Title: | Arcana Caelestia |
Notice: | Directory listings are in topic 2 |
Moderator: | NETRIX::thomas |
Created: | Thu Dec 08 1983 |
Last Modified: | Thu Jun 05 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 1300 |
Total number of notes: | 18728 |
While browsing in Boston a couple of weeks ago I came across this book entitled "Chung Kuo." I forgot who was the author. The premise of the story was that, unlike in our own history, the Middle Kingdom (Chung Kuo) dominated this planet. That's all I remember from the dust jacket. Has anybody else seen or read this? I'm just wondering if there'll be any chance to see it in softcover a year or two hence, or whether it's worth the hardcover price. --Simon
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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885.1 | Warning: First of Seven | SQM::MCCAFFERTY | Humpty Dumpty was pushed. | Mon Jun 25 1990 11:56 | 12 |
Simon, I glanced briefly at a review in the "ON BOOKs" section in the most recent edition of Isaac Asimoves Science Fiction Managazine and this was reviewed. I only skimmed through it but one thing that stood out was that this was to be the first of some 7 volumes dealing with Chung Kuo. The reveiwer seemed to think the world view a little implausible but also said that the book was a "high velocity read" i.e he really flew through it. - John | |||||
885.2 | re: .0 | HKFINN::CORBO | Tue Jul 31 1990 14:03 | 15 | |
Hi Simon, It caught my eye and I bought the book. I really enjoyed it, but it was bizzare. I was caught up by the characters. It was a quick read despite its size. It is about a future world where China ended up as the dominant race. I can bring in the book and give you a better synopsis if you want!! It has been a while since I read it. -Tracy | |||||
885.3 | HGABSS::SZETO | Simon Szeto @HGO, Hongkong | Tue Jul 31 1990 22:49 | 8 | |
re .2: Thanks, Tracy. A recommendation was all I was looking for. After I wrote the topic note, I also saw a softcover version (but large format) in the Hong Kong airport, but I didn't buy it then because I was in the middle of something else. I hope I see it again later after I return to the US. --Simon | |||||
885.4 | Author's name -- FYI | HKFINN::CORBO | Wed Aug 01 1990 17:02 | 6 | |
FYI -- I believe the author's name is David Wingrove (or something close). -Tracy | |||||
885.5 | The Middle Kingdom | KETJE::ROBBENS | Big animals move slow... | Mon Aug 20 1990 06:57 | 15 |
I just finished reading the book, and I have to admit that it was really fascinating ! The only 'problem': it's part 1 of a cycle. As it mentioned, the author spent four years writing volume 1, titled "The middle kingdom". Part 2 will be called "The broken wheel". My copy is a paperback, edited in 1989. So... 1989 + another 4 years gives me 1993. I suppose I will have forgotten the plot and certainly the characters. If you're interested, I can look for the ISBN number and all necessary data and post it here. Anyway, although it's a rather voluminous book, it read it in a couple of evenings (and nights). It's one of the best SF-books I've ever came upon. Luc. | |||||
885.6 | Some info. | KETJE::ROBBENS | Big animals move slow... | Mon Aug 20 1990 11:04 | 19 |
Author : David Wingrove Title : Chung Kuo Book 1 The Middle of Kingdom Edited : New English Library Paperback Edition 1990 ISBN 0-450-51610-5 Printed by : Hodder and Stoughton Paperbacks Mill Road, Dunton Green, Sevenoaks, Kent TN13 2YA England. Editorial Office: 47 Bedford Square, London WC1B 3DP, England. | |||||
885.7 | violence rating is fairly high | KYOA::CHURCHE | Nothing endures but change | Thu Aug 23 1990 14:50 | 5 |
I liked it overall too, but there was some pretty gross violence in it. So if you don't have a strong stomach, don't read it. jc | |||||
885.8 | ABSZK::SZETO | Simon Szeto, ISEDA/US at ZKO | Sat Oct 06 1990 13:31 | 95 | |
The New English Library paperback edition is list priced at UK �3.95 or Australian $10.95, the latter being roughly US$9.00 at the moment. The price in Hongkong is also around US$9.00, $10 and change at the airport. It was seen on display at a number of locations in Hongkong and Australia where I was vacationing. Haven't checked US bookstores since my return. Contrary to my first impression (in .0) this isn't an alternate history SF novel, but merely set in time future to our present. However, the ruling Han (Chinese) literally rewrote history, such that all anybody knew in late 22nd, early 23rd century was that the Han Empire defeated the Roman Empire in 97 AD [sic], and the rest was "history." Right at the beginning of the prologue, Mao Tse Tung was referred to as "the first Ko Ming Emperor." Actually, it was the tyrant Tsao Ch'un who conquered the world in mid 21st century and established Chung Kuo, the global empire. Although this background placed the Europeans in the position of underdog, change is a-brewing as the story develops. It is not necessary to know anything about Chinese language or culture to enjoy this book; in fact, knowing too much may detract from your enjoy- ment. The author is evidently a Sinophile, but I'm undecided how much of a Sinologist he is. I keep wondering if my grasp of Chinese is lacking or if he has made mistakes here and there. For example, the term "Chieh Hsia" is used throughout for "Your Majesty." In the Glossary of Mandarin Terms, this was explained as meaning "below the steps." That is so. However, I have always seen and heard "Your Majesty" as "Pi Hsia." It sounds almost as if he back-translated from "below the steps." I'm also puzzled where he got "T'ang" from, as the title of each of the seven Sons of Heaven who ruled the seven Cities of Chung Kuo. I just can't think of a Chinese word "T'ang" that fits the meaning of "ruler." Another gross mistake (I wish I could find the place again to make sure I didn't misread it) was to make "Yin" positive and male, and "Yang" neg- ative and female; it's the other way around in