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Hardcover The Shadow Pavilion: The Detective Inspector Chen Novels, Book Four Book

ISBN: 1597801224

ISBN13: 9781597801225

The Shadow Pavilion: The Detective Inspector Chen Novels, Book Four

(Book #4 in the Detective Inspector Chen Series)

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good*

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Book Overview

Detective Inspector Chen is back The Snake Agent returns in The Shadow Pavilion, the fourth Detective Inspector Chen novel from Liz Williams. When Chen's partner, the demon Seneschal Zhu Irzh, disappears, Chen must enlist all of his allies and assets in order to locate him.

Meanwhile, Zhu Irzh finds himself trapped in an unfamiliar jungle Hell, stalked by a rogue demon lord and his harem of tigress demons. An assassin from between worlds...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Awesome 4th

Series Overview: This series follows Inspector Chen, a mortal living in Singapore three, and a police inspector who tries to keep the peace while dealing with inhabitants of Heaven & Hell at the same time. The world created by Liz Williams is based on Chinese mythology & is a very crafty one to say the least. This universe, in which Heaven is not exactly as one prays to & Hell might not be that bad either, is a different one from the usual speculative fiction ones. In Williams' world Heaven and Hell operate as bureaucracies & both are as inept as the humans over whom they preside. Book Overview/Analysis: The series began with "Snake Agent" & was then followed by "The Demon & the City" & "Precious Dragon". While each story can be read as a standalone book, the overall storyline is carried forward by the events in each book of the series. In "Shadow Pavilion", we are reacquainted with Chen, Zhu Irzh, Inari, Mhara, Badger & many other characters and the book starts after the events of "Precious Dragon". Zhu Irzh is the representative of the Vice department of Hell currently partnering Chen in Singapore Three. Inari is Chen's demon wife who along with her demonimal, Badger, reside with Chen in his houseboat. Mhara is a celestial from Heaven who has a soft spot for mankind & its sufferings. The novel also features characters from previous books such as Ma, Jhai Tserai & one from the first book as well. The POV's are from Chen, Inari, Zhu, Mhara, Paulent Go, Badger & Seijen. After the huge debacle in Heaven & with the shift of the status-quo in Hell as well, Mhara gets a lift in his celestial position, not a position he would have preferred but one which he's responsible for. Immediately after his ascension, his policies bring him in conflict with certain persons who decide it would be best that Mhara were to take a hike, courtesy of an assassin. This is where Seijen the assassin makes an entry and to say that Seijen is a conflicted individual, will be an understatement & to find out more about this, one will have to read the book. The plot thickens as new schemes are hatched. Zhu & Badger are kidnapped by a deity from the neighboring country's God Pantheon. Chen & Inari are left to fend for themselves & help their friends without essentially knowing where to look for them. Adding to this, Paulent Go is a producer in Bollywood [Indian Cinema] who has had a very successful career thanks to Lara Chowdhirijee, his famous protege whose movies are playing to packed houses everywhere. However Lara is not just any actress & soon develops starry tantrums. Paulent then decides to make her go away & in the process meets Chen as something goes horribly wrong. Williams takes these various threads & makes a fine tapestry to give the readers another tasty entree in the Inspector Chen series. In the previous book, Chen was given more of a side role & the main action prominently featured Zhu Irzh & Jhai Tserai[ an Ind

Hindu Hells and an Assassination Attempt on Heaven's Emperor

nspector Chen has been to Hell, dealt with a misguided invasion of Hell by Heaven, corporate takeovers in Hell, and even overseen the ascension of a new Emperor of Heaven. What does "Snake Agent" Inspector Chen, his demon wife, his demon senechal partner (and new fiance!) and other allies do next? Well, would you believe get caught in the machinations of demonesses and a demigod from a different Hell (a Hindu one!) as well as deal with an assassination attempt on the (new) Emperor of Heaven himself? Shadow Pavilion is the fourth novel in Liz Williams' Inspector Chen series. Set in the early 21st century in the Chinese city Singapore Three, where the divine, demonic and real life intersect in very real ways. Not very assessable to those new to the series, Shadow Pavilion continues to expand the playground. While we have had hints there are other heavens and hells in the previous novels, but in Shadow Pavilion we not only meet denizens from them, but we actually have the characters travel to them. Williams does an excellent job making these new realms distinctly different than the bureaucratic-mad Chinese Hell, and the change in venue makes for an interesting contrast. I enjoyed this volume in the series overall, as always. Inspector Chen and his world are clearly subjects that Ms. Williams has found a niche in writing in, and I look forward to subsequent novels. My only complaint with this novel is its length. While the other novels are approximately the same short length, in this case, it feels like Williams was writing a bit to that length, rather than to the end point of a story. The pacing felt just a little bit off to me. This is not a serious flaw, but it is a noticeable one. Recommended to fans of the series. For others, I suggest trying out Snake Agent to see if you like Williams brand of modern Chinese supernatural urban fantasy.

Worth the long wait for it to arrive

I find this whole series difficult to review because they are so very different from most everything else out there. Suffice to say these books are surreal adventures in a near future Singapore with excursions into Chinese heaven and hell (and this time the Indian one as well) with demons and gods from both Chinese and Hindu mythology present in the real world. This particular entry should be read in sequence but is very rewarding since we see much more of Inari and Badger and learn something of them. Both are much braver than we thought they would be. The story divides into two pieces before rejoining into one interconnected conclusion.

Nice entry in the series

If you liked the previous volumes of this series, you'll like this one too. The relationships between the various main characters as well as the characters themselves evolved and at the end, Liz Williams opened up the perspective of what can or will come along quite interestingly. Not a good starting point however since there are a lot of references to people and events in the previous books. I'm waiting impatiently for the next book that should come out in April 2010.
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