Rating:  Summary: What might be called a "break-through book" Review: S.J. Rozan's two protaganists, Lydia Chin and Bill Smith, alternately take the lead in this series, of which "Reflecting the Sky" is number seven if I'm not mistaken. They just get better and better. Here, it's Lydia's turn. Along with compelling plot, complex relationships, and a dazzling setting, "Reflecting the Sky" offers some rich insights into differences in mind-set of the two cultures (as represented by the dread "nature metaphors" frequently offered Lydia as she seeks more straightforward advice). On every level, I loved this book...read it in a day and was just plain happy as I did so.
Rating:  Summary: A new level Review: SJ Rozan -- one of my favorite crime writers anyway -- has hit a new level with REFLECTING THE SKY. Maybe it's the Hong Kong setting, but something in this book brings out a new depth and maturity in Lydia Chin. She show a seriousness we haven't seen before as she and Bill Smith, working with (and sometimes against) an Alabama-raised, Chinese-American Hong Kong cop, try to solve a complicated case revolving around kidnapping, smuggling, and the meaning of family. I'm eyeing ticket prices to Hong Kong as I write this.
Rating:  Summary: I like the Bill Smith narrated novels best. This is a Lydia. Review: The first time I read a Rozan book, it was a Lydia Chin narrated book. I didn't like it at all. The second time, I read a Bill Smith narrated book and I couldn't believe that it was the same author. Now I've read another Lydia Chin and I'm kind of back to finding it only so-so.The Hong Kong part of the book is interesting, and the plot isn't bad as such, but so much of the book depends on Chin's inner life and I just don't find it that interesting. Accordingly, I never really managed to engage the book or really care about what happened. Back to Bill Smith for me.
Rating:  Summary: Wish I could say I loved it Review: This is my first Lydia Chin/Bill Smith book and I feel that I should have read some of Rozan's previous works in the series before tackling REFLECTING THE SKY. I have no complaints about the main characters. I was able to catch up as to who they are and their motivations. The problem was that this book was overly hyped to me and I just could not see what was so great about it. Private Investigators Lydia Chin and Bill Smith are sent to Hong Kong in order to fulfill a bequest made to them by Grandfather Gao. They feel that there is something more to this mission that they are being told and find out that they are right. When they arrive to Hong Kong they are caught in the middle of a kidnapping case where two different groups are claiming responsibility for the actions. It appears that Harry Wei's nanny kidnapped him for reasons only known to her and later to the reader. Lydia and Bill will do everything in their power to rescue Harry even if it involves them getting involved with Chinese Triads, smugglers and tongs. The story focuses on culture shock as Lydia Chin comes to China for the first time after living most of her life in Chinatown. We see the prejudice that Chinese people have on foreigners. This is not something exclusively Chinese but it is something we are seeing almost everyday in the news for other parts of the world. The author's descriptions are very vivid where it is easy for the reader to visualize the scenery. This book has its requisite twist and turns and the book had my attention. I just did not think it was that great. Hopefully I might change my mind in the future after I read some of S. J. Rozan's other works.
Rating:  Summary: As good as I've come to expect from Rozan Review: This is yet another great mystery in a very good series. The plot is complex and yet believable, Lydia and Bill are as entertaining as ever and the Hong Kong setting gives this book the added pleasure of an exotic atmosphere. I have read the entire series (except for Winter and Night) and it is all very good. Rozan seemed to reach a slightly higher level of excellence with A Bitter Feast and she has maintained that level with Stone Quarry and this book. Although I really like the Bill Smith narrated books, I have to admit I have a slight preference for the Lydia Chin narrated books (of which this is one). The Lydia Chin perspective, as one would expect, seems to come a little more naturally to Rozan than the Bill Smith perspective. Also, the Bill Smith books are written in a more hard-boiled style, which is fine but they do occasionally come across as a touch melodramatic, which never happens in the Lydia Chin books. I do have one very minor criticism of this series, however. Lydia's and Bill's personal lives seem to be almost in a state of suspended anamation; it is high time that something happens on this front. Lydia and Bill need to either get together or move on and develop other relationships. Anyway, I think Rozan is one of the very best mystery writers writing today and hope she writes many, many more!