Chinese. It surprises me that a Sinophile would make such a mistake. The use of the Wade-Giles system of Romanization of Chinese names and terms is debatable. In the Author's Note he explains that he chose Wade- Giles as better serving "to render the softer, more poetic side of the original Mandarin." I think this is subjective. Nevertheless, Wade- Giles probably fits in better with the old imperial setting in which the author has put his 22nd century Chung Kuo. It's pushing the limit of plausibility that a world-dominating China would revert back to the imperial China that came to an end along with the 19th century, totally wiping out the cultural changes of the 20th century. While it is true that the Chinese have an inclination towards imperialism, it's something else again to have kept the imperial court manners as if three centuries haven't gone by, or more to the point, that the 20th century Westernization, not to mention the Cultural Revolution, had not taken place. Despite these flaws, it's a fascinating story to read. The European characters are, to me, somewhat more "real" and the Han characters, somewhat unreal, but that may be just my background getting in the way. Well, maybe I should say something about the story. Under Han rule, planet Earth has grown to thirty-some billions in population. Much of Earth's land surface is covered by seven continent- sized cities, three hundred levels high, and meant to last ten thousand years. Each City is ruled by a T'ang, who is a Han person. While Han do occupy important government posts even in City Europe, many Europeans, or Hung Mao as they are called, serve in key posts in throughout the polit- ical and military infrastructure. A great many of the key characters in the story are in fact Hung Mao. The tyrant Tsao Ch'un founded his empire on his utopian ideal and his "Crusade of Purity," and had intended his utopia to last ten thousand years. Change was forbidden. Although there were colonies on Mars, space exploration was forbidden. Nevertheless, there was a Dispersionist faction which wanted change, and some of them plotted against The Seven (the T'angs who ruled Chung Kuo amongst them). The reader is liable to be undecided, whether to admire the likes of Lehmann, DeVore, Berdichev, and Wyatt, the conspirators, or to see them as villains because of their methods. Their plot culminated in the assasination of the heir of the T'ang of City Europe at his wedding ceremony. One is also liable to be undecided about the T'ang, Li Shai Tung, whether to admire him for the person he is, or dislike him for the policies he has to uphold. Interwoven in this story of intrigue is the story of the boy Kim, a precocious genius who, as it turned out, was the bastard of one of the Dispersionist conspirators. Kim, though, wasn't the only precocious kid in the story. Ben Shepherd, and the Prince Li Yuan, as well as Kim Ward will feature in the next book, titled _The_Broken_Wheel_. As mentioned in the preceding reply, the story has some sex, sadism and other violence. If it were a movie it'd probably be rated R. --Simon | |||||
885.9 | NYTP07::LAM | Q ��Ktl�� | Mon Oct 08 1990 20:16 | 7 | |
Though I haven't read this book, it reminds me of an article I read a few years ago written by Gore Vidal. It appeared in the magazine "The Nation". In this article Vidal speculates that China with its tremendous resources and Japan with its technical prowess and aggressiveness will ally with eachother and conquer the world. I can't help but think that this book, like Vidal's article, is a racist Westerner's nightmare or an ethnocentric Asian's dream. | |||||
885.10 | ABSZK::SZETO | Simon Szeto, ISEDA/US at ZKO | Wed Oct 10 1990 23:32 | 12 | |
The author is an Englishman. He knows too much Chinese poetry and plays Wei Chi ("Go") to be entirely racist; in fact I called him a Sinophile in .8. The plot is complex (I think) and so are the characters. Neither the Hung Mao nor the Han characters are all good or all bad. If there's racism, it's a bit too subtle for me. But Tsao Ch'un the dictator was worse than Hitler -- killed off the Japanese, the Blacks, and the Aborigines. However, that was only a page or so out of 700+. --Simon | |||||
885.11 | ABSZK::SZETO | Simon Szeto, ISEDA/US at ZKO | Sat Jan 19 1991 17:05 | 5 | |
Saw _Chung_Kuo_ in paperback at Booksmith today. Look for it at your favorite bookstore. --Simon | |||||
885.12 | Already bought the hardcover! | NYTP07::LAM | Q ��Ktl�� | Sun Jan 20 1991 04:37 | 1 |
NOW You Tell Me!!!!! Right after I spent $13 for the hardcover! | |||||
885.13 | The Broken Wheel | SIMON::SZETO | Simon Szeto, International Sys. Eng. | Sat Oct 26 1991 19:42 | 6 |
Book 2: The Broken Wheel, is out (in paperback). Actually, some other reader already tipped me off, but I saw it in the bookstores on my afternoon at the mall and picked it up. --Simon | |||||
885.14 | 3rd book is out in hardcover | NYTP07::LAM | Q ��Ktl�� | Sat Jan 18 1992 03:46 | 5 |
The third book in this series is out called "The White Mountain." I haven't even finished the first book in this series yet and I just bought the second book "The Broken Wheel." So far I find this book the first one anyway slow and tedious to read, hopefully it will pickup later. | |||||
885.15 | moves for me | SIMON::SZETO | Simon Szeto, International Sys. Eng. | Mon Feb 03 1992 23:26 | 16 |
> bought the second book "The Broken Wheel." So far I find this book the > first one anyway slow and tedious to read, hopefully it will pickup > later. I haven't noticed any such problem with the first book, possible exception may be the first 50-100 pages or so. "The Broken Wheel" moves pretty well for my pace. Good character development for a diverse cast. Sex and violence in places, as noted previously. > -< 3rd book is out in hardcover >- I also found the second book in hardcover, discounted to $5.95. Problem is (and true for other authors like Eddings) I already read these books in paperback. --Simon |