random House, UK for providing me with a free electronic copy of this book for review purposes.

Jennifer Cameron-Smith

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Robert Goddard's 'The Fine Art of Invisible Detection' was a great read, a thriller and detective mystery told in a gentle and linear way, so unusual these days. The main character, a Japanese lady, thrown unceremoniously in to being a private detective after the murder of her boss. She would not call herself a private detective though, as her role was secretary and PA until the 'hit'. Being invisible as she likes to think, maybe by age or stature, she uses to her advantage, blending in with crowds or not given a second glance when walking alone. It does give Goddard the chance to write in this unique style though. That's not to say it's without pace or excitement either. A story that goes from Japan to the UK, USA and Iceland and spans over forty years of friendships, there's plenty to intrigue. The ending is as enigmatic as the beginning but in a good way, maybe there's more to follow? For lovers of the genre, why not take a reading holiday from the usual and curl up with this, you won't be disappointed.

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Robert Goddard's latest thriller is an intricate and complicated piece of fiction, set primarily in Japan, London, Cornwall and Iceland. Middle aged widow Umika Wada is PA to PI Kazuro Kodaka at his one man detective agency in Tokyo, her husband a victim of the notorious sarin attack in 1995. Wada is an unflappable and stoic woman, a woman that barely makes an impression on others, rendering her well nigh invisible. It is these qualities that are to make her a rather good detective when she is unexpectedly sent to London by her boss on a case that turns out to be so dangerous that he is murdered in a hit and run incident. The agency had been hired by Mimori Takenaga to find out what really happened to her father who apparently committed suicide in London 27 years ago, Wada is to meet Martin Caldwell who claims to have information on this case, posing as their client.

41 year old Londoner Nick Miller is married to Kate, a private school art teacher whose mother, Caro, has recently died. Caldwell gets in touch with him, saying he has information on his father, the dead Geoff Nolan. Nick knows little of Nolan, other than Geoff never wanted to know anything about him, so he tries to find out more from his mother's partner, April. Nick's world is shattered when he finds out both his mother and April have lied to him about his parentage. When Caldwell fails to turn up to meet either Wada and Nick as agreed, both find themselves propelled into pursuing their inquiries, albeit separately, into a terrifying world where there is a rising tide of murdered people and gangsters. They find themselves going to Iceland to find Caldwell and look into the sinister Quartizon Corporation, and a strange auction that is to take place there, but will they survive?

Goddard excels in writing suspenseful thrillers, full of twists and turns, as is the case here, this is action packed and full of thrills that culminate in an exciting finale on a Cornish beach. Wada is an inspired creation, and developed so well, finding herself in an unfamiliar world of threats and constant danger, where the normal thing to do after her boss is murdered would have been to return to her life in Tokyo. However, she has a thread of steel and determination in her personality, plus she has a personal stake in the case with the sarin attacks, although not knowing what she is up against naturally means she make mistakes. What is clear is that she has what it takes to be a capable and competent detective, even if she doesn't recognise this in herself. This is a wonderfully complex and entertaining thriller that is likely to appeal to fans of Goddard and other crime and thriller readers. Many thanks to Random House Transworld for an ARC.

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I hadn’t read any books by Robert Goddard before and I was definitely impressed. He maintains good momentum within the two parallel narratives until they are finally brought together. I warmed to Wada instantly and loved her intrepid spirit, bravery and self awareness. Her ordinariness allowed her to have a cloak of invisibility (at least for a while) which meant she succeeded where others had failed. It took me longer to empathise with Nick but he did become important to me as the book progressed.

The plot was convincing, well paced and full of intriguing twists and turns as we travelled together from place to place. The ending did not disappoint- a sequel would be good although it did have a satisfying ending so not necessarily set up for that.

I have already researched a few more Goddard books to read. I liked the writing style and well drawn characters.

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Umiko Wada seems like everyones' idea of a typical Japanese housewife,quiet unassuming invisible but shes not a typical Japanese housewife.Her husband died as a result of being caught in the Tokyo subway Sarin Gas terrorist attack and was in a coma for 10 years before dying.She got a job as a secretary to a private detective and over time he began to take advantage of her invisibility to follow people or keep them under surveillance .
When a wealthy looking woman comes to engage her boss to look into a photograph of an Englishman who worked for her murdered father, that has been sent to her by a Martin Caldwell living in London Wada is persuaded to travel to London posing as the client to meet with the man and see what the info he has regarding the murder.
But Caldwell never comes to the meeting and then she hears her employer has been killed in a hit and run and she doesn't believe it was an accident. She is now unemployed but she liked her employer and determines to carry on, suspecting as her employer did, the shadow of Hiroji Nishizaki a businessman and for want of a better word gangster ,whose methods and ruthlessness are known to many but nobody has ever been able to obtain evidence or live long enough to talk.
Wada travels to the U.S and then Iceland searching for the man who was willing to talk and in the process keep one step ahead of a Japanese assassin, Her ability to remain invisible is severely tested.
Her story intertwines with that of Nick Miller a teacher who learns after his mothers death that the dead man he believed was his father is not and his real biological father seems to be the subject on a photograph sent to a woman in Japan .
The labyrinthine plot zips along at a cracking pace Nishizaki will stop at nothing to keep his secrets and has the necessary wealth and manpower to carry out his brutal and ruthless orders. But Wada has a determination that perhaps was only evident to her boss as she relentlessly follows the trail to a huge conspiracy that many are killed to protect.A great character and a great thriller.Mr Goddard has done it again.