Rating:  Summary: As good as I've come to expect from Rozan Review: This is yet another great mystery in a very good series. The plot is complex and yet believable, Lydia and Bill are as entertaining as ever and the Hong Kong setting gives this book the added pleasure of an exotic atmosphere. I have read the entire series (except for Winter and Night) and it is all very good. Rozan seemed to reach a slightly higher level of excellence with A Bitter Feast and she has maintained that level with Stone Quarry and this book. Although I really like the Bill Smith narrated books, I have to admit I have a slight preference for the Lydia Chin narrated books (of which this is one). The Lydia Chin perspective, as one would expect, seems to come a little more naturally to Rozan than the Bill Smith perspective. Also, the Bill Smith books are written in a more hard-boiled style, which is fine but they do occasionally come across as a touch melodramatic, which never happens in the Lydia Chin books. I do have one very minor criticism of this series, however. Lydia's and Bill's personal lives seem to be almost in a state of suspended anamation; it is high time that something happens on this front. Lydia and Bill need to either get together or move on and develop other relationships. Anyway, I think Rozan is one of the very best mystery writers writing today and hope she writes many, many more!
Rating:  Summary: Reflecting the Sky a portrait of Hong Kong..... Review: What a terrific story. Rozan's painting of the setting of Hong Kong from the weather, food and people, places you smack in the middle of that city. The story is complex and interesting and never fails to entertain. For those familiar with the duo of Lydia Chin and Bill Smith, Rozan keeps the sexual tension building. For those not familiar with this duo you could jump into this book and not feel lost, however I would reccommend starting with the first in this series, China Trade, you won't be sorry.
Rating:  Summary: SJ Rozan continues to get better Review: Years ago I read a mystery novel, the main character of which was a woman who worked as a private eye in New York City. She was Chinese-American, had a constant series of fights with her mother over everything, and had an interesting dichotomy of cultural influences, being of Chinese ancestry but very American in many ways. It was called China Trade, the author was an architect named SJ Rozan, who lives in NYC, and it was wonderful. Rozan has to now be the best kept secret in mystery fiction: the only woman to win a Shamus besides Sue Grafton, she never is on the bestseller lists, and is relatively anonymous. One of the most interesting aspects of the series is the narration. In typical hard-boiled style, the main character narrates the story. The twist here is that the Chinese-American woman, Lydia Chin, mentioned above has a sometime partner in detective work, a former sailor named Bill Smith, and the author switches narrator every book. Stone Quarry, the last book prior to reflecting the sky, and the sixth, was narrated by Bill, so this time Lydia is narrating again, as at the start of the series. It's one of the more entertaining and difficult things to pull off, changing narrators, and making it believable. Read through the rest of the reviews for this title, and you'll find most of the reviewers like the one character or the other as a narrator more than the other. That says to me that the author succeeds in making the two different. In the current installment, Lydia is sent on a deceptively simple errand by her "Grandfather" Gao, an elderly friend of the family and community leader. A lifelong friend of his has passed away, and his ashes and a keepsake must be returned to Hong Kong, to the part of his family that's still in the former colony. Lydia is a bit suspicious that everything isn't what it seems, because Grandfather Gao tells her to take her partner, Bill Smith, with her, even though no trouble is supposedly expected. When they arrive, Lydia and Bill stumble right into the middle of a kidnapping, and things take right off. The author throws everything at you: a shady antiques dealer, a shifty fortune teller, a martial arts movie stuntman, various thugs and intrigues, and even foreigners in Hong Kong (Filipina amahs, or au pair girls, who are ubiquitous) are all drawn wonderfully, and the plot hops right along for 250 pages. Like I said to start, SJ Rozan is one of the best kept secrets in mystery fiction. It's only a matter of time before the secret gets out.
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