
The Borrowed
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

Starred review from November 21, 2016
Retired detective Kwon Chun-dok, the Sherlock Holmes–like hero of this ambitious episodic crime novel set in Hong Kong from Chan (The Man Who Sold the World), is on his deathbed in 2013, working on a murder case with the aid of his mentee, Insp. Sunny Lok. Subsequent sections, introduced in reverse chronological order, focus on the infamous triads of Hong Kong organized crime (in 2003), the transfer of sovereignty from the U.K. to China (in 1997), the Tiananmen Square riots (in 1989), and more. Trained in England, the brilliant Chun-dok has been a great success, “silently filling a glorious page of the history of Hong Kong policing.” The mysteries he solves, as clever as they may be, can feel a bit old-fashioned. The author’s real goal is to tell a history of modern Hong Kong, as Chan explains in his afterword. As a “social narrative” of the city, to use his phrase, the story is fascinating. Agent: Markus Hoffmann, Regal Hoffmann & Associates.

Kwan Chun-dok has been a detective most of his life in Hong Kong. His ability to solve perplexing cases that take place amid major events in Chinese history has made him a legend on the police force. Narrator P.J. Ochlan doesn't strike the adventurous style a listener would wish for in a story like this. For much of the story, his delivery is neutral and repetitive. The male characters, and there are many, become difficult to distinguish because of a lack of emotion or variety in tone. For those interested in crime fiction set in an exotic locale, the twists and turns of Chun-dok's investigations may be enough to overlook a consistently unimaginative delivery. M.R. � AudioFile 2017, Portland, Maine
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