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The Mao Case (Inspector Chen Cao Series #6)

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  • Posted January 9, 2010

    The Mao Is Not the Merrier

    I have never read a detective story about China today, much less one which also tries to understand the nightmare Mao put them through, yet I kept having terminal deja vu. When it comes to termini, I prefer the Gare du Nord. I kept thinking that, barring the food, there wasn't much to separate this book from stories about life under the Nazis in Germany.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted May 25, 2010

    I love these books

    I love this mystery series. I cannot put them down I am so amazed at the charaters and the insight into China and life there in the aftermath of Mao. I am always waiting for the next book to be published. Please Hurry!!

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  • Posted February 15, 2009

    more from this reviewer

    fans of the Shanghai inspector will enjoy his latest case

    The Beijing leadership is concerned with the sudden appearance of wealth by a seemingly impoverished young artist living well above her means. Normally no one would think twice of Jiao¿s affluence, but she is the granddaughter of Xie, a film star who Chairman Mao personally liked; additionally Jiao¿s mother died during the Cultural Revolution cleansing. Needing expeditious subtly to determine if the painter is peddling ¿Mao material¿ five decades old that could embarrass the Party and China, the brass hand the Top Secret case to Shanghai Police Department's Special Case Chief Inspector Chen Cao; known for his success, speed and especially discretion.

    Chen begins with the mother whose life was explored in a bestseller. Using Cloud and Rain as access, Chen goes undercover pretending to be an author conducting research into a historical novel. This enables him to meet Jiao and her friends at the still alive Xie¿s run down home. There the older woman hosts a group who cherishes the pre-Communist culture until murder leave Chen suspecting grandmother and or granddaughter as the killer(s) especially their shared convenient alibi.

    The sixth Chen Chinese police procedural (see WHEN RED IS BLACK and RED MANDARIN DRESS) contains a strong investigation, but it is the profound look at the early Mao days in comparison to modern day China that brings the uniqueness to the story line. Chen is at his best with his asides about brass, bureaucrats, and bull as he diligently works the ¿Mao material¿ inquiry that turns into a homicide; he is more comfortable with the latter as the former is loaded with pompous interference. Mindful of the Bush Administration concealing Korean War Era documents that have been declassified for years and open to the public in the government archives, fans of the Shanghai inspector will enjoy his latest case as a reluctant Chen knows the penalty of dealing with anything Maoist even decades old.

    Harriet Klausner

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  • Anonymous

    Posted November 3, 2011

    No text was provided for this review.

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