Friday, September 04, 2009



China Trade by S.J. Rozan

In ten words or less: Asian-American investigator Lydia searches for stolen porcelains in Chinatown.

Review: An expensive gift of porcelain is stolen from the Chinatown Museum, and Chinese-American private investigator Lydia chin is hired to look into the theft. She is young, smart, and tough, and lives with her traditional mother, who fears that her daughter will never find a husband until she finds a more suitable career for a woman.
The porcelains are a gift from a reclusive collector; not many people knew they were stored in the Museum’s basement. Is it a gang-related crime? Or is a professor charged with inventorying the collection covering up insurance fraud?
Lydia’s partner, Bill Smith, is attracted to her, but her mother calls him the “white devil.” Lydia tries to sort out her feelings toward him as they discover a body in another museum, and set up a meet with a gang leader.

Why bother? Lydia is fiercely independent yet loyal to her family and community. Chinatown provides an intriguing setting for a mystery, and the reader wants to find out where the relationship between Lydia and Bill is heading. I’m getting the next in the series this week.

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