Eliot Pattison: Prayer of the Dragon
As you can see, I am into some serious reading. Not heavy reading, but books like carrots – I am the donkey, plodding way, packing my boxes, sorting, weeding, throwing out – it is time consuming, and it is pitiless work. I need the promise of a great excape at the end of my day to keep me going.
Prayer of the Dragon was a GREAT carrot. I like all of Eliot Pattison’s Inspector Shan Tao Yun series, set in Tibet. In his very first book, we meet Shan as he is still in the Tibetan prison camp, imprisoned for exposing corrupt officials in China. He learns a huge appreciation, in prison, for a different way of thinking, and his treasured companions become the Bhuddist monks with whom he is imprisoned. If you want to read this series, you can read any book as a stand-alone, but it helps to read them in order, starting with The Skull Mantra. The Chinese eventually free Shan; they find him useful – as long as he is not exposing corruption in the Chinese bureaucracy. He is free on parole; he lives with the sword over his head. At any time, if he crosses an important person, he can be sent back to the merciless gulag.

In The Prayer of the Dragon Inspector Shan finds himself involved in a series of murders on the mountainside, in a small mining village. The village headman has a great scam going, skimming the miners take, charging passage on the mountain trails, and keeping his village hidden from the Chinese bureaucracy.
Here is what I learned that surprised me. There appears to be a connection between the American Navaho nation and the native Tibetans. They share some body-prototype similarities, and they share many symbols and earliest legends. An first-nation Navaho and his niece are exploring similarities, and commonalities, when two members of their party are murdered while sleeping. The Navaho is charged, by the headman, with the death, because he survived although he is covered in blood. It doesn’t make sense, but it doesn’t have to. The headman needs a scapegoat, and he chooses the Navaho.
It is a fascinating read. Here is an excerpt from a conversation Inspector Shan has with the local director of Public Security:
“I know your type so well, Shan, ” Bing said. “God, how well I know you. I was responsible for ten barracks of prisoners, like you – pathetic, morose creatures with no vision, only bitterness about the past. They would sit in reeducation classes and copy out slogans from the little red books like robots, praising the Chairman, reading aloud apologies printed in other books, using someone else’s words. Never a one among them with the balls to stand up and say Fuck the Chairman, screw the Party secretaries, and screw the limo drivers who brought them to town.”
“I tried at first,” Shan replied in a weary voice. “They sent me to a special hospital for the criminally insane.”
“Unfortunately,” Bing said soberly, “you are the sanest person I have ever met.”
AdventureMan knows I love these books. “Do you want to go to Tibet?” he asks me, and I say “No, if I went I would want to hang around with Inspector Shan and his gang of monks, not do tourist things allowed by the Chinese.” These are great reads, Pattison is doing a great job of bringing the plight of the Tibetans to the conscience of his readers, depicting, in graphic, horrorific detail how the Chinese are systematically crushing and obliterating every shred of Tibetan culture, while claiming they are not. I think one of the very worst things they have done is taking over the Tibetan monastery system and corrupting it into something it was never meant to be, a cruel, ugly deformity.
I can hardly wait for the next book to come out. I am on the waiting list for The Lord of Death, yet another book about Chinese bureaucratic corruption and the adventures Inspector Shan has in Tibet confronting and evading all its manifestations.


Intlxpatr ;
you are posting about three or four books in one go , you are really stressed out from this move .
I have given it a lot of thought and did my own analysis and i really got it figured out .
This whole mess started with the re-assignment of Adventure Man to his old post in Doha , and like i said after some deep thinking i now know for sure that the one behind this move has an ulterior motive .
Trust me on this .
It is none other than
QC
That’s right
it is Qatari Cat’s plot to get a free ticket to go back home
What a diabolical design
LLOOLL, Daggero. QC is so subtle! He totally had me fooled! He’s been a little anxious; he knows things are changing – so it’s all fake, huh, and this is all QC’s plot . . . and I just finished another book. It’s my carrot at the end of a long day.
I’m just back from a holiday so it has taken me a while to get to this post. I had to comment on the Tibetan-Navajo similarities. My parents grew up in the 4 corners area of the US around many Navajo. My mother often told me that she felt the two cultures had some similarities – little things like a shared use of turquoise, silver and red coral in their jewelry and other things you mentioned. When I lived in Toronto several years ago I met my first Tibetan friend. Imagine my surprise when she told me her family name was Navajo! A Tibetan named Navajo!
I visited Tibet in 2007 for a few days only. It was breathtaking and truly fascinating, but the visit was way too short. I definitely felt the presence of many Han Chinese immigrants. We only traveled close to Lhasa, so we never felt Chinese security restrictions, but to be honest the feeling in the few monasteries we visited was not one of openness and light. Such a shame. The religious fervor among the Tibetan pilgrims in Lhasa was extremely moving, however, and walking with them through the Johkang in the center of the city was worth the whole trip.