The puzzle box A novel

Danielle Trussoni

Book - 2024

"It is the Year of the Wood Dragon, and the ingenious Mike Brink has been invited to Tokyo, Japan, to open the legendary Dragon Box. The box was constructed during one of Japan's most tumultuous periods, when the samurai class was disbanded and the shogun lost power. In this moment of crisis, Emperor Meiji locked a priceless Imperial secret in the Dragon Box. Only two people knew how to open the box--Meiji and the box's sadistic constructor--and both died without telling a soul what was inside or how to open it. Every twelve years since then, in the Year of the Dragon, the Imperial family holds a clandestine contest to open the box. It is devilishly difficult, filled with tricks, booby traps, poisons, and mind-bending twists.... Every puzzle master who has attempted to open it has died in the process. But Brink is not just any puzzle master. He may be the only person alive who can crack it. His determination is matched only by that of two sisters, descendants of an illustrious samurai clan, who will stop at nothing to claim the treasure. Brink's quest launches him on a breakneck adventure across Japan, from the Imperial Palace in Tokyo to the pristine forests of Hakone to an ancient cave in Kyushu. In the process, he discovers the power of Meiji's hidden treasure, and--more crucially--the true nature of his extraordinary talent"--

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Subjects
Genres
Action and adventure fiction
Thrillers (Fiction)
Detective and mystery fiction
Published
New York : Random House [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Danielle Trussoni (-)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
324 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780593595329
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

In this sequel to the magnificent The Puzzle Master (2023), Trussoni drastically increases the stakes for her protagonist, the world-famous puzzle constructor, Mike Brink. Mike's decision to try to solve one of the toughest puzzles in the world is the jumping-off point for a breathlessly paced and nail-bitingly suspenseful race between Mike and some very clever and highly dangerous adversaries. Readers who left The Puzzle Master with questions about Brink's astonishing puzzle-solving abilities will have some of them answered here, as the author goes into quite a bit of detail about the injury to Mike's brain and its unusual, sometimes frightening consequences; this is as much a story about Mike's road to making peace with his unique condition as it is about him trying to solve a fiendishly clever puzzle. The book can be read as a stand-alone, which means new readers can jump right in, although it's highly likely they'll then want to circle back and read the earlier book. A first-rate thriller. More, please!

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Puzzle savant Mike Brink attempts to unearth a 19th-century Japanese secret in Trussoni's astonishing sequel to The Puzzle Master. In 1868, Emperor Meiji hired a blind mechanical master, Ogawa Ryuichi, to build a lethal contraption accessible only once every 12 years--on the full moon in the Year of the Dragon--to house crucial imperial secrets. In the decades since, Meiji's descendants have hosted regular competitions to open the Dragon Box, but no one has ever survived the attempt. In the present, the imperial family has hired Brink to come to Tokyo for the job. Meanwhile, a long-hidden group of female samurai newly aligned with Brink's nemesis, Jameson Sedge, becomes interested in claiming what's inside the box. The narrative's solitary puzzle-solving and tense espionage are equally thrilling, while Trussoni's depiction of Brink as both a puzzle-solving genius and someone learning to trust his own abilities lends the plot surprising emotional depth. Best of all, the puzzle-solving sends Brink on an immersive sprint through contemporary and historical Japan, with plenty of shrewdly delivered trivia and thematically rewarding solutions along the way. This clever and satisfying novel cements Mike Brink as an action hero for the ages. Agent: Susan Golomb, Writers House. (Oct.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Puzzle genius Mike Brink, invited to Tokyo to open a booby-trapped puzzle box containing imperial secrets, risks becoming its latest victim. No run-of-the-mill puzzle expert, Brink can suss out seemingly impossible solutions with the savant syndrome and synesthesia he acquired as the result of a freakish head injury during high school. But his "nuclear brainpower" intensifies his need "to put [himself] in psychic danger to feel alive." In Japan, he feels as alive as he ever will, knowing that all six puzzle masters who attempted to open the deviously designed Dragon Box died trying. Constructed in 1868, "a time of unimaginable upheaval in Japan," it is equipped with such charming features as a guillotine to cut off a misplaced finger and a lethal aerosol spray containing arsenic. But Brink's tense adventure, which culminates in a cave on the island of Kyushu, "where the sun disappeared," only begins with his efforts to open the box. He is pursued by dark forces who are so desperate to keep him from its secrets--which are said to hold a key to the future of humanity--that they had his doctor-mentor in America murdered. At the center of the drama are two estranged sisters, one Brink's ally and the other part of the opposing faction. In different ways, both women, descendants of a samurai family, are beholden to Jameson Sedge, a tech billionaire who set up Brink's ex-girlfriend for murder in Trussoni's previous novel,The Puzzle Master (2023). Though he died by suicide, his downloaded consciousness is "digitally alive." The sequel takes a while to get going, but once its hero starts applying his special gifts, learning things he has kept secret from himself, the pages turn and the suspense kicks in. A smart, captivating novel about unraveling secrets. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

