
DRAGON BONES
By: Lisa See
Ballantine Books: New York
2003 (pb)
Dragon Bones is a multi-layered and
multi-faceted novel that deserves a wide readership. Lisa See presents the
reader with a richly-textured mystery, steeped in the archaeology of
present-day Peoples Republic of China. But she has written more than a
mystery, as she focuses her novelist’s eye on the political, cultural and
social realities of that enigmatic nation. She accomplishes this by
creating living, breathing, believable characters that are nonetheless
larger-than-life archetypes: a Western industrialist who covets the relics
of ancient China, a bevy of government officials who may be corrupt
careerists or selfless patriots—or both; a youthful Chinese-American dot.com
millionaire who seeks meaning and identity in the culture of ancient China;
and primarily her heroine, Liu Hulan, Inspector for the Ministry of Public
Security, who is perhaps as enigmatic as her homeland: She is at one and
the same time a highly regarded investigator for the Ministry, a staunch
Communist and a “red princess” by birth, that is, the off-spring of a parent
who fought beside Mao during the era of the Long March—the very same parent
who she betrayed during the Cultural Revolution. She was educated in the
United States and married David Stark, an American lawyer, by whom she bore
a daughter who died very young—a death she blames on herself and a death
that has damaged the marriage, perhaps irreparably.
Two widely disparate events open the novel when Hulan,
while on assignment to monitor a public demonstration in Tiananmen Square by
the All-Patriotic Society—a quasi-religious (and therefore illegal) cult
that opposes China’s lurch toward modernity and state capitalism, shoots
and kills a woman who is about to assault her own daughter. Tang Wenting,
the demonstration’s leader, urges the crowd to take vengeance on Hulan—the
“mother killer” and enemy of the people. Hulan manages to return to
Ministry headquarters but rather than being allowed to pursue the
All-Patriotic Society, which she believes represents a very real and present
danger to public order and the regime that runs China, she is assigned to
investigate the murder of an American archaeologist in the Three Gorges Dam
project on the Yangzi River, deep in the interior of China. Found floating
in the Yangzi River, miles from the archaeology site he had been working,
the young victim had apparently been branded on the forehead before tumbling
into the river. Meanwhile, David Stark is requested to represent the Bureau
of Cultural Relics to investigate the disappearance of archaeological
artifacts and the deaths of several workers at Site 518 in the Three Gorges
area. Among the victims is Brian McCarthy, the same young American
archaeologist whose death Hulan is to investigate.
Shortly after arriving in Bashan, the small village
that is headquarters to the archaeological project, Hulan discovers the
brutally murdered corpse of Lily Sinclair, the representative of a Hong Kong
auction house that specializes in Chinese antiquities. Lily bears the same
brand as found on Brian McCarthy’s forehead and her feet and nose had been
amputated, and she had been exsanguinated. Hulan also discovers that the
tiny village, destined to be evacuated and inundated when the Three Gorges
project is completed, is a center of activity for the All-Patriotic
Society. The Society is apparently playing upon the fears and dread, as
well as the deep-seated traditional values of the rural peasantry to oppose
the massive dam project.
Lisa See proceeds then to utilize the form of the
traditional murder mystery to explore the stresses and strains and inherent
contradictions found within contemporary Chinese society. There is the
reverence for the cultural traditions deeply engrained in the Chinese psyche
struggling with the demands of economic development and modernity—all within
the context of a rigid authoritarian, if not dictatorial political system;
there is the struggle between Western concepts of individualism versus the
need for societal tranquility; there is present the continuing tension
between the values of Confucianism and Buddhism on one hand and the values
of the State on the other; and there is the seemingly eternal venality of
individuals and groups, whether they be government bureaucrats, wealthy
Western industrialists, looters of Chinese antiquity, or demagogues that
would use religion and tradition to stir up the masses. Liu Hulan and David
Stark must contend with all these forces as they collaborate to solve the
macabre murders at Site 815, while struggling with inner demons that might
bring them back together or destroy their marriage forever.
This is a wonderful novel written on many levels of
meaning and subtlety. It offers great insight into contemporary China and
at the same time is a wonderfully complex and intellectually satisfying
murder mystery—an easy four trowels!
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