Death of a Red Heroine
By Qiu Xiaolong
By Qiu Xiaolong
By Qiu Xiaolong
By Qiu Xiaolong
Part of An Inspector Chen Investigation
Part of An Inspector Chen Investigation
Category: Crime Fiction
Category: Crime Fiction
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$16.95
Jul 01, 2003 | ISBN 9781569472422
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Jul 01, 2003 | ISBN 9781569476963
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Praise
Praise for Death of a Red Heroine
TIME Magazine‘s 100 Best Mystery and Thriller Books of All Time
A Parade Magazine 101 Best Mystery Books of All Time
Winner of the Anthony Award for Best First Novel
Nominee for the Edgar Award for Best First Novel
BookRiot 100 Must-Read Novels of Noir
“Another reminder of how the mystery genre can open up countless worlds.”
—Parade Magazine
“A marvelously assured debut . . . Engrossing, immensely readable.”
—The Wall Street Journal
“Xiaolong knows that words can save your soul and in his pungent, poignant mystery, he proves it on every page.”
—Chicago Tribune
“Stupendous . . . [with a] hard-boiled, intricate plot and subtly developed characters . . . A matchless pearl.”
—Maureen Corrigan, NPR’s Fresh Air
“Death Of A Red Heroine grabbed my imagination, took me on a slowly, intricately built journey that nevertheless felt sexy and slick, and kept me turning the pages deep into the night . . . A refreshingly brave exploration into political China, woven around a tense thriller and likeable, enigmatic characters.”
—Huffington Post
“A fascinating and thought-provoking read, rich in descriptions of delicious meals, beautiful gardens and impossibly cramped housing conditions. Not to be missed.”
—The Guardian
“A tale of murder, deception and politics that has the ring of authenticity.”
—St. Louis Post-Dispatch
“An absolutely exquisite book (and I don’t believe I’ve ever before used this descriptor in a review!) . . . Qiu Xiaolong’s attention to culture, politics, loyalty (to persons and to country), poetry, justice (whatever this may be), love, art more generally, law and order and the sacred and intimate relationship between the Chinese people and their food, all blend to form an intellectually stimulating, beautiful, and surprising work of art.”
—Deadly Pleasures Magazine
“Riveting and convincing.”
—Far Eastern Economic Review
“Xiaolong, a Chinese poet and literary critic, is adept at threading social commentary of China in the 1990s with his detective’s movements through social strata in search of the killer . . . Xiaolong’s first mystery may be the most impressive debut of the year.”
—Booklist
“This political mystery offers a peek into the tightly sealed, often crooked world of post-Tiananmen Square China . . . An impressive and welcome respite from the typical crime novel.”
—Publishers Weekly
“In his first novel, [Xiaolong] depicts a modern, changeable China, using focused prose, realistic depictions, and a very human protagonist.”
—Library Journal
“[Meet] the wonderful and complex Inspector Chen Cao, the ever-impecunious, couplet-quoting poet of the Shanghai Police Bureau. A wonderful, many-faceted gem of a book!”
—William Marshall, The Yellowthread Street Mystery series
“In Death of a Red Heroine China is not only the setting . . . The Party’s attempts to recoup political legitimacy from the real setting for this mystery and cast a dark shadow over every step in its resolution. Raw, naked power is at the core of both the murder and its investigation, but its manifestations are anything but predictable in this splendid first work.”
—Robert E. Hegel, Professor of Chinese and Comparative Literature, Washington University
“A brilliant debut . . . I cannot imagine any readers, including fellow whodunit addicts, who would want to miss this fine novel, which makes a strong bid for a place in lasting literature.”
—Mona Van Duyn, U.S. Poet Laureate, 1992–3
“A sheer delight.”
—I Love a Mystery
“Unique in that it combines the stringency and rigour of police work, the inflexibility of Communism and the need for artistic expression . . . The novel is a fascinating read.”
—Mystery Review
“The main character is three-dimensional and practically jumps off the pages. I am anticipating another case with Inspector Chen.”
—The Snooper
“Much more than a detective story, it is an elegant, true-to-life portrait of China today.”
—Persimmon
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