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I loved the character of Wada- quiet and assuming but totally kickass! The journey to solve the mystery of a decades old suicide take Wada from Japan to London via Cornwall and iceland and the descriptions of all of the places feel very realistic, fromthe architecture to the incessant coach loads of tourists!
A gentle read with a very clever plot!

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I have read all of Robert Goddard books and this one continues his excellent work. The plot moves from Japan to the UK and cleverly knits together a story of intrigue, murder and loss starting in 1977. Thoroughly recommended.

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This was my first Robert Goddard book and I will definitely look out for more from this author.
I wasn't quite sure about the book at the beginning but quiet, courageous and almost invisible Wada reeled me in.
Wada is an unusual heroine; theres nothing showy about her but her determination and intelligence make her remarkable.
Wada works as a secretary for a private detective in Tokyo but he makes use of her ability to be invisible in some of his work. When he is asked to investigate the suicide if a Japanese businessman in the UK in the 1970s he sends Wada while he looks into another aspect of the case in Japan. Her investigations lead her to Iceland, Cambridge and Cornwall. She faces many adversaries and is in mortal danger on several occasions.
I'd like to think that there may be more stories about Wada but I have a feeling that all of the threads which normally make for a sequel (or even a series) have been neatly tied up. But I can hope.

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Well written story which kept me turning the page.

It is full of intrigue and the premise of a secretary to a private detective coming from Japan to London for a case is unusual.

Enjoyable read.

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Another book where the synopsis sounded quite intriguing but sadly I just couldn't get into the book at all and found myself more skim reading it than being fully engaged with the book.

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This was my first foray into the world of Robert Goddard. I must say if this is the norm, then I'm in! This book gripped me from the start. There are two parallel stories, one in Japan and one in London. In Japan, Wada works as the woman Friday in a detective agency. When a woman asks the agency to look into her fathers death and will involve a trip to London, she is asked to go as she speaks fluent English and can pose as the client..
Meanwhile Nick finds out that his past is not what he's led to believe after the death of his mother and begins a quest to find out the truth.
As the book progresses the storylines converge as the action moves between London, Iceland, Cambridge and Cornwall. Big business meets big gangsters amid dirty deals and a trail of deaths.
Very enjoyable.

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A Cracking Read from Beginning to End!

Robert Goddard could be described as a veteran British author having had numerous novels published from as far back as 1986. He has won many awards over the years culminating in the Cartier Diamond Dagger awarded by the Crime Writers Association for outstanding contribution to the crime fiction genre, received in 2019.

However even with these impressive credentials and a long back catalogue of work staring me in the face, I have to admit to never having read any of his books until being offered the opportunity to review this latest novel, but believe me when I say that this may be the first, but it will certainly not be the last!

“The Fine Art of Invisible Detection” is a total gem from beginning to end. Stretching from Tokyo to the United Kingdom, to the USA, to Iceland and back to the UK again, this global blockbuster will have you on the edge of your seat and probably awake late in the night wondering which way the story will turn next.

In Tokyo, Umiko Wada is a secretary to a private detective and enjoys the quiet life simply filing, making coffee and the usual administrative duties. But when her boss accepts a new case, a case which is so dangerous he loses his life in the investigation, Wada has to put simplicity behind her and travel to London to try and solve the case alone. Here she encounters danger at every turn - a far cry from her previous life.

Meanwhile in London, Nick Miller never knew his father, but by all accounts he hadn’t missed much. But when being informed by a friend of his late mother that there were things he needed to know, it set his mind racing. In his quest to find out more information he becomes inextricably linked with Wada and her investigation, leading to both of them being in fear for their lives.

This is a great story, superbly plotted, well researched and a total joy to read. It has to be said Robert Goddard is certainly a master of his craft. The story builds to an incredible climax leaving the reader desperately wanting more. I truly believe there is a sequel lying in the shadows with the further investigative adventures of Wada being something I would very much like to explore.

A very small criticism could be that the use of the many Japanese and Icelandic character names would possibly put some readers off, but that is about the only negative I can come up with and I would urge anyone considering reading to go ahead.

My great thanks go to Random House UK for offering me the opportunity to read and review this excellent work.

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Wada is assistant to a PI in Tokyo. Her boss takes on a case which has its roots in the distant past and she has to travel to London to follow it up. Nick is a young art teacher and when his mother dies she leaves him some clues as to who his father really was which he can't resist investigating. Wada and Nick are moving in the same direction and will find some serious money and ruthless people are involved. Old scores are going to be settled. Its a fast thriller , full of action. The plot is complex and its well written. Unputdownable.

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This was a very enjoyable read that was not particularly taxing so it was easy to sip in and out of the story. Very well written.

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I found this to be a very enjoyable read. The story which starts in Japan and moves continents to UK, Iceland and US cleverly unfolds along the way. Wada the main characte describes herself as someone who can go about unnoticed and is frequently invisible to the rest of the world. Her character develops throughout the story and I grew to like her and very much wanted her to succeed in her quest. I enjoyed the way all the characters developed gently throughout the course of the book. I thought they were interesting and the book was well written. I was very happy with the ending and look forward to reading more by this author.

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