
— Crime Fiction Lover—Bookwormex 1995, Japan struggles with a severe economic crisis. Xavier Douterloigne, the son of a Belgian diplomat, returns to Hiroshima, where he spent his youth, to come to terms with the death of his sister. Inspector Takeda finds a deformed baby lying dead at the foot of the Peace Monument, a reminder of Hiroshima's war history. A Yakuza-lord, rumored to be the incarnation of the Japanese demon Rokurobei, mercilessly defends his criminal empire against his daughter Mitsuko, whom he considers insane. And the punk author Reizo, obsessed by the ultra-nationalistic ideals of his literary idol Mishima, recoils at nothing to write the novel that will "overturn Japan's foundations".... Hiroshima’s indelible war-past simmers in the background of this ultra-noir novel. Clandestine experiments conducted by Japanese Secret Service Unit 731 during WWII are unveiled and leave a sinister stain on the reputation of the imperial family and Japanese society. "Van Laerhoven’s Return to Hiroshima might well be the most complex Flemish crime novel ever written." — Fred Braekman, De Morgen, Belgium "A complex and grisly literary crime story which among other things refers to the effects of the nuclear attack on Japan." — Linda Asselbergs, Weekend, Belgium "Van Laerhoven skillfully creates the right atmosphere for this drama. As a consequence the whole book is shrouded in a haze of doom. Is this due to Hiroshima itself, a place burdened with a terrible past? Or is the air of desperation typical for our modern society? " — Jan Haeverans, Focus Magazine, Belgium "Van Laerhoven won the Hercule Poirot Prize with Baudelaire’s Revenge. You’ll understand why after reading Return to Hiroshima. " — Eva Krap, Banger Sisters "Author Bob Van Laerhoven pulls together an outlandish ensemble cast of peculiar personalities; fierce, fragile individuals who claw their way under your skin. Their predicaments –and their potential to unleash chaos – drag you into the narrative’s darkening abyss." — Murder Mayhem & More
Author

Flemish author of more than 40 books. You'll find them on my website in three languages: Dutch-French-English. Currently published in The Netherlands, Belgium, USA, Canada, France, Italy, Russia, Brazil, Argentine, Germany, Sweden. Winner of the Hercule Poirot Prize for the best crime novel of the year 2007 with "De Wraak van Baudelaire" (Baudelaire's Revenge). Baudelaire's Revenge is published in the US by Pegasus Books in hardcover in 2014. The paperback edition was published in 2015. "Baudelaire's Revenge" won the USA BEST BOOK AWARD 2014 in the category: Fiction:mystery/suspense. In April 2015 the Anaphora Literary Press published the collection of short stories, "Dangerous Obsessions," in paperback and e-book version in the US, Canada, Australia, and the UK. The collection is translated and published in Italy, Brazil, Sweden, and Spain. "Dangerous Obsessions" was hailed as "best short story collection of 2015" by the San Diego Book Review. Crime Wave Press (Hong Kong) published the novel "Return to Hiroshima" in May 2018. The quality English book site Murder, Mayhem & More chose "Return to Hiroshima" as one of the ten best international crime books of 2018. Readers' Favorite rated the novel Five Stars. In 2018, The Anaphora Literary Press published "Heart Fever," the second collection of short stories. With this collection, Laerhoven became the only non-American author to be selected as a finalist in the Silver Falchion 2018 Award, in the category "short stories collections." In August 2021, Next Chapter published the third novel in English: "Alejandro's Lie," set in a fictitious Latin-American dictatorship. "Alejandro's Lie" is voted "Best Political Thriller 2021" in the Best Thriller Book Awards 2021 on BestThriller.com