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The Shanghai Tunnel [Mass Market Paperback]

Sharan Newman (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

December 30, 2008

Portland, 1868. It is a rough hewn place, an exploding trading post that has dreams of becoming a metropolis. 

Horace Stratton, one of Portland's wealthiest heirs, has decided to come home for good after amassing yet another fortune in Shanghai. With him comes his wife Emily, a shy daughter of missionaries, and their teenaged son. On the brink of that happy return, Horace suddenly falls ill and dies in San Francisco.

Emily and her son bring her husband home to Portland and they try to settle into this new culture. While they look as if they should belong, Portland is a strange and unsettling place for them. 

Emily is guilt-ridden, but sorrow is one of the few emotions she didn’t feel when told of her husband's passing. For Emily had learned more about her husband’s past than anyone would believe. And she discovers that all of his schemes did not die with him.

His partners very much want Emily and her son to go away... by whatever means necessary. Emily will have to delve into her husband's seedy and painful past and set things right so that she can make a life for herself and her son in this strange land.



Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Best known for her Catherine LeVendeur medieval series (The Witch in the Well, etc.), Newman turns to her hometown of Portland, Ore., for this lackadaisical 1860s historical. The rough young city is growing fast, creating a wealth of opportunities for unscrupulous businessmen. When Horace Stratton, who made his fortune in China, dies on his way back to Portland with his wife, Emily, the daughter of American missionaries in China, Emily must manage her new life alone. After delving into Horace's business affairs, Emily learns that his fortune came from the abhorrent opium trade. Her reform efforts trigger alarm among the city's power brokers. As bodies start piling up and her own safety is threatened, Emily struggles to find her place in a society that expects women to stay home and let men take care of things. All the elements are in place for a rich, multilayered story, but weak character development and the heavy-handed portrayal of the era's sexism make for a disappointing read. Loyal Newman fans may wish for a return to the 12th century. (Feb.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review

“Readers looking for quality historical fiction ought to add Newman’s name to their lists of must-read authors. Newman offers absorbing stories with well-drawn sympathetic characters.”--Mystery Scene
 
“Newman mixes moral complexity and careful research to tell an entertaining tale.”--Publishers Weekly on Heresy

“An unforgettable tale of vengeance and love and cruelty and death…Sharan Newman creates memorable characters who spring off the page breathing, crying, singing, laughing, as completely realistic as any people I have met. It is rare to find a book so historically accurate and enjoyable to read as this one is.”--Mystery News on Cursed in the Blood  

“Colorful characters and thoroughly researched culture add up to wonderful historical fiction.”--Library Journal on Strong As Death

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Forge Books; First Edition edition (December 30, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0765354594
  • ISBN-13: 978-0765354594
  • Product Dimensions: 6.7 x 4.1 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #983,806 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars a mystery novel to be savoured, March 9, 2008
By 
tregatt (Portland, Oregon) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Shanghai Tunnel (Hardcover)
Perhaps one has to live in Portland, Oregon in order to be able to appreciate Sharan Newman's "The Shanghai Tunnel," or perhaps one just has to be discriminating enough to appreciate this slower paced but finely nuanced mystery novel. As you have probably guessed, this is going to be a review in praise of "The Shanghai Tunnel."

With her husband's sudden death, Emily Stratton finds herself facing several options: returning to China, where she had spent most of her life, establishing herself in San Francisco as a rich widow, or proceeding to Portland, Oregon, her dead husband's home town, and settling down there with her teenaged son. Having no illusions about the kind of man her husband was and the unscrupulous business practices that he probably participated in, Emily is determined to detach her son and herself from anything illegal and sordid, and the first step is to examine her husband's business papers. To her dismay, her husband's business partners seem reluctant to surrender his papers to her, protesting that she should trust them to have her best interests at heart, and that she wouldn't be able to understand the complexities of the business enterprises anyway. Used to being completely dominated by her husband, Emily is not about to allow her husband's business partners to treat her the same way; and anyway their reluctance to deal with her only confirms her suspicions that there is something untoward about her husband's business dealings. Determined to discover all, Emily presses on and soon finds herself wondering if she has bitten off than she can chew...

