Review – Strange Buildings

Posted March 8, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 1 Comment

Review – Strange Buildings

Strange Buildings

by Uketsu

Genres: Horror, Mystery
Pages: 384
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

Eleven strange buildings. One terrible secret.

A lonely hut in the woods.
A murder house.
A hidden chamber.
A mysterious shrine.
A home in flames.
A nightmarish prison…

Each of the buildings in this book tells a chilling story. Each one is part of a puzzle.

Look closely… and you’ll see that everything is connected.

All leading to a revelation so horrifying you won’t want to believe it.

Millions of readers have become addicted to solving Uketsu’s dark mysteries.

Strange Buildings is the strangest, and darkest, of them all.

Uketsu’s Strange Buildings is a follow-up to Strange Houses: I don’t think you need to start with the former, but there are several references to it, and since the mysteries are similar in principle, it can help put together the whys and wherefores of the cases presented in this one. I liked Strange Houses quite a bit; I think Strange Buildings is a bit looser, with a higher page count used to detail eleven cases and then extensively unpack how they relate to each other.

While the mystery in Strange Houses wasn’t exactly sunshine and daisies (houses built in order to facilitate murder and child abuse), it’s worth noting that things are a bit darker again in this one, with themes like child prostitution, children being coerced into murdering family members, cults and brainwashing, infidelity, and other child abuse into the bargain.

So… a light romp this isn’t, though it’s a little disconnected from the horrors by the narration, which is a bit journalistic in angle. It follows the same format as Strange Houses, mostly, presenting floorplans for you to figure out what’s strange… though I found them a bit less obscure, maybe? I kind of figured out how things were lining up and the links between the mysteries, so that helped — after a few, it becomes obvious what the key factors to consider are.

It’s not really about characterisation or anything, so beware of that going into the story: there are two characters which recur from the previous book, but they’re mostly an excuse to gather the stories and a way to dissect them for the reader and finally reveal the truths behind the weird floorplans.

It was still a pretty quick read, though probably about double the length of time I took to read Strange Houses. I’m still enjoying the format very much, and looking forward to what’s next — Strange Maps, apparently!

Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)

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