IJ Parker Books in Order
Explore IJ Parker books in order, with Sugawara Akitada and Hollow Reed reading lists, quick summaries, series background, and start-here guidance.
Last updated: July 6, 2026
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Publication Order
25 books
Rashomon Gate
by IJ Parker
2002
A blackmail case at the Imperial University gives Akitada a break from his dull post at the Ministry of Justice. Then a girl is murdered, an old man vanishes, and scholarly gossip opens onto something far more dangerous.
The Hell Screen
by IJ Parker
2003
Riding home to his dying mother, Akitada stops at a temple where a painted hell screen and a woman's scream disturb the night. The murder that follows draws him into family bitterness, old lies, and a case uncomfortably close to home.
The Dragon Scroll
by IJ Parker
2005
On his first major assignment, young Akitada is sent to distant Kazusa to learn why tax convoys keep vanishing. Bandits, corrupt officials, and a suspiciously wealthy temple make his apprenticeship in justice a rough one.
Black Arrow
by IJ Parker
2006
Appointed provisional governor of frozen Echigo, Akitada faces a hostile province, a rash of murders, and unrest that could explode into open revolt. As winter closes in, an old local secret proves deadlier than the snow.
Island of Exiles
by IJ Parker
2007
To solve the poisoning of an exiled prince on Sado, Akitada goes undercover as a prisoner. The disguise drops him into a world of brutal guards and hidden politics, while Tora races to find him before it is too late.
The Convict's Sword
by IJ Parker
2009
Akitada investigates the murder of a man condemned to exile for a crime he did not commit. At the same time, Tora looks into the death of a blind street singer, and both cases lead to buried histories.
The Fires of the Gods
by IJ Parker
2010
Akitada is demoted by court enemies, then finds himself suspected of murdering the powerful official behind his downfall. To clear his name, he must investigate in defiance of the people who most want him destroyed.
The Masuda Affair
by IJ Parker
2010
Grieving the death of his young son, Akitada becomes determined to rescue an abused child he meets during a festival night. The search leads him into the secrets of the Masuda family, while Tora battles troubles of his own.
Death on an Autumn River
by IJ Parker
2011
Traveling to Naniwa to investigate officials suspected of helping pirates, Akitada becomes haunted by the recovery of a drowned girl. Sabotage, kidnappings, and river trade corruption turn a routine inquiry into a deadly struggle.
Dream of a Spring Night
by IJ Parker
2011
Fourteen-year-old Toshiko is sent to the women's quarters of Emperor Go-Shirakawa, where her voice, beauty, and innocence draw dangerous attention. Her forbidden bond with the physician Sadahira begins a family saga set against the fading old order.
Dust Before the Wind
by IJ Parker
2012
War scatters Toshiko, Sadahira, and Hachiro across a brutal country where each must survive alone. As battles widen and old loyalties break, the Yamada family's fight becomes a story of endurance, loss, and impossible choices.
The Emperor's Woman
by IJ Parker
2012
Months after a woman meant for the emperor dies below a cliff, Akitada is drawn into the buried scandal when his friend is accused of treason. Another killing in the entertainment quarter deepens the danger on every side.
The Sword Master
by IJ Parker
2012
Hachiro grows from a brutalized street child into a feared swordsman, still driven by anger and the need for revenge. War, love, and a secret enemy force him to decide what kind of man his skill has made.
Death of a Doll Maker
by IJ Parker
2013
A dubious promotion sends Akitada to Kyushu, where illegal trade, treason, and a vanished predecessor are waiting. When a doll maker's Chinese wife is brutally killed and Tora disappears, the new posting becomes a trap.
The Left-Handed God
by IJ Parker
2013
In 1763 Germany, wounded veteran Franz von Langsdorff returns home with a dead man's letter and more enemies than he knows. He and his sister Augusta are swept into a dark mix of family pressure, assassination plots, and dangerous secrets.
The Crane Pavilion
by IJ Parker
2014
Broken by the loss of his wife and newborn son, Akitada drifts back to Kyoto and reluctantly takes up two troubling cases. An apparent suicide and a murder accusation against a blind masseuse force him back toward the living.
The Old Men of Omi
by IJ Parker
2014
Still recovering in body and spirit, Akitada is sent to Omi to settle a bitter dispute between powerful temples. Murder turns a political mission into a closer look at piety, land, and the people profiting from both.
The Assassin's Daughter
by IJ Parker
2015
A fifteen-year-old political murder returns to trouble Akitada when his wife's brother wants to marry the killer's daughter. Reopening the case threatens friendships, family peace, and more than one carefully buried secret.
