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China Run: A Novel
 
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China Run: A Novel (Hardcover)

de David Ball (Author)
3.9étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (20 évaluations de client)

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From Amazon.com

When the Chinese government, citing "clerical error," demands that six American families waiting for the adoption papers they need to take their promised babies back to America surrender their precious charges, Allison Turk refuses. With her young stepson, three other adults and three infants, she defies the powerful forces arrayed against them--including her own husband--to flee halfway across China and make a run for the American consulate in Shanghai. This courageous but foolhardy attempt seems doomed to fail; escape seems impossible, especially in a country whose language, law, and customs they can't begin to comprehend. One by one, all the fugitives except Allison and her little family are picked off, captured, or killed, including their unlikely allies--a tour guide, a fisherman, a gangster, a country doctor--all of whom are as vividly rendered as China itself. Driving this riveting, compelling adventure story to its heart-stopping conclusion, Ball turns in one of the most exciting thrillers of the season! --Jane Adams

From Publishers Weekly

Ball (Empires of Sand) explores the dark side of Americans adopting Chinese babies in his compulsively readable thriller. When Allison Turk, who has traveled to Jiangsu province with her stepson, Tyler, to adopt the infant Wen Li, is told that she has been given the wrong baby, she decides to make a run for it rather than give up her beautiful daughter. Single mother Ruth Pollard along with Claire Cameron and Claire's husband, Nash, also choose to flee with their babies. Hoping to reach an American consulate, they become increasingly tangled in the Chinese heartland, as they trek across the country pursued by the forces of a bureaucratic government. The case attracts international attention, and Ruth's cousin, an American senator, begins to questions China's most favored nation status. A score of unforgettable characters provide portraits of both bravery and treachery: the selfless guide, Yu Ling, and her peasant family; the military men, led by implacable Colonel Quan and his subordinate Ma Lin, who finally ignores direct commands; and greedy peasants, petty thieves and murderers. Much of the novel's strength derives from the author's remarkable evocation of Chinese language and Chinese landscape, whether it's in mud and monsoon or a beautiful monastery with beatific monks. Before the last breathless page, readers will encounter panic, killings, a ship collision and a devastating revelation of the truth behind the government's action. Though the subject matter is delicate, this sweeping odyssey of action and sentiment set in exotic and gritty locales cries out for filming.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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L'avis des consommateurs

20 évaluations
5 étoiles:
 (13)
4 étoiles:    (0)
3 étoiles:
 (3)
2 étoiles:    (0)
1 étoiles:
 (4)
 
 
 
 
 
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3.9étoiles sur 5 (20 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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5.0étoiles sur 5 A Good Read, isn't that what fiction is really about?, Mai 1 2004
Par Denise Bentley "Kelsana" (The California Redwoods) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
I have never been to China, or adopted a child. I just enjoy good fiction, written well, with a smooth rythm of story progression, and characters I love and care about. Add a thriller aspect that leaves the reader turning the pages as fast as they can, and you have a great book.

I won't make this a political statement. It is just one man's version of a possibility. If anything, it will make the believers cautious, perhaps ask a few more questions, and that can't hurt.

Allison Turk has come to China to adopt a baby, and because of an unknown glitch the officials have requested she turn the baby over to officials, and a new baby will be forthcoming. Allison who has bonded with the child decides to take matters into her own hands, along with her 9 year old step-son Tyler, she makes a run for it. Her journey is nothing short of remarkarkable.

The story culminates in moments as montrous as the imagination could devise. Just what is going on with the unwanted children in China? Is there any truth in it? I don't know, but the story caught me up in it's momentum from start to finish...Kelsana

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3.0étoiles sur 5 Adoption took a wrong turn; thrilling but not satisfying, Mai 2 2003
Par Matthew M. Yau "Voracious reader" (San Francisco, CA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
China Run sets in Suzhou, China (some 250 kilometers west of Shanghai) where the government told 6 American families the babies whom they just adopted was the wrong babies. The Chinese law requires adoptive parents have to be at least 35 and have no other children at the time of the adoption application in order to qualify for healthy babies. Otherwise they will only qualify for children with special needs. Allison Turk has come all the way to China with her 9-year-old stepson Tyler to adopt Wen Li. On the morning the Americans supposed to return the babies to orphanage, Allison decided to keep Wen Li and ran away with Nash and Claire Cameron and Ruth Pollard who were determined to keep their babies as well. The Americans set off to seek help from the American embassy in Shanghai with the help of Yi Ling, their Chinese guide.

The disappearance of the Americans quickly alerted the government which immediately dispatched the "gong an" (security) officers to hunt them down. They set up roadblocks and checkpoints on major highways while PSB interrogated Yi Ling's family and whoever might have helped the Americans escape. No sooner than they boarded a ship that belonged to Yi Ling's uncle Yang Boda on the Yangtze than some smuggler boat hit them... A fisherman Ren Kai and his wife Mei Ling sheltered the fugitives, namely now just Ruth and Allison, and tendered Tyler and the babies. Knowing that the whole world is collapsing about her ears, Allison was determined to keep Wen Li and by all means dodged the police. The rest of the book was about her hiding in the truck, walking in the bushes, and dodging those who were after her in her venture down south to Guangzhou (180 kilometers northwest of Hong Kong).

