
In the blistering heat of a 1914 London summer, an American visitor named Jeff West finds himself navigating the city’s bustling streets, from the soda stalls crowded with tourists to the cool refuge of the Carlton Hotel’s breakfast room. While sipping strawberries and scanning the Daily Mail, he discovers a peculiar feature of the paper — the “Suffering Column,” a public forum where strangers post love notes, warnings, and odd proclamations. The column’s blend of heartfelt confessions and bizarre alerts offers a vivid snapshot of Edwardian society’s hidden desires and anxieties.
Captivated, West devotes his mornings to reading each new entry, from grand romantic verses to cryptic threats about mermaids and duels. The column becomes a mirror reflecting the city’s restless spirit, and when a striking American woman joins him at the hotel table, her fascination with the same postings hints at deeper connections and untold stories. Their chance encounter suggests that the seemingly trivial messages may conceal secrets that could ripple through the lives of those who read them.
Language
ja
Duration
~1 hours (68K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Kiyotoshi Hayashi
Release date
2012-03-28
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1884–1933
Best remembered as the creator of Charlie Chan, this American novelist and playwright turned a trip to Hawaiʻi into one of early 20th-century popular fiction’s most famous detective series. His work mixed mystery, travel, and stage-ready dialogue in a way that helped it move easily from page to screen.
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