Penance Audiobook By Kanae Minato cover art

Penance

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Penance

By: Kanae Minato
Narrated by: Karissa Vacker
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About this listen

The tense, chilling story of four women haunted by a childhood trauma.

When they were children, Sae, Maki, Akiko, and Yuko were tricked into separating from their friend Emily by a mysterious stranger. Then the unthinkable occurred: Emily was found murdered hours later.

Sae, Maki, Akiko, and Yuko weren't able to accurately describe the stranger's appearance to the police after Emily's body was discovered. Asako, Emily's mother, cursed the surviving girls, vowing that they would pay for her daughter's murder.

Like Confessions, Kanae Minato's award-winning, internationally best-selling debut, Penance is a dark and voice-driven tale of revenge and psychological trauma that will leave listeners breathless.

©2017 Kanae Minato (P)2017 Hachette Audio
Detective Fiction International Mystery & Crime Mystery Psychological Thriller & Suspense Women Sleuths Women's Fiction Suspense Stranger
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Critic reviews

"Moving, tension-filled...Minato has crafted an unnerving tale of tragedy, guilt, and penance." ( Publishers Weekly)
"Kanae Minato is a brilliant storyteller." (Emily St. John Mandel, New York Times best-selling author of Station Eleven)
"Minato's simple, clear voice highlights the stories' psychological intensity, and themes of powerlessness evolving to strength, duty, and redemption create layers of interest that are perfect for book-group dissection." ( Booklist)

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The story was a little circular, a little bit complicated with some of the characters but overall, it was a good adventure.

Another great kanae minoto work

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... or the Kiyoshi Kurosawa mini-series adaption of this book. Like Confessions, the story's told by multiple narrators. Each is haunted by a tragic event in the past. An event they are never able to escape, especially since one narrator never lets them forget it. The premise is intriguing, but the multiple narratives never come together as a whole, they way they did in Confessions.

The reader's good, for the most part, but does mispronounce Japanese words now and then.

Not as good as Confessions...

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It’s a good psychological book but lacking in the thriller aspect. It’s a lot of unnecessary information about the characters although I like how it was connected in the end. Though without the filler we could have arrived at the conclusion much faster.

We’ll written, but it’s no Confessions

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I would usually not read a book like this, but it came recommended to me, so I wanted to give it a try. I was immediately pulled into this fascinating story after listening to only a few pages. Five 10 year old girls venture out for an afternoon of play at the school grounds when a murder of one of the girls occurs. So many twists and turns to this intriguing plot, which deeply affects the remaining four girl's lives for the next fifteen years. The story is very well written. The narrator really brings the story to life. Her narrative of each character's journey in coping with this unsolved murder is compelling.

Intriguing Book!

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Keeps you enthralled to the last few minutes. This is one of her best to date. Intricate and absorbing. Do not miss

Would make outstanding movie

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The complexity of crime and abuse extends well beyond the direct victim of the atrocity and the perpetrator. This psychological and actual reality is vividly elaborated in this gripping tale. Well-told
and skillfully narrated, the surprising conclusion is nonetheless logical and heart-wrenching. A great read with pentrating insights into the subtle class layering of contemporary Japanese society.

The World of Witness and Victim

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Minato does it again with Penance. Her ability to go between the different characters and tell how they have been impacted by a single event shows her ability to handle the head-space of these distinct and different voices easily. While not as gut wrenching or with the same flare as her first piece, Confessions, Penance is an excellent examination of how different people process a single event (a murder) and what it is like to be linked by such an event. This is not a "who done it" sort of mystery, as it spends more time focusing on how the characters process the murder rather than the investigation. If you are a fan of psychological stories, I highly recommend it to you.

Haunting and Compelling

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​I was hoping that "Penance" would be another "Confessions", but there was no follow through. The murder mystery didn't go anywhere in my opinion and unlike Kanae Minato's first book, there wasn't any morbid twist and turns. I was disappointed with the reader also. Instead of having a Japanese accent, Karissa Vacker had a southern accent and she sounded like that she grew up with apple pies.

​Didn't Really Follow Through

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