WILL STONE fact-checks the colourful life of Ozzy Osbourne

SEICHO MATSUMOTO was one of Japan’s best known and most significant 20th-century crime writers, credited with leading the break from so-called “puzzle fiction” – locked room mysteries, traditional whodunnits and the like – and instead taking the genre towards social commentary and psychological observation.
Point Zero (Bitter Lemon, £9.99), first published in 1959, is amongst his key novels.
Its 26-year-old protagonist marries, via a matchmaker, an advertising salesman 10 years her senior. As Teiko gets to know him a little, her hope grows that it’s a partnership which could work for both of them. But then, after only a couple of weeks of marriage, her husband sets out from Tokyo on a business trip to the north – and vanishes. As Teiko investigates she finds a tragedy with its roots in the post-war US occupation, and the ways in which women, only a generation before her own, survived both war and peace.

MAT COWARD presents a peculiar cabbage that will only do its bodybuilding once the summer dies down

A heatwave, a crimewave, and weird bollocks in Aberdeen, Indiana horror, and the end of the American Dream

A corrupted chemist, a Hampstead homosexual and finely observed class-conflict at The Bohemia

Beet likes warmth, who doesn’t, so attention to detail is required if you’re to succeed, writes MAT COWARD