Like Sharan Newman's excellent Catherine LeVendeur series, "The Shanghai Tunnel" is an excellently researched historical novel, full of wonderful and detailed period details and fairly reeking of atmosphere -- I'll confess that "The Shanghai Tunnel" has inspired me to read up more diligently about Portland's history. But to get back to the somewhat reserved response so far to Sharan Newman's latest novel; it is true the book did unfold a tad slowly, juxtaposing between Emily's investigation into what's going on, and her responses to life without her brutal husband, and her new life in Portland. For readers who prefer more dynamic, forceful heroines, Emily's retiring and reserved ways may frustrate; however, I'd advise everyone to keep an open mind. "The Shanghai Tunnel" is a very different kind of mystery novel -- the type that almost requires slow and careful reading so that one can not only appreciate the mystery at hand but also slow transformation of Emily Stratton from a downtrodden wife into someone who comes into her own. All in all a very rich and absorbing read.
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars riveting historical amateur sleuth, February 21, 2008
This review is from: The Shanghai Tunnel (Hardcover)
In 1867 Horace Stratton decides to return home to Portland after a very successful business trip in Shanghai. Accompanied by his wife Emily and their teenage son Robert they reach San Francisco in January 1868; only Horace dies there. The dutiful daughter of missionaries, feeling some guilt for she knows she never lived up to her husband's expectations, Emily and Robert bring Horace's body home to be buried in Portland.

The surviving Strattons plan to live in Horace's hometown; not aware of how rough and tumble of a place it is in spite of leading citizens hoping to turn it into the San Francisco of the northwest. However, the widow and her son are not welcomed by Portland's elitists especially those who partnered with Horace. They are ignorant as to how much she really knows and understands about her late husband's unethical and mostly illegal activities; and her plans to learn what she does not know. Still they will not take chances and plot to drive her and her son out of town; if they fail to run her out then they will bury her next to her deceased husband.

THE SHANGHAI TUNNEL (in an afterward Sharan Newman explains that the tunnels exist under Portland's streets) is an enjoyable and riveting historical amateur sleuth tale that brings alive Reconstruction Era Portland, which obviously has come a long way from its salad days. The Oregonians are a deep support cast, but the story line totally belongs to the courageous widow as she surprises everyone including her self with her grit by refusing to leave. Horace must be turning in his grave witnessing what he never saw in his wife; as the mouse roars. Ms. Newman begins her new historical saga (see Catherine LeVenduer historical mysteries) with a winning mid nineteenth century thriller.

Harriet Klausner

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars When East Meets West, March 18, 2009
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This review is from: The Shanghai Tunnel (Mass Market Paperback)
"The stench of embalming fluid rose from the open ocffin and struck Emily with the force of a tidal wave," is an opening line readers won't soon forget. But, with that sentence, Sharan Newman's new novel, "The Shanghai Tunnel," is out of the chute like a main event bull at a rodeo. Emily, of course, is the widow of the embalmed cadaver -- and, contrary to expectations of grief, Newman follows the startling opening line with "And with that she also closed the lid on eighteen years of marriage to a monster" -- Now, let the games begin! The year is 1848.

As Emily and her son make thir way north to Portland. After the beauty and culture of Shanghai and Boston, they are shocked by the shabby frontier of western America. Furthermore, unbeknownst to them, a cast of shady characters, so called Portland businessmen and double dealers have already put in place nefarious plans to relieve them of their inheritance.

In the early chapters of this book, we learn of the hidden conspiracy of Horace, Emily's cruel and deceptive husband, and his equally dissembling business partners who intend to take the company from her and put her on a miserly dole while keeping the enormous profits for themselves. A novel full of secrets, we learn that her young son is a drunkard and opium addict. Later, Robert, the son is seen dating the same young Chinese girl his father bought and brought to Portland and then sold.

As the story unfolds, we learn that Emily's husband's scoundrel partners learn of her son's vices and plan to co-opt him in their plan to take over her corporation. Further, Emily discovers a jewel box, love letters, and a mini-diary of Horace's most illegal and immoral dealings. Meanwhile, of course, the double dealing partners plot to get rid of both Emily and her son even though that may mean murder.

In the novel it takes yet another kidnapping to unravel before the plot begins to resolve via Emily's tenacious investigations. We watch with wonder as Emily strengthens her character that had always been hidden in the rigid expectations of Victorian women, especially the child of missionaries in China. To the author's credit, the puzzle is not all gift-wrapped with tidy bows to see the bad guys punished and the good ones saved, rather the reader is left with many strings to think about. And, this says nothing of the mysterious Shanghai Tunnel that she has explored.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
east siders
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Mary Kate, San Francisco, Captain Stratton, Marshal Jacobi, Daniel Smith, Matthew King, Dan Smith, Ben Holladay, George Bracewell, Emily Stratton, Horace Stratton, John Mahoney, Front Street, Ned Chambreau, West Side, Norton Andrews, Tom Eliot, Portland Academy, Second Street, Master Robert, Aunt Alice, Reverend Stratton, Kwan Yin, Uncle George, Missee Stratton
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