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The Case of the Chinese Boxes
 
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The Case of the Chinese Boxes [Paperback]

Marele Day


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Product Details

  • Paperback: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Allen & Unwin Pty., Limited (Australia) (February 1900)
  • ISBN-10: 1864486716
  • ISBN-13: 978-1864486711
  • Product Dimensions: 18.1 x 11.1 x 2 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 191 g

Product Description

Book Description

New year starts with a bang in Chinatown - the biggest bank job in Australia's history. Something infinitely more invaluable than money is missing - a gold key with a dragon on it. Why does the Chen family want it back so badly? Claudia takes up the case. And everywhere, nothing is as it seems. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From AudioFile

The largest bank heist in Australian history finds investigator Claudia Valentine hired by a Chinese family to search for a key stolen from a safety deposit box. Effortlessly narrator Diana Greentree transforms herself into the heroine detective and dispatches each scene and character. Her accents authenticate the story line, whether for a resident from Chinatown or a fellow Australian. B.J.L (c)AudioFile, Portland, Maine --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Amazon.com: 3.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)

3.0 out of 5 stars Crime in Chinatown, Dec 27 2004
By Untouchable - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Case of the Chinese Boxes (Paperback)
Following on from THE LIFE AND CRIMES OF HARRY LAVENDER, the book that introduced tough Sydney private investigator Claudia Valentine comes this second book in the series, THE CASE OF THE CHINESE BOXES. It's now 1988, the year of Australia's Bicentennial and there's a lot of celebrating going on. But the National Australia Bank aren't celebrating. They've just been knocked over in one of the biggest, most daring robberies in Australia's history and the fall-out is about to land in Claudia's lap. Like the first book it's a traditional PI story that starts out with few leads before careful digging unearths an unexpected twist and some villains not happy with the attention.

Claudia is hired by Charles Chen and his mother Victoria to recover a lost key that had been stolen from a bank safe deposit box during a recent daring bank robbery. The key is particularly ornate and apparently opens some traditional Buddhist Chinese Boxes, but more importantly, is a symbol of the family's power and standing in the community. This case will not only take Claudia out of her comfort zone and into the underworld dominated by the dangerous Chinese Triads who rule Chinatown, but it will also take her to parts of Sydney that she never knew existed and, for her own safety, perhaps wished she still didn't know.

Not only does Claudia have to contend with an unknown enemy who, at one point, thoughtfully slips a warning message inside her fortune cookie, but she finds that she is working for a client who is very unwilling to provide her with any details that might prove helpful in solving the case. Claudia has to resort to some pretty unorthodox investigative methods before she begins to achieve results.

As a consequence, for much of the story we are carried along while waiting for something to happen. Because the case is fairly vague and clues are hard to come by, Claudia - to invoke a relevant metaphor - is left to poke at the dragon in the hope that it might wake and try to bite her. The result is a case that shoots off into a completely unexpected direction dragging an unwilling private investigation along with it.

Many of the characters who were introduced in Harry Lavender returned to assist Claudia with this case too, but author Marele Day didn't think to reintroduce those characters to us. So unless you had just finished the first book or had a particularly good memory, you wouldn't know who these characters were or how they fit into Claudia's life. I had only finished Harry Lavender a month before reading this and I was still struggling to recall who some of the vaguely familiar characters were.

A delightful addition to the story is Hong Kong based visitor James Ho, a flirtatious nuisance who quickly becomes the bane of Claudia's life with his unexpected appearances and amusingly obvious suggestions. Claudia's annoyance and discomfort around Ho provides for some lighter moments in an otherwise dangerous and serious case. But Ho is also the holder of some of the more tantalising secrets in this story and proves to be an exceptional private investigator in his own right.

This is an intriguing investigation that displays Claudia Valentine's ingenuity and dogged determination. She takes us on a visit into Sydney's Chinese community, faces down a Triad member or two, makes contact with the most talked about bank robber in the country and crosses swords with a visiting P.I.

3.0 out of 5 stars Smooth Australian feisty femme PI tale, Sep 27 2002
By F. J. Harvey "Cricket ,country music and a go... - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Case of the Chinese Boxes (Paperback)
The setting-Sydney,especially its less public face-helps set this novel apart from the competitors in the women PI market.Otherwise it is capable,moderately enjoyable but not terribly distinctive.
Narrated ,as before,by Claudia Valentine,a charcter with obvious affinities to other women investigators-tall,feisty,independent-the tale takes place for the most part in the city,s Chinatown.Claudia is hired by the redoutable Mrs Chen to trace an antique key stolen during the course of a major bank robbery.She does not get a clear run at the case however as James Ho,a Hong Kong based private eye,is also searching for the key believing it to be the key to boxes containing priceless religious artefacts.The case takes her into the world of the Triads,and soon comes to involce drug trafficing and protection racketeering
The fate of the key soon assumes a secondary role in a plot which soon comes to revolve around the kidnapping of Mrs Chen's grandchild by Triad members.
The Chinese characters are somewhat stereotypically depicted and the portarait of the role of organised crime in Australia,notably its immigration policy,will not please the nation's tourist or PR people.
Strong sense of place,lively plot and decent action but a bit routine
Recommended as a break from the American-UK writers who dominate the genre
 Go to Amazon.com to see both reviews  3.0 out of 5 stars 

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