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Shanghai

(Book #1 in the China Coast Trilogy Series)

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

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$5.39
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Book Overview

An epic "New York Times" bestseller chronicling the rise of a "Taipan." John Denton lands in famed Shanghai in 1903, a young customs officer newly assigned. A "griffin," green and inexperienced, he... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

'Hometown Project', Part I

The novel is pulp, no doubt. But among pulp rivals, it stands out. New was a very literate man, a Hongkong based professor of English literature, who also knew his Chinese history. The book is part of a trilogy. It is the first part and covers roughly the first half of the 20th century in Shanghai. If you know nothing about that period and place, this is as good an entry level as any. The novel tells the story of a young English customs official (first lesson: China's customs were run by foreigners during the last emperors' reign), who arrives in Shanghai around the turn of the century and who is going to experience the glory and the misery of the place and the generic expatriate over the next 50 years. Of course he has to quit soon and start his own business, as the emperors have to quit soon and start whatever they started (have a look at Bertolucci's Last Emperor for the details of that story). He lives through ups and downs of an undefined period. The peak of undefinition is the bloody war between Chiang Kai Shek and the newly founded Communist Party (which was an offspring of the Kuomintang, which itself was a Leninist party; this in the face of all the terrible simplificators who think that George Marshall 'lost' China to the Communists! as if it was his to lose!) Japan invades and things turn hard; Japan loses the war and things look up for a moment, but then down again, the Communists win the civil war, and the hero's business tacks in its tail and runs to Hongkong. As far as pulp goes, this book is top notch. If you knew nothing of 20th century Chinese history before, now you know a lot. Thanks to Mr.New!

An Epic on a Human Scale

Shanghai is the kind of book people mean when they say "They don't write them like that any more." It's one of the biggest, best, most fascinating novels I've read in years, and I read maybe 100 novels a year. The story of John Denton, a British expat, becomes the story of the city of Shanghai over 50-some years of turbulent history, but for all the historical content the characters (and they're great characters) remain front and center. This is the first in New's trilogy about China, and it brilliantly sets the stage for what's to come. I recommend it very highly.

Engaging story of East meets West in Shanghai

This is an engaging historical novel of both Shanghai and China. The main plot and various subplots move along nicely, the main characters are interesting and generally well developed, moral issues related to imperalism are addressed, and the political and sociological background of the city and China are portrayed well. The author definitely captures the exotic mystique of the city during the early part of the 20th century. A definite read for those interested in historical fiction about Asia.

Good Historical Fiction

I realy like this book. I think this one of the best fiction books about China I have read. I recomend this book highly

Clavell times 2

In short, this is by far the best epic novel I've ever read. Having read all that James Clavell has written, this novel by Christopher New, in the same flavor of Clavell's Asian epics, actually exceeds Clavell's offerings in taste and flow of the narrative. I am a great fan of Clavell and I thought nothing could exceed "Tai Pan" for depth of character development and suspense. Then I read Shanghai.
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