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"Yellow peril": The adventures of Sir John Weymouth-Smythe : a novel [Hardcover]

Richard Jaccoma (Author)
3.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 383 pages
  • Publisher: Richard Marek Publishers; 1st edition (1978)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0399900071
  • ISBN-13: 978-0399900075
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.7 x 1.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.5 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #303,352 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

8 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.1 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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11 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the Best Books I've Ever Read, July 3, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: "Yellow peril": The adventures of Sir John Weymouth-Smythe : a novel (Hardcover)
This novel is so brilliant in its many facets and so rich in interlocking ironies, it's a totally fascinating book to read. The "hero" is soon enough revealed to be an unreliable narrator in the tradition that includes such great books as Ford Maddox Ford's The Good Soldier. He is also an anti-hero, or anti-villain, in the tradition of the greatest pulp fiction -- an adventurer whose exploits are daring in pursuit of enemies who are our friends and friends who turn out to be our enemies -- yet Smythe, in his foolish arrogance, never quite realizes who he is or what the stakes really are. All this tells us so much not just about the terrible times in which the book is set, the 1930s, but our own times too, when, as Yeats wrote,"the best lack all conviction, while the worst are full of passionate intensity." The book is truly high-minded in exposing racism and sexism and those who are tempted by fascism and every other evil that exalts power; that this is all portrayed through the structure of a the pulp novel form is yet another expression of the book's rich genius. The muscular action is so much fun, and yes there is sex, which is also fun, and there are scary events too, but then, Nazism was scary, and racism is scary, and the inability to recognize evil is scary, as this book so vividly shows. Perhaps because the book is so entertaining, it's possible to miss its deep seriousness; yet this is no surprise, because this too is what the book is about. YELLOW PERIL is like the intelligent older brother of RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK -- every bit as much fun but genuinely, morally smart. I can't wait till my nine year old is about 18; I'll insist that he read it.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Before "Indiana Jones", there was....., September 18, 2010
By 
Jim (Texas USA) - See all my reviews

Sir John Weymouth-Smythe! (book review)

He was the globe-trotting English adventurer of Richard Jaccoma's novel "YELLOW PERIL" (Richard Marek Publishers, New York, 1978).

Forget the "Fu-Manchu" stuff. I love reading about the Nazi characters in this book set in the mid-late 1930s. Just as Smythe tries to conceal his identity, so do the Germans. They consist of a middle-aged university professor and his oversexed sister Clara, traveling the Indian outbacks with a couple of thinly-diguised bodyguards (obviously SA thugs in civilian clothes). Outwardly, they are searching for ancient artifacts, but are actually on a quest for the "Heilige Lanze" (the fabled Spear of Destiny) on orders from the Fuhrer himself! Add to this the fact that the Nazi brother-sister duo are into private occult rituals featuring Aryan symbols painted on their nude bodies, knives, sex and human sacrifice and you've got Big Time Show Biz as far as I'm concerned. :-)

While much of the book is about Smythe's run-in with a Chinese "Fu-Manchu" type villain (and his daughter), it always returns to the Nazis, including the blood-splattered climax in Berlin!

Here is an excerpt when Sir John first runs into (literally) the Germans on an Indian riverboat:

////////////////////

And first proof of our strategy's wisdom came to me at the very gangplank of the riverboat! My car made the quay with but moments to spare. I shouted the Moslem porters into tossing my luggage in the hold, then raced myself for the first-class ramp, trampling my way through the ever-present hordes of massing Asiatics. Just as I gained the ramp's bottom, I collided with another passenger likewise racing, and near sent that person sprawling. In the last instant I reached out, caught a flailing arm just in the nick, and suddenly found myself staring full in the face of the most beautiful blonde goddess I had ever seen!

"SO sorry!" I panted. "After you, madam..."

The gorgeous creature that I had nearly bowled over was near as tall as I. A broad, white smile danced on her open face, crinkling her small, fine nose.

"Danke, mein Herr," she said, and at once turned her attention to a figure lounging on the railing above.

"Hans!" she called, and waved a long, suntanned arm vigorously.

The man who was the object of her attentions was dressed impeccably in white summer suit with wide-brimmed hat. He was well over six foot tall and well muscled. ...his handsome, fine features spoke loud and clear of Teutonic aristocracy.

And then, the Valkyrie was striding up the gangplank in front of me. I caught myself gazing with much appreciation at those deliciously firm flanks which flared beneath her loose, ankle-length brush skirt.

I remember feeling, in my damp and dust-coated traveling suit, quite the inferior to these crisp Nordic superhumans who strolled obliviously away from me and down the deck."

///////////////

Try it, you'll like it.

