21 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One interesting character writing about another one, September 5, 1998
This review is from: Robert Van Gulik: His Life His Work (Paperback)
Van de Wetering (a Dutch) is a very interesting author of quite unique "mysteries", set in a very everyday Amsterdam and also writes interestingly about his experiences with Zen Bhuddism. Van Gulik was a Dutch diplomat (before, during and after WW II), and a scientist working on Chinese history and culture who could play old Chinese instruments and mastered calligraphy - and who wrote mysteries in an old Imperial Chinese setting. Gulik is clearly one of Van de Wetering' s "heroes" and he is very aptly portraited as an interesting person living in interesting times and doing interesting things.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
a thorough joy, July 24, 2010
This review is from: Robert Van Gulik: His Life His Work (Paperback)
Van Gulik was a unique personality -- a linguist, diplomat, scholar, historian, novelist and sensualist. He clearly was a hero and model and "ghost" for Van Wetering, an accomplished novelist in his own right. This book is an unusual biography of a singular man, as well as a conversation between Van Wetering and Van Gulik. There's nothing like it. If you read Van Gulik's Judge Dee novels, this is a wonderful appreciation of them. If you like Van Wetering's work, this is a fine insight into one of his most important inspirations. A thorough joy that can be visited again and again.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The eccentric Dutch diplomat behind Judge Dee, August 9, 2011
This review is from: Robert Van Gulik: His Life His Work (Paperback)
A Chinese gentleman once suggested that Robert van Gulik must be an incarnation of some illustrious spirit with a sense of humor. How else explain this giant blond Dutchman with the intellect and bearing of a venerable Chinese scholar?
Van Gulik comes alive with all his talents and eccentricities in this biography. It helps that his biographer is also Dutch, and also the creator of a series of superior detective novels. I can't imagine a more felicitous combination of biographer and subject.
Van Gulik had a distinguished diplomatic career, finally becoming Ambassador to Japan for The Netherlands. Despite his lofty position he was good at evading dull duties, devoting much of his time to things like shopping for art treasures, practicing calligraphy, working on Judge Dee novels and writing scholarly treatises in Chinese.
Only the most arcane subjects interested van Gulik, such as the Chinese lute, esoteric deities, and the sex life of the ancient Chinese. His last book was The Gibbon in China. Van Gulik had lived with these little monkeys all his life and even learned how to chant their songs. This biography abounds in such delightful details. It does lack details about van Gulik's Chinese wife and four children, but perhaps his biographer wished to protect their privacy.
There's a great chart by van Gulik included showing where Judge Dee was posted when, and what cases he solved at that time. We can follow the timeline to read the cases in chronological order.
Was van Gulik a highly realized sage hiding his wisdom behind scholarship? Van de Wetering, himself a Zen Buddhist, believed so. You can judge for yourself on this point!
I found the biography quite fascinating, and it impressed upon me how authentic the Judge Dee mysteries are. A real find for fans of the Judge.
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