• Yakudoshi

  • Age of Calamity
  • By: Chris McKinney
  • Narrated by: Zion Jang
  • Length: 5 hrs and 36 mins
  • 4.0 out of 5 stars (1 rating)

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Yakudoshi  By  cover art

Yakudoshi

By: Chris McKinney
Narrated by: Zion Jang
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Publisher's summary

In Japan, people believe that there are years in a person’s life that are bad luck. For men, the worst is 41. It is yakudoshi. It is the age of calamity.

Bruce Blanc, fresh off a nine-year prison jolt and back on the streets of Honolulu, is about to turn 41. He finds himself embroiled in urban Honolulu’s Asian American nightlife. Kids lighting up the night with cocaine and killing daylight with Xanax. Girls who spend more time looking at themselves in the mirror than Snow White’s stepmom; the older divorcees with means who prey on them. And 90-pound female drug lords and the cops in love with them. A new bar is opening or shutting down daily. The foundation of a new high-rise is being poured every day. This is not your mom’s Hawai‘i. It’s building up, not building out.

When Bruce finds out that during his incarceration, his son, who he has never met, has gone missing, he takes on drug lords, police, and anyone else who stands in the way of his discovery of the truth. Yakudoshi: Age of Calamity is about a changing world and a man who is trying to change with it. It is about how a father’s love can bend his code. But most of all, it’s about how the roughest year in a person’s life can sometimes be the most enlightening one.

©2016 Chris McKinney (P)2023 Audible, Inc.

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Very Good Read!

This was good, not as awesome as his other books, but I liked it. Imagine coming from a bloodline of what seems like totally dysfunctional family members and wondering which is worse, your paternal or maternal side? This is sort of the story, but it isn't completely cut and dried, there are twists and turns, rollovers, deaths and births. It's family on a different scale from what you may have experienced. What I have always loved about McKinney's books are his detailed descriptions of Hawaii and her people. I've spent so much time there, both living and visiting, that reading his stories are like a homecoming of sorts. McKinney's Hawaii isn't all about the tourist traps, rich people or perfect life. His Hawaii takes you to dark corners, and places you more than likely will never see as a visitor, but the grit and tenacity the locals have in these spaces are unmatched.

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