SJ Rozan and John Shen Yen NeeJudge Dee and his faithful sidekick Lao She swashbuckle their way through London in the 1920s, solving murders, kung fu fighting, and drinking tea.
The extravagantly exciting third installment of the Dee and Lao mystery series
October, 1924. Dee Ren Jie is dead—to all but his inner circle, who know he survived the Battle of the Necropolis Railway. In hiding, he awaits new instructions from the government of Sun Yatsen (and the ghost of Commissioner Lin). Until Dee reappears, his friends return to their own pursuits—Hoong to shopkeeping, Lao to teaching, Jimmy to picking pockets. Feng and her hound, Mei Qiang, make themselves useful in Hoong’s shop and also around Anthony Cartwright’s laboratory.
Niming Cheng arrives in London, sent by the Chinese government ostensibly to investigate Dee’s death but in fact to look into another matter: the disappearance of a shipment of arms sent through back channels from England to China, intended for Sun Yatsen. The British government can’t admit to the existence of the weapons or the deal, but the chaos in China makes it urgent that the shipment be located and, if possible, sent on to its original destination.
Cheng’s daughter, Irene, is being educated in London, and has become completely enamored of the new technologies of voice recording and radio transmission. She’s engaged to a young Chinese man but it’s an arranged match. More and more she’s drawn to Olga Agapova, a student from Russia.
Suddenly both young women are dead—murdered. Are the deaths related to the weapons’ disappearance? How? And who will be next? To investigate, Dee Ren Jie will have to rise from the dead. The search for answers will lead Dee and his friends through the worlds of seances, prizefighting, cutting edge 1924 technology, and many disguises; and they will find themselves ignoring, at their own peril, a warning to the curious.
Judge Dee and Lao She must use all their powers of deduction—and kung fu skills—to take down a sinister conspiracy between Imperial Russia, Japan, and China in a rollicking new mystery set in 1920s London.
The follow-up to The Murder of Mr. Ma, this historical adventure-mystery is perfect for fans of Laurie R. King and the Guy Ritchie Sherlock Holmes films.
London, 1924. Following several months abroad, Judge Dee Ren Jie has returned to the city to foil a transaction between a Russian diplomat and a Japanese mercenary. Aided by Lao She—the Watson to his Holmes—along with several other colorful characters, Dee stops the illicit sale of an extremely valuable “dragon-taming” mace.
The mace’s owner is a Chinese businesswoman who thanks Dee for its retrieval by throwing a lavish dinner party. In attendance is British banking official A. G. Stephen, who argues with the group about the tenuous state of Chinese nationalism—and is poisoned two days later. Dee knows this cannot be a coincidence, and suspects Stephen won’t be the only victim. Sure enough, a young Chinese communist of Lao’s acquaintance is killed not long after—and a note with a strange symbol is found by his body.
What could connect these murders? Could it be related to rumors of a conspiracy regarding the Chinese Eastern Railway? It is once again all on the unlikely crime-solving duo of Dee and Lao to solve the case before anyone else ends up tied to the rails.
For fans of Guy Ritchie’s Sherlock Holmes films, this stunning, swashbuckling series opener by a powerhouse duo of authors is at once comfortingly familiar and tantalizingly new.
Two unlikely allies race through the cobbled streets of 1920s London in search of a killer targeting Chinese immigrants.
London, 1924. When shy academic Lao She meets larger-than-life Judge Dee Ren Jie, his quiet life abruptly turns from books and lectures to daring chases and narrow escapes. Dee has come to London to investigate the murder of a man he’d known during World War I when serving with the Chinese Labour Corps. No sooner has Dee interviewed the grieving widow than another dead body turns up. Then another. All stabbed to death with a butterfly sword. Will Dee and Lao be able to connect the threads of the murders—or are they next in line as victims?
Blending traditional gong’an crime fiction with the most iconic aspects of the Sherlock Holmes canon, Dee and Lao’s first adventure is as thrilling and visual as an action film, as imaginative and transportive as a timeless classic.