Tai-Pan by James Clavell

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(Mass Market Paperback - Reissue)

  • Pub. Date: September 1986
  • 736pp
  • Sales Rank: 26,436
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    Reader Rating: (18 ratings)

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: September 1986
    • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
    • Format: Mass Market Paperback, 736pp
    • Sales Rank: 26,436

    Synopsis


    It is the early 19th century, when European traders and adventurers first began to penetrate the forbidding Chinese mainland. And it is in this exciting time and exotic place that a giant of an Englishman, Dirk Straun, sets out to turn the desolate island of Hong Kong into an impregnable fortress of British power, and to make himself supreme ruler…Tai-Pan!

    Gale Research

    New York Times reviewer Orville Prescott claimed that in Tai-Pan, Clavell "holds attention with a relentless grip. Tai- Pan frequently is crude. It is grossly exaggerated much of the time. But seldom does a novel appear so stuffed with imaginative invention, so packed with melodramatic action, so gaudy and flamboyant with blood and sin, treachery and conspiracy, sex and murder." A Time critic labeled the work "a belly-gutting, god-rotting typhoon of a book" and added: "Its narrative pace is numbing, its style deafening, its language penny dreadful.... It isn't art and it isn't truth. But its very energy and scope command the eye."

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    Biography

    James Clavell, who died in 1994, was a screenwriter, director, producer, and novelist born in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Although he wrote the screenplays for a number of acclaimed films, including The Fly (1958), The Great Escape (1963), and To Sir With Love (1967), he is best known for his epic novels in his Asian Saga.


    From the Paperback edition.

    Customer Reviews

    Read it 7 timesby dan0817

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    December 09, 2008: Definitely in my top 10.

    Tai-Pan is good, but not as good as Shogun.by Anonymous

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    July 02, 2003: If you want to read Taipan, read this book before Shogun. If you read Shogun first, you will expect this book to be just as good (which is impossible to do). The Taipan of this book is a little too superhero-like, and book strays from the founding of Hong Kong (which is what I wanted the focus to stay on) to a long standing fight with a rival trader. If Clavell focused on the former a bit more, this book would have been more interesting.


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