Purloined Letters: Cultural Borrowing and Japanese Crime Literature, 1868–1937 and The Curious Casebook of Inspector Hanshichi: Detective Stories of Old Edo. Okamoto Kidō.Published in:2009Publication type:Book Review
Detective Fiction and the Rise of the Japanese Novel, 1880-1930.Published in:2013By:Blakesley, ElizabethPublication type:Book Review
Kawabata Yasunari's House of the sleeping beauties , retold: the case of Kirino Natsuo's Sleep in water, dream in ashes.Published in:2011By:Matsugu, MihoPublication type:Literary Criticism
Narrating the detective: nansensu, silent film benshi performances and Tokugawa Musei's absurdist detective fiction.Published in:Japan Forum, 2009, v. 21, n. 1, p. 75, doi. 10.1080/09555800902857070By:Ōmori, KyōkoPublication type:Article
"Readers" and "Writers" in Japanese Detective Fiction, 1920s–30s: Tracing Shifts from Edogawa Rampo's "Beast in the Shadows" to The Demon of the Lonely Isle.Published in:Humanities (2076-0787), 2023, v. 12, n. 1, p. 12, doi. 10.3390/h12010012By:Komatsu, Shoko;Siercks, EricPublication type:Article
Science Fiction as Subversive Hypothesis: henkaku tantei shōsetsu between Entertainment and Enlightenment.Published in:Japanese Studies, 2011, v. 31, n. 2, p. 267, doi. 10.1080/10371397.2011.591775By:Suter, RebeccaPublication type:Article