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Better
Link Press/Reader's Digest
2007
She
is the most celebrated woman in Chinese history. Her story is told a thousand
and one times through the centuries. Her name is synonymous with beauty in the
Chinese language.
Siren of China
brings the tale of this legendary woman to
Western readers for the first time a tale of love and war and revenge of epic
proportions.
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BOOK REVIEW
SHANGHAI DAILY
DECEMBER 4, 2007 |
The
legend of Xi Shi, one of the four ancient beauties of China, has it all: love, war, espionage, revenge. Michael Tang's new English book
Siren of China retells the 2,500-year-old story for Western readers,
writes Yao Minji.
Probably the most celebrated woman in Chinese history, Xi Shi is synonymous with
"beauty" in Chinese. Her magnificent looks and valor as a spy
dispatched to destroy her king's enemy has inspired poets and writers for 2,500
years.
Every Chinese grows up hearing varied versions of the Xi Shi tale, and New
York-based Shanghai native Michael Tang's newly published 334-page English novel
Siren of China (Better Link Press, US$22.95) carries the ancient
story to foreigners.
Instead of simply relating the ancient legend, Tang used his research and imagination to
logically fill the loopholes, resolve contradictory details and craft a coherent
tale about the Spring and Autumn Period (770-467 BC).
In the story, the king of Wu defeats the king of Yue, and the king of Yue seeks
revenge. Xi Shi, the lover of Yue’s chief general Fan Li, was sent to Wu to
seduce its king.
She succeeds and becomes the concubine of the enemy king. For the next 12 years
the king of Wu neglects his kingdom, addicted to a luxurious life with Xi Shi.
During this time the king of Yue strengthens his forces, plots and finally
conquers the Kingdom
of
Wu..
Tang fills in the details.
The author moved to the
UK
and then the United States
in the late 1980s and today is a businessman. He considers "writing a
story or reading a book a constructive use of leisure time." He is the
author of well-received books about ancient Chinese wisdom for Western readers.
Speaking of research into Chinese philosophy, Tang says: "China's classic wisdom is about one people, one nation, one history. But it is more
than that. Transcending time, space, and race, it speaks to all peoples, all
nations." He calls it "the heritage of mankind" that can be
applied to modern society.
While researching and writing about Chinese wisdom, Tang encountered once again
the story of Xi Shi, the most famous of the four ancient Chinese beauties.
"It captured my imagination ever since I heard it when I was a child."
He decided to research and write about Xi Shi because "it is a compelling
story and it could capture readers of all kinds." Tang says it's difficult
to categorize the complex story "containing elements of love, war, epic,
revenge and more."
"But a good story needs to have a tight structure with no flaws in the
plot, while most exciting ancient tales are loose. Carried on through centuries,
the tale has many unsolved questions," explains Tang.
Moreover, besides the main story of Xi Shi helping to destroy the
Kingdom
of Wu, the various versions differ and some are contradictory. For example, in some
versions the beautiful spy commits suicide after
Yue’s victory;
in others, she lives happily ever after with her lover, wise man, Fan Li.
Tang compared the different versions with historical documents to find "the
most convincing way" to structure the story. He created other aspects,
dimensions and textures, based on known facts, to fashion his novel.
For instance, Tang created child-bearing for Xi Shi because "she lived with the
king of Wu for 12 years as his favorite concubine - it doesn't make sense for
her to be childless."
Tang also adds his own interpretation to each character, often very different
from those in the old tales. While the king of Yue is always hailed as a hero
and shining example of hard work and self–discipline, the author finds him
"an ultimately unsavory character who knew nothing but revenge." Tang
also considers Xi Shi's original lover, the wise man Fan Li, "a person with
serious flaws."
And Xi Shi was the most intriguing character because of her complexity. He found
her persona and psychology increasingly more complicated during the process of
research.
Still exhilarated after
Siren of China, Tang is now working on another historical novel based on the
story of Wang Zhaojun in the Han Dynasty (206 BC-220 AD), another of the four
ancient Chinese beauties who was ordered by her emperor to marry the
king of an enemy country. The novel is tentatively entitled The Last Princess
from China.
Tang does not plan to write about the other two beauties, "because their
stories are less dynamic."
Siren of China is available at bookstores and online book sellers
worldwide as well as foreign language bookstores in
China.
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