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Book Review: Jade Dragon Mountain marks Elsa Hart as a novelist to watch

Set in China in the early 1700s, Hart’s fiction debut perfectly marries history with mystery

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A 19th-century engraving showing worship at a Jesuit institution in Macau. Hart's novel looks at the interaction between the order and the emperor in the 1700s.
Elsa Hart’s fiction debut perfectly melds history with the mystery genre for a lush look at China on the cusp of change. Set in the early 1700s, Jade Dragon Mountain delivers a compelling look at Chinese politics, culture and religion, delivering the complexities of each with a character-rich story.

Disgraced Beijing librarian Li Du planned to stop in the border city of Dayan only long enough to register, as required of an exile, before continuing on his solitary travels.

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He wants no favours from Magistrate Tulishen, who happens to be his cousin, nor does he want to spend much time in this dirty, overcrowded place near Burma. Dayan is preparing for a major festival to honour the upcoming visit of the emperor, who has announced that he will cause an eclipse on the day he arrives. The emperor will be joined by a group of Jesuit scholars that, through the years, has proved invaluable in providing  him with a calendar of astronomical events.

But it was forbidden to publicly acknowledge the Jesuits’ contributions so as not to “tarnish the pageantry of the Emperor’s predictions”.

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Elsa Hart.
Elsa Hart.
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