Ghost Hero Audiolibro Por S. J. Rozan arte de portada

Ghost Hero

Vista previa
The buy box is not available to display at this moment. We apologize for the inconvenience
To purchase this book, please visit this page again later. For help with any other issue, please call our 24/7 customer service

American-Born Chinese P.I. Lydia Chin is called in on what appears to be a simple case. Jeff Dunbar, art world insider, wants her to track down a rumor. Contemporary Chinese painting is sizzling hot on the art scene and no one is hotter than Chau Chun, known as the Ghost Hero. A talented and celebrated ink painter, Chau's highly-prized work mixes classical forms and modern political commentary. The rumor of new paintings by Chau is shaking up the art world. There's only one problem - Ghost Hero Chau has been dead for twenty years, killed in the 1989 Tianamen Square uprising. Not only is Ghost Hero Chau long dead, but Lydia's client isn't who he claims to be either. And she's not the only P.I. hired to look for these paintings. Lydia and her partner, Bill Smith, soon learn that someone else - Jack Lee: P.I., art expert, and, like Lydia, American-Born Chinese - is also on the case. What starts as rumors over new paintings by a dead artist quickly becomes something far more desperate--a high-stakes crisis the P.I.'s will find themselves risking everything to resolve.

©2011 S. J. Rozan. All rights reserved. (P)2011 AudioGo
Misterio Detectives Mujeres Suspenso Detective China Investigadores Privados Thriller y Suspenso Ficción Embrujado Fantasma Literatura Mundial Estados Unidos Ficción de mujeres

Las personas que vieron esto también vieron:

China Trade Audiolibro Por S. J. Rozan arte de portada
China Trade De: S. J. Rozan
Todas las estrellas
Más relevante
S.J. Rozan does something rare in Ghost Hero: she builds a mystery dominated not by villains, but by good, fully realized people. The primary conflicts are between characters you genuinely care about, which makes every choice and misunderstanding feel consequential rather than schematic.

There’s just enough darkness around the edges to give the story tension and stakes, but the heart of the book lies elsewhere — in decency, loyalty, wit, and the quiet complications of doing the right thing. The mysteries themselves are elegant and deeply satisfying, unfolding with clarity rather than gimmicks.

Smart, humane, and quietly exhilarating, Ghost Hero is a reminder that suspense doesn’t require cynicism — only intelligence and craft. Highly recommended.

A delight from start to finish

Se ha producido un error. Vuelve a intentarlo dentro de unos minutos.

The characters have matured, the plot was more entertaining and the narrator did an excellent job of imbibing the characters with distinct voices.

The best of the Lydia Chen mystery novels yet

Se ha producido un error. Vuelve a intentarlo dentro de unos minutos.

around the halfway point, but my library had a long hold queue for it, so I kept listening. At first I thought my issues were with the narrator, but as the book wore on it seemed she made a weak plot worse: very little actually happens! Lydia, Bill, and their "temporary colleague" Jack run around the city, holding conversations without much relevance in each location. There's not much tension here, so I never really felt anyone was in great danger. Instead, there's the hook of Chinese dissidents and the NYC art scene - if those aren't your thing, there's little else of interest.
Not really a spoiler, but Jack (another Chinese-American P. I.) crosses paths with Lydia and Bill early on as he's working on the same case from a different angle. He's her age, specializing in Asian art matters, with outstanding academic credentials; the difference is that he's second generation, from the midwest. Bill is largely absent, appearing much of the time in the "undercover" character of a Russian mobster. With Jack in the picture, there's little interaction at all between Lydia and Bill. So, what is Jack's function: love triangle? possible spin-off? a device to keep from dealing with the partners' relationship?
Which brings me specifically to the audio production. Zeller's treatment of Lydia underscored for me that Rozan was unable to get back into that character after several years away. I had thought Lydia was going on 30 by now, but with her sassy banter and suburban almost-Valley-Girl delivery, she seemed barely old enough for a P. I. license. Bill (as Bill) was a complete mess - he sounded as though he were on loan from Archie Comics with his squeaky voice, on par with cousin Linus, not a forty-something New Yorker with years of experience; as the Russian mobster, Zeller did a pretty good job. Seems obvious she was hired for her native Chinese proficiency, but that wasn't enough to keep her from being a mismatch for much of the 9 hours.

I would've switched to the print version

Se ha producido un error. Vuelve a intentarlo dentro de unos minutos.

Would you say that listening to this book was time well-spent? Why or why not?

No

How did the narrator detract from the book?

The narrator was so poor that I had to stop listening. There was no difference between the voices of the characters, male or female

Was Ghost Hero worth the listening time?

No

Any additional comments?

I'd like to read or listen to the book, I like the author very much, I'd like to have the part of my life back spent trying to listen to it read by this reader!

couldn't finish

Se ha producido un error. Vuelve a intentarlo dentro de unos minutos.

Loved the story. It is more complex with more interesting characters than just Bill and Lydia

Best book in the series so far

Se ha producido un error. Vuelve a intentarlo dentro de unos minutos.

Ver más opiniones