The book is a thriller (it doesn't seem to be the case when I read the first chapter) where almost two thirds of it is about the cat-and-mouse chase for the fugitives. It's a page-turner until the last few chapters where the author rambles on and on and makes an effort to drag and twist the story somehow. While the author does excellent and thorough research on places and the reality issues of China, he does expose some of the most repugnant problems in China: the black market of healthy human organs and the extraction of such organs from deceased children in orphanage. Corrupted government officials (such as orphanage director and public security officers) collaborated with gangster rings in smuggling the organs that promised a lucrative business. No less striking was how Xinhua agency (the official government newsagent) often by all means covers up the truth of such vile trades.

I realized the book was based on a true story shortly after I finished it. David Ball had managed to fictionize the real-life incident and its characters. At that point I felt somewhat relieved and beamed at the fact that despite the relentless Chinese government there were good-hearted Chinese people who possessed a good conscience. In a country where one's furies stayed tucked neatly beneath the skin, Yi Ling had stood by the truth of her feelings and risked her life to save the babies, to help the Americans escape. She was confronted face-to-face by her own conscience as she encountered Allison escaping on the hotel hallway. It was that split of a second when Yi Ling made the fateful decision out of her heart and not duty. Allison had touched and changed the lives of Ren Kai and his wife Mei Ling. Ren insisted on helping the Americans since he had come this far with them (picked them up in Hokou after the ship collision and took them home) against all odds. An interesting vignette was how well 9-year-old Tyler got along with the Chinese with whom he shared nothing in common. In the midst of touching moments and outrageous adventures, I question the validity of all the events in this book. David Ball might have forged some of the extra thrilling details here and there to touch up the actual incidence. Whatever the case is, this is a different kind of novel about China. It's a quick-read good for an afternoon in the weekend. It also contains sporadic prose on Chinese scenery. 3.6 stars.

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5.0étoiles sur 5 absolutely outstanding book on tape listen!, Avril 27 2003
Par Un client
i listen to many novels on tape; this is about as good as it gets -- on two critical counts. first, the story itself is dramatic and real and constantly imminent, pulling in the listener from the start and never letting go for an instant. secondly, the narrator -- george guidall -- is superb, never missing a beat; his characters speak in perfect english, some in broken english and others only in chinese -- every word is credible, every moment compelling.
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Commentaires client les plus récents

5.0étoiles sur 5 Loved It...very much a page turner
I was surprised by how much I enjoyed this book. The vivid description of the journey painted scenery in my mind's eye as I read... Read more
Publié le Fév 19 2003

5.0étoiles sur 5 Outstanding Action/Literary fiction
David Ball's "China Run" is everything a good novel should be: Engaging, focused story, sympathetic characters, and intense action with people we care for. Read more
Publié le Déc 15 2002 par George R. Sloan

3.0étoiles sur 5 Why did the author have to mention the Mideast?
I really enjoyed this book until about halfway through, when discussing some torture equipment, the author threw in a comment about the Israeli/Palestinian conflict. Read more
Publié le Nov. 21 2002

3.0étoiles sur 5 Remove the aspect of "True Story" and it is a great read..
I got this book as a gift and was skeptical about it. My daughter was born in China and I adopted her a few years ago. Read more
Publié le Sep 30 2002 par Sharon Knutson

5.0étoiles sur 5 China Run
I loved China Run! I've never traveled to China, or adopted a baby. Ball allowed me to experience both with vivid details and emotional connections. Read more
Publié le Sep 15 2002

5.0étoiles sur 5 I didn't want to like it ... but it is a great read
As mom to two wonderful children adopted from China, I admit I approached the book with a juandiced eye, however, keeping focused on the fact that it IS indeed a work of fiction,... Read more
Publié le Sep 6 2002 par Bonnie J. Ward

1.0étoiles sur 5 The author should have researched Chinese adoption first
This book misrepresents Chinese adoption beyond recognition. As a parent of a daughter adopted from China, I have found the Chinese government to be reliable and predictable... Read more
Publié le Sep 5 2002

5.0étoiles sur 5 Outstanding!
David Ball takes the reader on a thrilling adventure through China with several American families desperately trying to keep their adoptive babies. Read more
Publié le Sep 4 2002 par Kathleen Abbott

5.0étoiles sur 5 A thriller
This book is NOT meant to be an intro to adoption from China. This book is a page-turning thriller. I enjoyed it tremendously, frequently unable to put it down. Read more
Publié le Sep 2 2002

5.0étoiles sur 5 Loved this book!!
What a storyteller David Ball is. I could not put this book down. He develops wonderful characters, both American and Chinese, and has exquisite descriptions of China, and the... Read more
Publié le Aoû 27 2002

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