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The Eye of Jade: A Mei Wang Mystery (Mei Wang Mysteries)
Diane Wei Liang

Simon & Schuster, 2008 - 272 pages

average customer review:based on 10 reviews
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   highly recommended  highly recommended





Double Lucky Read

Eye of the Jade is extremely well written and plotted. Mei Wang searches for the truth, that phantom character in any mystery, and her journey takes us through Bejing's penthouses and dark alleys. The author weaves words with the careless abandon of silk: "...the sweet smell of spring was bouncing on sunbeam s like transparent butterflies." The growing pains of modern China are neatly delivered with subtle plotting and tied together with ancient history. If you liked or remember Robert Van Gulik's Judge Dee mysteries, you'll enjoy this book. Mei Wang joins the ranks of women detectives, and may she live a long and adventuresome life.


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Exciting New Chinese Mystery Series

Mei Wang is 29, attractive, single and living in modern day Beijing. She has left work at the Ministry of Public Safety under clouded circumstances and has started a private detective agency aka a consulting firm, as private detectives are illegal in China. Wang is approached by an old friend of her family to locate a jade seal from the Han Dynasty.

However, much of this evocative and intelligent novel revolves more around Wang's personal life than around the mystery. The author brilliantly brings to life the sights, sounds and smells of Beijing as Wang deals with the serious illness of her mother, her difficult sister and the reappearance of a lover who left her for another several years before. Towards the end of the novel the mystery and her family life are brought together and we learn secrets from her family's past.

I was fascinated reading about China both before and after the Cultural Revolution and the scars that have been left upon its people. I look forward to Ms. Liang continuing her series about Mei Wang.

Just learned that Ms. Liang's second Mei Wang mystery novel,'Paper Butterfly' although not available yet in the US is available in England from Amazon.uk.


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a good debut!

I picked this up because I am interested in China and in the past have been a mystery fanatic. I thought the mystery plot itself was a little weak but the description, background info and atmosphere he created made up for it. This is a series I think I will keep following because I am guessing she will get better and better!






Eyes over corruption

The mystery part itself is not that surprising, but the book is much more focused in the guanxi system, the corruption that presides over all actions in China. For us from Latin America is surprising similar...I enjoyed the book and felt that human beings are the same all over.


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Unusual and fascinating

First Sentence: In the corner of an office in an old-fashioned building in Beijing's Chongyang District, the fan was humming loudly, like an elderly man angry at his own impotence.

Mei Wang had been dismissed from the Ministry for Public Security and has opened an office as a private investigator. "Uncle" Chen, a family friend, hires her to find an ancient, and extremely valuable, piece of jade looted from the Luoyang Museum during the Cultural Revolution. The case takes her into the back streets of Beijing, and into secrets of her family's past.

This was an unusual mystery and a fascinating book. It is a PI story, but very different from the typical American PI. The story focuses on people, interactions and relationships, yet still has some suspense.

I realized how little I know about China, past or present. There are vast differences between our cultures but enough similarities that the story really worked.

The sense of place is wonderful and the dialogue has just the right voice to it. I am interested to see where Mei Wang's story goes. You might want to give this a try.



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reviews: page 1, 2



"Having her own detective agency would give her
the independence she had always longed for. It
would also give her the chance to show those people
who shunned her that she could be successful. People
were getting rich. They owned property, money,
business, and cars. With new freedom and opportunities
came new crimes. There would be much that
she could do."

Present day, Beijing. Mei Wang is a modern, independent woman. She has her own apartment. She owns a car. She has her own business with that most modern of commodities -- a male secretary. Her short career with China's prestigious Ministry for Public Security has given her intimate insight into the complicated and arbitrary world of Beijing's law enforcement. But it is her intuition, curiosity, and her uncanny knack for listening to things said -- and unsaid -- that make Mei Beijing's first successful female private investigator.

Mei is no stranger to the dark side of China. She was six years old when she last saw her father behind the wire fence of one of Mao's remote labor camps. Perhaps as a result, Mei eschews the power plays and cultural mores -- guanxi -- her sister and mother live by...for better and for worse.

Mei's family friend "Uncle" Chen hires her to find a Han dynasty jade of great value: he believes the piece was looted from the Luoyang Museum during the Cultural Revolution -- when the Red Guards swarmed the streets, destroying so many traces of the past -- and that it's currently for sale on the black market. The hunt for the eye of jade leads Mei through banquet halls and back alleys, seedy gambling dens and cheap noodle bars near the Forbidden City. Given the jade's provenance and its journey, Mei knows to treat the investigation as a most delicate matter; she cannot know, however, that this case will force her to delve not only into China's brutal history, but also into her family's dark secrets and into her own tragic separation from the man she loved in equal parts.

The first novel in an exhilarating new detective series, The Eye of Jade is both a thrilling mystery and a sensual and fascinating journey through modern China.


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