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Water Touching Stone

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In Water Touching Stone, the sequel to the internationally acclaimed The Skull Mantra, Shan Tao Yun is cloistered in a remote Tibetan sanctuary when he receives shattering news. A teacher revered by the oppressed has been found slain and, one by one, her orphaned students have followed her to her grave, victims of a killer harboring unfathomable motives. Abandoning his mountain hermitage, Shan Tao Yun, a former Beijing police inspector who has been exiled to Tibet, embarks on a search for justice. Shadowed by bizarre tales of an unleashed 'demon,' Shan braces himself for even darker imaginings as he stalks a killer and fights to restore spiritual balance to the ancient and tenuous splendor of Tibet.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 14, 2001
      Few mystery sequels have been awaited with as much anticipation as this one, and in many ways this is a worthy successor to Pattison's first novel, the Edgar- winning The Skull Mantra
      (1999); it too is full of reverence for the beleaguered people of Tibet, especially its tortured and imprisoned Buddhist monks. "I know that of all the world I have seen, the lamas are the best part of it," says Shan Tao Yun, a former high-ranking police investigator from Beijing who—because he looked too deeply into some financial scandal—was disgraced and imprisoned in a Tibetan gulag, where his life and his soul were saved by the monks who were his fellow prisoners. Released without official consent after his investigations into a murder exposed Chinese corruption, Shan has been living quietly among the monks, awaiting his chance to escape the country with the UN's help. Will he now risk his freedom to find out who killed a revered teacher and several wandering orphan boys? To Pattison's credit, he makes Shan's choice to roam across the wastes of northern Tibet in a virtually endless and dangerous search seem inevitable and totally believable—even if some readers would rather see him in action on the streets of London or San Francisco. And Shan's companions are largely fascinating: a vast gallery of Kazakh resistance fighters, White Russian smugglers who ride camels along the old Silk Road and Chinese officials of varying degrees of nastiness. Finally, though, there are too many people, places, events and questions—and pages—to sustain the amazing energy of Pattison's initial creation. (June 2)Forecast:Given the critical success of
      The Skull Mantra, which is being released simultaneously in paperback, and continuing political controversy surrounding China, this book has real breakout potential.

    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2001
      Chinese ex-investigator Shan Tao Yun, who was introduced in the Edgar Award-winning The Skull Mantra, has come to the inhospitable terrain of western China to unravel the mysterious death of a popular teacher. Shan's team of allies, a remarkable array of Kazakhs, Tibetans, and others, quickly learn that the teacher's death masks others. Alas, the interference of tyrannical Chinese investigators, the hardships of the terrain, and the complexity of the interweaving plots slow Shan down despite his stunning psychological and political insights. The first half of the book moves at a meditative pace, but once the true quarry is identified, the hunt quickens and suspense mounts unbearably. As in the previous book, Shan mirrors the spirituality and peril of the Tibetan cause, while the addition of the Kazakh, Uighur, and other non-Buddhist indigenous elements makes this a compelling saga of vanishing peoples. The archaeological themes are but one of the ways Pattison demonstrates his power to evoke the desperate cataclysms that these tribes and individuals suffer. For all public libraries where the East lures readers. Barbara Conaty, Library of Congress

      Copyright 2001 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from May 1, 2001
      Pattison's debut, " The Skull Mantra" (1999), won the Edgar Award, and his second continues the adventures of his smart, courageous, and spiritually inclined hero, Shan Tao Yun. Once a high-level Beijing investigator, Shan didn't tow the Communist line and consequently endured the horrors of the Tibetan gulag. He now devotes himself to helping the Tibetans in their seemingly impossible battle for justice under China's brutal occupation. As the curtain rises, Shan is traveling in the company of a lama and various members of the Tibetan resistance, including Jakli, a young Kazakh woman of great valor. They're investigating the death of a revered teacher, Lau, whose young students are also dying. Shan's perilous mission sends him across the world's most astonishing landscape as he holes up in the ruins of Karachuk (once a great Silk Road oasis), in secret Buddhist mountain caves, and in tents that could have been pitched 2,000 years ago but that now shelter portable computers. Things get really crazy when Shan meets a pair of American anthropologists risking their lives to prove that, contrary to the government's claims, the Chinese were not the first people to inhabit this mysterious land. Sandstorms, clandestine nuclear missile installations, and rumors of the reincarnation of a lama all figure into Pattison's remarkably complex, knowledgeable, and compelling tale, which both celebrates Tibet's marvels and decries its suffering.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2001, American Library Association.)

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