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DescriptionThe setting is Hong Kong, 1963. The action spans scarcely more than a week, but these are the days of high adventure: from kidnapping and murder to financial double-dealing and natural catastrophes?fire, flood, and landslide. Yet they are days filled as well with all the mystery and romance of Hong Kong?the heart of Asia ?rich in every trade... money, flesh, opium, power. If you like this title, you might also likeā¦
ExcerptsFrom the book ...Chapter One
8:45 p.m.: The police officer was leaning against one corner of the information counter watching the tall Eurasian without watching him. He wore a light tropical suit and a police tie and white shirt, and it was hot within the brightly lit terminal building, the air humid and smell-laden, milling noisy Chinese as always. Men, women, children, babes. An abundance of Cantonese, some Asians, a few Europeans. "Superintendent?" One of the information girls was offering him a phone. "It's for you, sir," she said and smiled prettily, white teeth, dark hair, dark sloe eyes, lovely golden skin. "Thanks," he said, noticing that she was Cantonese and new, and did not mind that the reality of her smile was empty, with nothing behind it but a Cantonese obscenity. "Yes?" he said into the phone. "Superintendent Armstrong? This is the tower--Yankee 2's just landed. On time." "Still Gate 16?" "Yes. She'll be there in six minutes." "Thanks." Robert Armstrong was a big man and he leaned across the counter and replaced the phone. He noticed her long legs and the curve of her rump in the sleek, just too tight, uniformed chong-sam and he wondered briefly what she would be like in bed. "What's your name?" he asked, knowing that any Chinese hated to be named to any policeman, let alone a European. "Mona Leung, sir." "Thank you, Mona Leung." He nodded to her, kept his pale blue eyes on her and saw a slight shiver of apprehension go through her. This pleased him. Up yours too, he thought, then turned his attention back to his prey. The Eurasian, John Chen, was standing beside one of the exits, alone, and this surprised him. Also that he was nervous. Usually John Chen was unperturbable, but now every few moments he would glance at his watch, then up at the arrivals board, then back to his watch again. Another minute and then we'll begin, Armstrong thought. He began to reach into his pocket for a cigarette, then remembered that he had given up smoking two weeks ago as a birthday present to his wife, so he cursed briefly and stuck his hands deeper into his pockets. Around the information counter harassed passengers and meeters-of-passengers rushed up and pushed and went away and came back again, loudly asking the where and when and how and why and where once more in myriad dialects. Cantonese he understood well. Shanghainese and Mandarin a little. A few Chu Chow expressions and most of their swearwords. A little Taiwanese. He left the counter now, a head taller than most of the crowd, a big, broad-shouldered man with an easy, athletic stride, seventeen years in the Hong Kong Police Force, now head of CID--Criminal Investigation Department--of Kowloon. "Evening, John," he said. "How're things?" "Oh hi, Robert," John Chen said, instantly on guard, his English American-accented. "Everything's great, thanks. You?" "Fine. Your airport contact mentioned to Immigration that you were meeting a special plane. A charter--Yankee 2." "Yes--but it's not a charter. It's privately owned. By Lincoln Bartlett--the American millionaire." "He's aboard?" Armstrong asked, knowing he was. "Yes." "With an entourage?" "Just his Executive VP--and hatchet man." "Mr. Bartlett's a friend?" he asked, knowing he was not. "A guest. We hope to do business with him." "Oh? Well, his plane's just landed. Why don't you come with me? We'll bypass all the red tape for you. It's the least we can do for the Noble House, isn't it?" "Thanks for your trouble." "No trouble." Armstrong led the way through a side door in the... ReviewsIn this three-volume set, the Cold War provides a splendid backdrop for corporate chicanery. Early on we learn that "life isn't fair. Death isn't fair. War isn't fair. Big business is war." And the war in this epic Clavell work is a chess game played on the board of 1963 Hong Kong. Every moment shivers with intrigue. The taipan of Noble House faces a hostile takeover. The market is in flux. Smugglers abound, as well as murder, natural disasters, and espionage plots. John Lee performs a series of loathsome, as well as engaging, characters with wickedly accurate accents. Their motives lurk in his nuances. His women characters have dignity (when they deserve it), and, happily, none is given to simpering. A massively entertaining read. S.J.H. (c) AudioFile 2002, Portland, Maine
Los Angeles Times....
"The last time I was so taken with a spellbinding safari was when I read Gone With The Wind."
Washington Post...
"Clavell's biggest triumph yet...storytelling done with dash and panache...a rousing read."
New York Times...
"Fiction for addicts...extravagantly romantic...a book that you can get lost in for weeks...staggering complexity...not only is it as long as life, it's also as rich with possibilities."
Cleveland Plain Dealer ...
"Tremendous entertainment...a seamless marvel of pure storytelling."
Los Angeles Times...
"A mesmerizer...spellbinding."
Chicago Tribune Book World...
"Breathtaking...only terms like colossal, gigantic, titanic, incredible, unbelievable, gargantuan, are properly descriptive....Clavell has made himself the king of super-adventure thrillers."
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