French Concession by Xiao Bai

French Concession

by Xiao Bai

 

A richly atmospheric, fast-paced thriller teeming with femme fatales, criminals and double-agents

An acclaimed Chinese writer makes his English-language debut with this heart-stopping literary noir, a richly atmospheric tale of espionage and international intrigue, set in Shanghai in 1931—an electrifying, decadent world of love, violence and betrayal filled with femme fatales, criminals, revolutionaries and spies.

A boat arrives in Shanghai harbour, carrying an important official in the Nationalist Party and his striking wife, Leng. Amid the raucous sound of firecrackers, gunshots ring out; an assassin has shot the official and then himself. Leng disappears in the chaos.

Hsueh,...

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Reviewed by viking2917 on

2 of 5 stars

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Chinese/French spies in 1930s China. Atmospheric. Mistresses. Blackmail. Assassination. I wanted to like it, I really did. But I found the translation very jumpy, the storyline confusing and hard to keep up with. Shifts of perspective occur without warning, seemingly mid-paragraph. Not sure if that is the author's style, or oddities of translations, but I really had a hard time finishing this.

Try Bartle Bull's [b:Shanghai Station|890733|Shanghai Station|Bartle Bull|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1436395425s/890733.jpg|875974] for a much more accessible, similar, tale.

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  • 3 August, 2015: Reviewed