
Mystery Resolved: Myrrh Garden
About This Novel
Dr. He Xingpi, a doctor of anthropology, collected media reports, court records and information disclosed by the police to retell eight 100% true cases. The crime may be bizarre, but the motive often represents the universal desires in human nature. A corpse suddenly appeared in the urinal of a female teacher's dormitory in Fukushima Prefecture, Japan. Who is the murderer? Why did serial killer Lee Chun-jae, the prototype of "Memories of Murder", become a demon? What kind of torture did Zhang Yingying, a Chinese student who disappeared in the United States, endure before her death? Why are Chris, the wife-killer, and Nora, the matricide suspect, so cruel to those close to them? ... From these cases, we can see all kinds of human nature: lies, betrayal, jealousy, fear, as well as persistence in love and confidence in justice.
What Readers Think
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Official(1)Scraped 21d ago
Myrrh Garden
Personally, I like the analysis of the Hwaseong serial murder case the most, because after reading Memories of Murder, it was a coincidence that the case was solved in 2019. People are inherently curious animals. Is the first Japanese case an urban legend?
Rating
Community(0)
Official(1)Scraped 21d ago
Myrrh Garden
Personally, I like the analysis of the Hwaseong serial murder case the most, because after reading Memories of Murder, it was a coincidence that the case was solved in 2019. People are inherently curious animals. Is the first Japanese case an urban legend?
