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The Gold Swan [Mass Market Paperback]

James Thayer (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)


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Book Description

November 1, 2003

To mark five thousand years of civilization, China has commissioned master architect John Llewellyn to construct a building like no other -- a three-thousand-foot-tall crescent of bronze, steel, and concrete, towering above the Hong Kong skyline. Its official name is the Fifth Millennium, but the city's citizens have dubbed it the Gold Swan. It will be the eighth wonder of the world, a testament to China's glory. And it may hold a fatal flaw that could bring it crashing to the ground before it is completed.

Llewellyn's chief security man, ex-FBI agent Clay Williams, and young architect Anne Iverson suspect the impending disaster, and they are thrust into the deadly world of Chinese politics -- where the truth is a lie, and lies are the only answers they can find. What they cannot know is that there are those in power who want the tower to fall, and with it, the very heart of one of the most powerful nations on earth....


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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

James Stewart Thayer, a former attorney turned thriller writer who keeps getting better with every new novel, offers a provocative story about an extraordinary new Hong Kong tower--the Gold Swan of the title--whose success or failure will affect the geopolitical ambitions of the Chinese government and make or break the fortunes of architect John Llewellyn, a maverick in the Frank Gehry tradition whose one-time college roommate is now China's Premier. Meanwhile, former FBI agent Clay Williams, head of security for the project, is approached by intermediaries for a powerful Triad leader whose grandson's kidnapping seems linked to the imminent collapse of the Swan--as well as to the murder of Clay's father. Some readers may want to skim over Thayer's detailed description of the engineering challenges involved in the construction of such an innovative building, but they don't slow down the plot or get in the way of his deft characterizations, especially of Llewellyn. The Gold Swan is a slick, smart read. --Jane Adams --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

Beijing corruption, the Chinese criminal underworld and Hong Kong real estate codes are all part of the stew in this 12th international thriller from Thayer (Force 12, etc.), which centers on the fate of one building. The Gold Swan is a massive, curved, nearly completed Hong Kong skyscraper-set to be the tallest building in the world, the crowning glory in the career of world-famous architect John Llewellyn and a powerful symbol of the People's Republic of China. Alas, it's also leaning. Wry Clay Williams, building security chief and former FBI agent, has to figure out what went wrong, but his investigation is complicated by the suspicious "suicide" of his visiting father, which Williams suspects was actually a murder. A loner estranged from his wife, Williams teams up with architect Anne Iverson, Llewelyn's mistress and second-in-command, and becomes smitten with the unavailable beauty. He stumbles onto a plot by Chinese gangsters and meets with CIA operatives, who, somewhat implausibly, allow him to view videotapes of secret meetings of the Chinese Central Committee in Beijing. Thayer paints a rich picture of Hong Kong politics as well as of the world of international architecture, but his plot lacks suspense and credibility. There are contrived, groan-out-loud coincidences and little sense of danger for the hero or heroine-uncanny luck saves them every time. The book is also riddled with factual inconsistencies, from the fluctuating length of Iverson's hair to more pivotal plot details. Long on atmosphere, this putative thriller is sadly short on thrills.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 448 pages
  • Publisher: Pocket Star (November 1, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0671034332
  • ISBN-13: 978-0671034337
  • Product Dimensions: 6.8 x 4.3 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.5 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,927,289 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I served as a physician in the British Army during the Boer War. Wait. Sorry. That was Arthur Conan Doyle. I was raised in Spokane, and went to school in Pullman and Chicago. My wife Patti, our two daughters, and I live in Seattle. I'm trying to learn to play the tenor saxophone, but Coleman Hawkins needn't be looking over his shoulder. I teach novel writing at the University of Washington extension school, and maintain a blog about fiction writing (www.novelpro.net), where I discuss writing techniques each day.

 

Customer Reviews

9 Reviews
5 star:
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4 star:
 (3)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars This is one of those rare books you are likely to read again, December 7, 2002
By 
Bookreporter (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
The Gold Swan is the nickname of a fabulous building being constructed, fictionally, in present-day Hong Kong --- more precisely, on a man-made island in Hong Kong harbor. The nickname comes from the unique, curving shape its architect has given to the structure, which is best described in the author's own words: "It was the tallest structure ever created by man and made of steel and bronze, those metals that are the very embodiment of solidity and it was a massive thing. Yet it was also slender, with delicate edges and was one long, elegant curve that some architecture critics were calling feminine. It was solid and inert, planted out there in the middle of the harbor, yet it was also soaring, more than seven hundred feet higher than the Peak, reaching skyward in a fluid, rounded motion, touching the clouds. And it was a chameleon, its bronze casing throwing back the gold of the sun and also reflecting images of passing clouds and the restless water of the harbor, endlessly changing as the day unfolded."

Clay Williams is a former FBI man approximately in his 40's. He has been working for ten years in Hong Kong as a security agent for international projects and has been one of three security men on the Gold Swan project from the beginning. Clay's visiting father is killed in a fall from the 20th story balcony of Clay's apartment at the same time that an eleven year-old boy disappears from his next-door neighbor's apartment --- and the plot is set in motion. The Hong Kong police say the father's death is suicide and they plant a couple of ridiculous clues as proof, but Clay knows better. It doesn't take the boy's grandfather long to find Clay and to discern a connection between death and disappearance and, thus, an unlikely but colorful and productive alliance is formed.