The Island of the Gods
by IJ Parker
2015
During his uneasy last year as governor of Mikawa, Akitada faces rumors of piracy, a murdered lord's daughter, and an investigator from the capital intent on ruining him. A roadside inquiry uncovers a wider conspiracy and fresh danger.
The Shrine Virgin
by IJ Parker
2015
Akitada is sent on a secret mission to locate a missing imperial princess serving as the shrine virgin at Ise. Bandits, fresh murders, and official silence turn a delicate assignment into a hard road case.
Ikiryo: Vengeance and Justice
by IJ Parker
2017
Back in the capital, Akitada is pulled between a poisoning case, a courtesan accused of murder, and a powerful noble said to be tormented by a vengeful spirit. Personal scandal and political danger make every step riskier.
The Kindness of Dragons
by IJ Parker
2018
Hoping for peace after his marriage breaks apart, Akitada takes his children to a remote mountain district. Instead he finds killings, arson, missing girls, and a local web of fear that leaves no one easy to trust.
The Nuns of Nara
by IJ Parker
2019
What should have been a quiet trip to Nara becomes deadly when Akitada is sent to find a missing former concubine turned nun. Murders inside a temple community turn a discreet errand into a dangerous investigation.
Massacre at Shirakawa
by IJ Parker
2020
A lone warrior massacres a noble gathering and leaves Akitada's closest friend among the dead. As he probes the slaughter and Tora works a second murder case, the trail leads toward buried grudges and conspiracy at the heart of the court.
The Lucky Gods of Otsu
by IJ Parker
2021
Akitada is already under pressure from a hostile new superior, family troubles, and money worries when an old friend's sudden death looks like murder. Chasing the truth draws him toward two killers and a fight for his career and life.
Where should I start?
If you want the true beginning of Akitada's story: The Dragon Scroll → Rashomon Gate → Black Arrow
If you like court intrigue and classic mystery plotting: Rashomon Gate → The Hell Screen → The Convict's Sword
If you want Parker's later, darker Akitada novels: The Nuns of Nara → Massacre at Shirakawa → The Lucky Gods of Otsu
If you want her non-detective historical fiction: Dream of a Spring Night → Dust Before the Wind → The Sword Master
Author bio
I.J. Parker was born Ingrid J. Parker in Munich in 1936 and grew up in Germany. Her academic path took her from the University of Munich to graduate study in Texas and New Mexico, and that mix of European roots and American academic life stayed with her. She later became an American novelist, but the professor came first.
For many years Parker taught English and foreign languages at Norfolk State University in Virginia. Teaching was not a detour from the fiction. In a very real way, it was the road to it. Her interest in literature led her into research on classical Japanese writing and, from there, into the world of eleventh-century Japan.
That accident changed everything.
While digging into the period for professional reasons, Parker started imagining crimes, officials, servants, and families moving through that world. She has also spoken about the influence of Robert van Gulik's Judge Dee novels, another example of a writer using deep historical knowledge to build mysteries. Parker's first Akitada short story, Instruments of Murder, appeared in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine in 1997. A few years later, Akitada's First Case won the Shamus Award for Best P.I. Short Story.
Her best-known work is the long-running Sugawara Akitada series, set in Heian Japan. In books like Rashomon Gate, The Dragon Scroll, and The Convict's Sword, Parker follows an underpaid government official who keeps getting pulled into murder, corruption, and political trouble. Readers tend to come for the mysteries, but many stay for the texture of everyday life, the travel, the bureaucracy, and the sense that justice is never simple.
Akitada is not a swaggering hero.
That is one reason the series feels so human. Parker likes people caught between duty and private feeling, rank and poverty, law and mercy. Her fiction returns again and again to families under strain, clever servants, stubborn investigators, vulnerable women, and the way power can distort even the most refined court life. She writes about old Japan, but the emotions are rarely distant.
She did not stay in one lane, either. With Dream of a Spring Night and Dust Before the Wind, the Hollow Reed books move into a broader family saga set during the violent end of the imperial age. The Sword Master circles back to that same world through the life of Hachiro, a damaged boy who grows into a formidable swordsman. And in The Left-Handed God, Parker shifts completely, writing a thriller set in eighteenth-century Germany, the country where her own story began.
What ties these books together is not one formula. It is Parker's patience with the past. She likes systems, customs, roads, paperwork, temples, households, meals, and all the small rules that shape a life. Just as important, she understands outsiders, people with learning but not enough power, people trying to do the decent thing in worlds that do not reward decency.
After retiring from university teaching, Parker kept writing from Virginia, where she had long been based. Later in her career she also turned to self-publishing, which let her continue the Akitada novels on her own terms. One small detail from her biographical notes says a lot: one of her hobbies is gardening. It fits. Her books have the same patient, careful quality, built season by season, with a lot of quiet work behind the scenes.
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