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Evelyn  M
  • Rated 5 stars

Rabbit in the Moon tells the story of Dr. Lili Quan, an American who struggles with her Chinese identity and who, by traveling to China to find her roots, discovers much more - including a part of herself that she never knew. The backdrop of the story, the short-lived student democracy movement...

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  • Kevin Tipple
      • Rated 4 stars

    The secret of longevity has been a puzzle that has a haunted scientists. While life spans have elongated due to better healthcare and nutrition as societies have evolved, scientists have long searched for the secret key to increase life spans even more. The search for the magical exlir has been unsuccessful.

    Until now.

    Dr. Ni-Fu Cheng has found the secret. He has created a potion that can easily double the human lifespan while also improving the overall health of the test subjects. Working at the Xian Institute, Dr. Ni-Fu Cheng isn't sure that he should go public with his knowledge. A "guest" of the Chinese government, he isn't going to be freed until he tells his secret. The elderly leaders of the government, desperate to retain power, have concocted a plan.

    Their plan is to entice his American born granddaughter, Dr. Lili Quan, to come to the Institute. They will orchestrate events and offer her a fellowship so that she leaves her current position and travels to mainland China. Once in China, they will inform her that her grandfather, who she has long thought was dead, is alive. They will give her plausible explanations of why they couldn't tell her until she was in China and then arrange a family reunion. After her family reunion, they will use his grand daughter as leverage against Dr. Ni-Fu Cheng to make him give up the formula. But, the Chinese government is not the only one who wants the secret as there are many players in this game and everyone has a plan leading to cross and double cross and even triple cross.

    Set against the backdrop of the seven weeks in 1989 that culminated in the Tianamen square massacre, the novel is both highly political and one person's journey back to her home land. Dr. Quan is Chinese only by genetics at the start of the novel having been born in America and having strongly resisted her heritage every step of the way. It is only through her journey home, both in terms of place as well as meeting her grand father, that she is able to heal her psyche and become at peace with who she is. She is a complex character that evolves significantly throughout the novel and yet is still left with major life questions at the end of the work.

    Rich in characters and settings, this novel often moves at a slow pace despite its "thriller" designation. "A novel of suspense" would be more appropriate as the thriller components seem only to be the science, exotic locales, and the involvement of government agencies at home and abroad. It certainly can't refer to the pace which is often little more than glacial. Point of view shifts through the many characters, often for a few paragraphs at a time, further slows the pace of a work that needs some serious streamlining to fit the thriller genre or a major increase in action. It is only the last 70 pages or so, where bodies begin to fall and thereby eliminate some of the "meanwhile, back over here" point shifts that the pace increases dramatically. Even then it doesn't come anywhere near classic Robert Ludlum or David Morrel who have both touched upon the longevity issue from time to time and wrote actual thrillers.

    Despite the fact that it is an "Award-Winning Finalist in the Fiction & Literature: Thriller/Adventure category of the National Best Books 2008 Awards," the novel is a good read that could have been better. As it is, the work is an overall interesting read that is filled with complex characters, plenty of intrigue, and numerous exotic locals. One can't help but believe there has to be a movie deal in the works.


    Rabbit in the Moon: An International Thriller
    Deborah & Joel Shlian
    Oceanview Publishing
    http://www.oceanviewpublishing.com
    June 1, 2008
    ISBN# 978-1-933515-14-4
    376 Pages
    ARC


    This material was provided in ARC form by publicist Maryglenn McCombs in exchange for my objective review.


    Kevin R. Tipple © 2008



    Kevin Tipple wrote this review Sunday, November 30 2008. ( reply | permalink ) Was this review helpful? Yes | No
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    Evelyn  M
    1 of 1 members found this review helpful
      • Rated 5 stars

    Rabbit in the Moon tells the story of Dr. Lili Quan, an American who struggles with her Chinese identity and who, by traveling to China to find her roots, discovers much more - including a part of herself that she never knew. The backdrop of the story, the short-lived student democracy movement of 1989, is perfect for the longevity theme and the apparent struggle between the old leaders and the young students. This book was extremely well researched. I have recommended it to my book group.

    Evelyn M wrote this review Wednesday, October 22 2008. ( reply | permalink ) Was this review helpful? Yes | No
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    Paul W
    1 of 1 members found this review helpful
      • Rated 4 stars

    Rabbit kept me turning the pages to find out what happened next...I finished reading Rabbit and turned around and read it again..Well done. Loved the twists and turns, characters and plot. A must read

    Paul W wrote this review Thursday, June 26 2008. ( reply | permalink ) Was this review helpful? Yes | No
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    Arlene B
    1 of 1 members found this review helpful
      • Rated 5 stars

    I must say, I was hooked on this amazing international thriller from the first sentence: “It is Chinese to hope…” The authors, Deborah and Joel Shlian, have packed an incredible amount of detailed history of China from Mao to the Tiananmen massacre into 357 pages, at the same time telling a wonderfully rich story. Dr. Lili Quan, an American born doctor has spent so much of her life rejecting her Chinese heritage, embracing her American identity, yet always feeling a little “different”. When her confrontation with her chief of medicine threatens to cost her a coveted geriatrics fellowship, she takes the opportunity to travel to China for some training in Eastern medicine. What Lili doesn’t know is that the people who engineered her trip are three senior members of the Communist party who want to use her to obtain her grandfather’s discovery – a way to prolong life. Throw in an old billionaire who can buy anything but longevity, a rogue CIA agent, a desperate American drug company VP and a few other villains and you have a recipe for a real page turner. Rabbit in the Moon, will make you appreciate the cultural differences between East and West. While there’s much to savor long after you read the last page, if you’re like me, you’ll be hungry for a sequel. This is a must read – especially with the Olympics in Beijing in August.

    Dr. Arlene Barro

    Arlene B wrote this review Wednesday, June 18 2008. ( reply | permalink ) Was this review helpful? Yes | No
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