1 Ise Grand Shrine, Japan February 23, 2024 The Year of the Wood Dragon The Shinto priest runs to the temple, lifting the hem of his robes to keep from tripping. There isn't time to waste. The first light of dawn is falling through the trees, casting long shadows over fresh-­fallen snow. Soon, his brothers will enter the sanctuary and sit before the shrine in prayer. Soon, the most important day of his life will begin, and with it the sacred duty he's spent years preparing to fulfill. The priest shakes the snow from his robe, bows, and steps into the temple. Incense, thick and fragrant, fills the air. Beyond the shoji doors, candles flicker at the altar, their light bending over copper vessels and pooling over the tatami, leaving him with an impulse to fall to his knees and pray. It's instinctual. Ingrained. Every day for the past twelve years he's arrived at the temple before sunrise to sit in meditation before the altar. He's never questioned his duty--­not why he's there, not what would happen if he failed. None of them did. And yet, over the years he'd gathered fragments of information about the precious object he guarded, whispers of the lore surrounding the emperor's Dragon Box. He heard that, during the war, the emperor hid the box to protect it from American bombs. In the years since, it had moved to shrines across Japan--­Ise Grand Shrine, Atsuta Shrine, the Three Shrines Sanctuary at the Imperial Palace--­where priests kept watch day and night, guarding it with their lives. He'd heard rumors that the box hid a treasure, perhaps an ancient text, maybe even an artifact belonging to the imperial family itself. He'd heard of its dangers: One look will blind you; one touch will burn your fingers to the bone. He believed the warnings. Some decades before, a young priest had died cleaning the altar, and no doctor could explain why. The truth was not meant for men like the priest. And so he hadn't asked questions. One indiscretion, the slightest capitulation to curiosity, could be disastrous. Bells ring in the distance, calling the priests to prayer. The first ray of sunlight falls through the shrine and spills over the floor, illuminating the altar. The seconds rush past, faster and faster, outpacing him. He must hurry before the others arrive. Now is the moment. Kneeling before the altar, he opens the doors of the tabernacle and there it is: the Dragon Box. Large, the size of two outstretched hands, the box is made of bands of hardwood expertly cut and joined to create a single block. On its surface, composed of curls of inlaid wood, is the twisting shape of a dragon. The priest sees only the surface, but inside the box, wrapped in layers of deadly traps, lies an ancient enigma, one that has waited thousands of years to be solved. His instructions are clear. He must wrap the box in a square of silk and carry it to Tokyo. He must not touch it; he must not even look at it. He knows this as well as he knows his norito. And yet, as he gazes down at the Dragon Box, his resolve wavers. Could it be true what they say? One look will blind you; one touch will burn your fingers to the bone. He runs a finger over the surface of the wood, feeling the subtle ridges of the jointing, seeking out an opening, slipping a fingernail into a groove, applying the slightest pressure. The razor cuts quick, the blade hot and bright as fire, and draws blood. Wiping the blood away, the priest wraps the box in silk, ties the ceremonial knot, and tucks it under his arm. Bowing to the altar, to the growing sunlight, to all that he serves--­the kami, the emperor, the mountains, the seas--­he turns and rushes away. But already, a seed of poison has dropped roots in his bloodstream. Before the sun will set over the shrine, before the priest fully understands the terrible mistake he's made, he will be dead. Excerpted from The Puzzle Box: A Novel by Danielle Trussoni All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.