The Case of the Chinese Boxes by Marele Day
Written: Oct 28 '04 (Updated Oct 11 '05)
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Product Rating:
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Pros: Likable tough female P.I. leads. Setting's alright, too.
Cons: Slow to begin
The Bottom Line: This is the second book in the Claudia Valentine series, a Sydney private investigator who never gives in.
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| damieng's Full Review: Marele Day - The Case of the Chinese Boxes |
Following on from THE LIFE AND CRIMES OF HARRY LAVENDER, the book that introduced tough Sydney private investigator Claudia Valentine comes this second book in the series, The Case Of The Chinese Boxes. Its now 1988, the year of Australias Bicentennial and theres a lot of celebrating going on. But the National Australia Bank arent celebrating. Theyve just been knocked over in one of the biggest, most daring robberies in Australias history and the fall-out is about to land in Claudias lap. Like the first book its a traditional PI story that starts out with few leads before careful digging unearths an unexpected twist and some villains not happy with the attention.
Claudia is hired by Charles Chen and his mother Victoria to recover a lost key that had been stolen from a bank safe deposit box during a recent daring bank robbery. The key is particularly ornate and apparently opens some traditional Buddhist Chinese Boxes, but more importantly, is a symbol of the familys power and standing in the community. This case will not only take Claudia out of her comfort zone and into the underworld dominated by the dangerous Chinese Triads who rule Chinatown, but it will also take her to parts of Sydney that she never knew existed and, for her own safety, perhaps wished she still didnt know.
Not only does Claudia have to contend with an unknown enemy who, at one point, thoughtfully slips a warning message inside her fortune cookie, but she finds that she is working for a client who is very unwilling to provide her with any details that might prove helpful in solving the case. Claudia has to resort to some pretty unorthodox investigative methods before she begins to achieve results.
As a consequence, for much of the story we are carried along while waiting for something to happen. Because the case is fairly vague and clues are hard to come by, Claudia - to invoke a relevant metaphor - is left to poke at the dragon in the hope that it might wake and try to bite her. The result is a case that shoots off into a completely unexpected direction dragging an unwilling private investigation along with it.
Many of the characters who were introduced in Harry Lavender returned to assist Claudia with this case too, but author Marele Day didnt think to reintroduce those characters to us. So unless you had just finished the first book or had a particularly good memory, you wouldnt know who these characters were or how they fit into Claudias life. I had only finished Harry Lavender a month before reading this and I was still struggling to recall who some of the vaguely familiar characters were.
A delightful addition to the story is Hong Kong based visitor James Ho, a flirtatious nuisance who quickly becomes the bane of Claudias life with his unexpected appearances and amusingly obvious suggestions. Claudias annoyance and discomfort around Ho provides for some lighter moments in an otherwise dangerous and serious case. But Ho is also the holder of some of the more tantalising secrets in this story and proves to be an exceptional private investigator in his own right.
This is an intriguing investigation that displays Claudia Valentines ingenuity and dogged determination. She takes us on a visit into Sydneys Chinese community, faces down a Triad member or two, makes contact with the most talked about bank robber in the country and crosses swords with a visiting P.I. All in all theres a lot to like about The Case Of The Chinese Boxes
The Claudia Valentine series
The Life and Crimes of Harry Lavender
The Case of the Chinese Boxes
The Last Tango of Dolores Delgado
The Disappearances of Madalena Grimaldi
Recommended:
Yes
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Epinions.com ID: damieng
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Location: Sydney, Australia
Reviews written: 427
Trusted by: 94 members
About Me: Stop thanking me for my patience...I don't have any.
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