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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars How NOT to Write a Pastiche, June 14, 2008
By 
fredtownward "The Analytical Mind; Have Brain... (Mocksville, North Carolina, United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: "Yellow peril": The adventures of Sir John Weymouth-Smythe : a novel (Hardcover)
This is a wretched, unpleasant, infuriating book, in part because of the missed opportunity. Richard Jaccoma is a talented writer, clearly capable of providing us with a modern (well, modern as of 1978) take on the Fu Manchu archetypes. Unfortunately he decided he'd rather give us a lecture and in the process provided us with a clinic on how NOT to write a pastiche.

The best pastiches (read, the most successful) are written out of affection for the source material and have a ready-made market in fellow fans. It is not impossible to produce a successful pastiche motivated by hatred, but it is an uphill fight. People who enjoyed the source material are unlikely to enjoy your attack upon it, and people who hated the original are unlikely to want to read your version.

Second, unless you are trying to be funny, it is a bit unfair to wildly exaggerate the alleged wrongs of the source material, and "wallowing in it" is going to make for an unpleasant read, far more unpleasant than the original source material. One of the hazards of reading old books is coming across offensively outdated ideas. If you read Sax Rohmer's Fu Manchu books, you will find yourself cringing every few pages, but in reading this book, you will be cringing at almost every paragraph.

Third, it is rarely a good idea to commit the very sin you are condemning the original author for. As other critics have pointed out, Jaccoma seems to take a special, perverse pleasure in using and abusing his WASP characters. Of course they have all done something to deserve it, if only by expressing a more virulent racism than you'll find in anything Sax Rohmer ever wrote, but the result is to make the book that much more unpleasant.

A less excusable lapse is Jaccoma's attitude towards his female characters. No one who has read him can accuse Sax Rohmer of misogyny, but the same cannot said for Richard Jaccoma. One of the major themes of the Fu Manchu stories (done to death by repetition of course) is that True Love Triumphs Over Evil. Genius that he is, the male chauvinist Fu Manchu has a real blind spot when it comes to women. Invariably the women he compels by various threats to beguile our heroes end up falling in love with one of them and turning on him, and Fu Manchu who cannot imagine any of his slaves summoning the gumption to oppose him, invariably fails to recognize it. Contrast that admittedly naive, old fashioned romanticism with what takes place in here. Leaving aside the abuse Jaccoma heaps upon his Nazi female character (who enjoys it of course), Chou en Shu initiates all his female conscripts by brutally raping them, which they "naturally" enjoy immensely by the end, and the resulting sex slaves remain completely loyal to him even when they sincerely profess to have fallen in love with someone else. This is supposed to be an improvement? Yes, apparently, because these willing sex slaves of Chou en Shu repeatedly condemn our hero both for his stupidity in failing to figure out what is REALLY going on AND for his old fashioned ideas about sex, like being uncomfortable with rape.

In the end it is difficult to pose as the voice of moral outrage...

from the bottom of the sewer.

Sir John Weymouth-Smythe is the "unreliable narrator" who we are supposed to feel so smugly superior to, but Jaccoma never gives him a chance. After being mailed the heart and severed head of his fiance, a man can be forgiven for taking on questionable allies and failing to grasp the subtle intricacies of such a twisted plot. Father Dan, too, misunderstands, but given the way things are set up, how could he not? A foreshadowed from the beginning but nevertheless phony feeling tacked on happy ending rings false, and the Spear of Destiny turns out to be one of the most blatant MacGuffins in literary history. What is it? What does it do? What are the consequences if the bad guys get hold of it? No reader will ever know because the author never made up his mind. Maybe if you read the book referred to in the introduction, which the author obviously stole the idea from, you can figure it out: Spear of Destiny.

As political or historical commentary, the book is a mess as well. In the one Fu Manchu book I'm sure Mr. Jaccoma has read and gotten angry about, The Drums of Fu Manchu, Sax Rohmer comes dangerously close to expressing some esteem for his stand-in for Adolph Hitler, but that hardly justifies Jaccoma's assertion of direct British involvement in the rise of Adolph Hitler here. In a more general sense it is also silly to suggest that obsession with Sax Rohmer's imaginary "yellow peril" of the title distracted the British from the true fascist peril rising in Europe because there actually WAS a "yellow peril" rising in the East -- Sax just got the country wrong:

The Empire of Japan proceeded to outdo in real life the worst horrors that Rohmer or Jaccoma could imagine.

Jaccoma wrote two quasi-sequels: The Werewolf's Tale and The Werewolf's Revenge. Frankly I'd be more inclined to recommend the original Fu Manchu stories: The Fu Manchu Omnibus: Volume 1, The Fu Manchu Omnibus: Volume 2, The Fu Manchu Omnibus: Volume 3, The Fu Manchu Omnibus: Volume 4, and The Fu Manchu Omnibus, Volume 5 (Fu Manchu Omnibus), if you can find them.
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