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Emperor's Pearl
  

Emperor's Pearl (Audio Cassette)

by Robert Van Gulik (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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From Library Journal

This pair of Van Guliks, first published in 1963 and 1961, respectively, are the latest in the series of "Judge Dee Mystery" reprints. Judge Dee is a detective in ancient China, who, in the nature of Conan Doyle's and Christie's protagonists, is more cerebral than hard-boiled.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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6 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Judge Dee at his best, April 5 2004
More than half a century ago, Robert Van Gulik translated an ancient Chinese detective novel about a real-life Chinese magistrate named Dee Jen-Djieh who lived around 700 A.D.; evidently he had so much fun that he decided to write a few more Judge Dee mysteries of his own. "The Emperor's Pearl" is among his better ones. On the night of the dragon boat races in Poo-Yang district, the drummer of the boat favored to win the race collapses; turns out he's been poisoned. Judge Dee is called in to investigate, and finds out he has not one murder on his hands, but a whole string of deaths involving a missing domino, a malevolent river goddess, and the theft of the Emperor's Pearl, still unsolved after a hundred years. With the help of his trusty seargeant Hoong Liang and a lady wrestler named Violet Liang (no relation), Judge Dee unravels the tangled mess and puts everything to rights.

Unlike the classic Chinese detective novel which reveals in the beginning whodunit and focuses instead on how the crime was solved, "The Emperor's Pearl" is more like a contemporary novel in which we have to wait for the end for the resolution. There are some interesting plot twists and turns and enough surprises to satisfy the most diehard mystery fan. It's too bad Van Gulik didn't bring back the formidable Violet Liang in a subsequent novel; she's a delightful invention who's worth a book all by herself.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Enjoyable, classical mystery in Tang dynasty China, Jun 15 2003
By David Brukman (USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
The annual boat race is a popular tradition in many Chinese cities near rivers and lakes. The festival provides an opporunity for feasting and betting, but in some cases it's an outgrowth of an older tradition. The capricious river goddess will not give good harvests unless celebrated once per year. When a drummer on one of the boats collapses and dies, the old folks are happy--they say that the Goddess claimed her sacrifice.

Suspecting human guilt, Judge Dee investigates--and finds complex stories of greed and passion, plus the legendary theft of an Imperial treasure a century ago.

This is an enjoyable mystery in the classical style--investigation of a puzzle. The story combines eternal human passions--greed, fear, lust--with he exotic culture of China 14 centuries ago. The characters are colorful, the investigation solid, and humor understated--what else would a mystery fan want?

--inotherworlds.com

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4.0 out of 5 stars Satisfying mystery in exotic setting, Jun 15 2003
By David Brukman (USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Judge Dee, a magistate in 7th century China, is forced by the weather to stop at a remote mountain monastery. There, while the storm rages, Dee observes suspicious behavior and hears stories of ghosts and vague accusations of murder.

The investigation shows the judge many secrets, some personal and some criminal, places him in danger of his life, and exposes to the reader the religions and manners of ancient China; surprisingly modern in some respects and almost unimaginable in others.

In the end, Dee's perception of human motivations as well as his logical mind allow him to redress injustice, improve the lives of several young people, and give the reader a solid solution to intellectual puzzles.

A mystery in the classical sense, this concentrates more on the plot than on characters, and gives a well-integrated lecture in history.
--[...]

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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Judge Dee mystery
I have read several Judge Dee mysteries and this is one of my favorites. There are a lot of interesting plot twists and some sad and cruel surprises. Read more
Published on May 14 2002 by Melissa K. Bourdius

5.0 out of 5 stars a pearl indeed
the book is very interesting!!
Published on Oct 14 2000

5.0 out of 5 stars A pearl indeed!
The book is VERY interesting. I love it!
Published on Oct 13 2000 by Peter Ruevski

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