Clay is well connected. He has a best friend who is a police officer and he has other friends in the CIA and State Department. He's quiet, capable, thoughtful and
unassuming --- an appealing character whose heroic qualities are present in a muted key. After ten years in Hong Kong, Clay still sees the city with the eyes of a stranger who just happens to know his way around and he shares that vision constantly with us. He also educates us about the changes that have occurred since the British returned Hong Kong to China a few years ago. Ah yes. The plot thickens with those changes. John Llewellyn, architect of the Gold Swan, went to college with the (fictional) leader of China, who of course is based in Beijing; the fabulous building is
a way for Beijing to put its stamp on Hong Kong, to reclaim that city and its international prestige and wealth for the whole of China. Beijing-Hong Kong tension looms large.

Eventually it develops that Clay's father was killed and the little boy was kidnapped as part of a conspiracy surrounding the Gold Swan. It is a conspiracy so huge that, like the building itself, it's hard for the mind to grasp. Clay begins, secretly, to work with the CIA. At the same time, he's working with the boy's grandfather who is in an amazing line of business. He also has his own job to do, as the Gold Swan nears completion. It's a sort of triple-agent scenario that Clay juggles quietly and smoothly, even as he manages to nurture a friendship with a difficult woman.

Thayer handles his large story well, particularly in the way he brings Hong Kong alive on his pages. This is one of those books you can fall into and, when you come out of it, feel as if you've truly spent many hours in another place. It's about as close to a vacation in Hong Kong as most of us will ever get.

The characters, especially the little boy, his friends and his family, are vividly drawn. There are few clichés here -- with the notable exception of a certain henchman of enormous size, who seemed to have come from a Bond movie and whose guardian angel qualities were improbable all around.

The plot unfolds somewhat unevenly, but realistically -- life itself never unfolds at an even pace, particularly around big events; there are always hitches and glitches. This is a thoughtful book best read for the whole scope of what it has to say, not as if it were a print version of a summer blockbuster movie. Tension builds here slowly but inexorably, both in the ever-widening conspiracy surrounding the Gold Swan and in Clay's own personal life. The denouement, when it arrives, is huge, catastrophic and
totally believable.

THE GOLD SWAN is a poignant, sensual read that is likely to stay with you long after you close the pages of the book. It is, in fact, a keeper -- one of those rare books you are likely to want to read again.

--- Reviewed by Ava Dianne Day

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Book, Great Author, February 17, 2003
By 
ROBIN MCCALL "LTC (Ret.) Robin McCall" (Chula Vista, California United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I would like to say that I discovered a great new author, but I can only say that I discovered a great author. He is not new, because GOLD SWAN is his 12th book, and I am very unhappy that it took me so long to find him. I do not understand why he has not already been on the bestseller list 12 times.

I was lucky enough to read one of Thayer's WWII novels a few weeks ago. I enjoyed that paperback so much that I immediately went looking for it in hardback, as well as trying to find all the author's other books. I managed to get a new hardback copy of GOLD SWAN, and I immediately read it as fast as I could. It is a wonderful thriller that is almost completely different from the WWII books, except for the outstanding writing.

GOLD SWAN is a marvelous, fast paced story, with many interesting characters. I enjoyed it thoroughly, while learning more about Hong Kong than I did in my 10+ trips there. I love fiction that teaches me things, at the same time that I get a great story. Both of Thayer's books that I have read do that for me, but Gold Swan taught me about Hong Kong, Chinese politics and gangsters, architecture, construction, and police work, and it increased my respect for the work of the CIA. This book was exciting from beginning to end, fun, interesting, educational, and very well written.

I now have 10 more books to look forward to reading.

It is my understanding that the WWII book has been optioned for a movie that should be as exciting as the book, because of the star who is involved. Buy this author's books now, because he will soon be so well known that copies of his old books will be hard to get.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars How does he do it?, November 25, 2002
By 
Richard R. Greiling (Seattle, WA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This is the fourth James Thayer book I have read, and each one is completely different: different setting, era, professions of main characters, etc. And he does his homework. All of the details are well studied and accurate. I also think he does an excellent job of writing believable female characters. Many male authors of mysteries and thrillers create female characters who are like the male characters but with higher voices and better grooming. Thayer gets the women right.

The Gold Swan is one of those mysteries where the reader can see it coming, but can savor the way the story plays out to the characters. This is very American in its style -- Phillip Margolin writes this way too. Unlike the classic British mystery writers, who like to keep you guessing to the very end (and sometimes beyond).

Thayer also nails the cultural differences between the Chinese and the gweilos (non-Chinese) in the middle of an increasingly tense construction project in Hong Kong.

This book will hold your interest. You may be late for a meal or two while you read to the end of a chapter.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
I had just become an orphan, just that moment. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
cafeteria trailers, physics club, new ferry terminal, red pole, tile contractor, construction minister, tower commission, old gangster, dragon head, range finder, armored truck
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Hong Kong, Fifth Millennium China Tower, Anne Iverson, Shao Long, Soong Chan, Darrel Reese, Wen Quichin, Central Committee, Peach Blossom, President Chen, Hsu Shui-ban, New Territories, Pen Kai-ge, Heroes of the Revolution Island, Floor Physics Club, Ministry of State Security, San Francisco, Wan Chai, United States, Victoria Harbor, Zhu Jintau, Jack Rainey, New York, Sears Tower, Cao Ah-kin
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