(4.5 stars) Author James Church takes his series of mysteries set in North Korea in new directions with this surprising fourth novel. Church, a former intelligence officer with the U.S. government, has spent much time in Asia, and presumably North Korea, and he makes a foray here into speculative fiction-not speculating on life in North Korea in the far distant future, but in the very immediate future. When this novel opens, it is 2016, and Inspector O, the iconoclastic officer who has been the fascinating main character of the three previous novels, has been happily retired from action, living in blessed isolation on a mountain top. Suddenly, he is brought back to Pyongyang for a special assignment.
Church uses a great deal of (rare) tongue-in-cheek humor and irony here to show how much Pyongyang has changed since O's retirement five years ago. He doesn't understand the concept of tipping, of "turndown service" in his hotel, or the expression "Pleasant dreams." He is even more mystified by his assignment to work with, and take orders from, Major Kim from South Korea, who is in North Korea to bring permanent co-operation between the countries. As confused as O is, however, so, too, is the reader, who learns along with O what circumstances have brought about such momentous changes. O's first assignment is to go to Macau to investigate the murder of a woman in a hotel room. The "killer" has been apprehended, but it is essential to the future of North Korea that this man not be the killer. O's assignment is to wipe out any tracks that might connect this man to the crime. Though no one will say who he is, he is supposedly so highly placed in the North Korean government that if he is compromised in any way, the country will not be able to bring about the transition to a more cooperative state.
The plot becomes complicated as the author reveals through O's activities that North Korea has now become so weakened that the Chinese plan to move into North Korea to prevent further collapse. The South Koreans are determined to keep them out. At the same time, the Japanese are on the east coast of the country, waiting to make their move, and the Russians are in the northeast. Some of the old guard in North Korea want to maintain old ways and are willing to fight to ensure that, and some of the people with whom O has had previous relationships, some of them living in hiding or exile, are now ready to return. Murders occur to complicate all the negotiations, what is said to be real may not be real, and the motives ascribed to various factions may be wrong.
As in all the other novels in this series, O is not always sure what is going on, and his ignorance and confusion parallel those of the reader. Though this novel is particularly complicated, O himself becomes more human, more sympathetic, and more able to keep the reader interested and committed to knowing the outcome. For readers who are willing to set aside the norms of mysteries that have a predictable beginning, middle, and end and are willing to accept the uncertainties required by Church's novels, this one starring Inspector O is one of the most interesting and unusual mysteries in the genre today. Mary Whipple