Farewell the Dragon bookcover

Farewell the Dragon

American Boomer in China Before the Boom
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Description

Nate Scheutt, American, 35, is pulled into a politically charged murder investigation when he stumbles onto the bodies of two young Europeans on a prestigious Beijing university campus. Gradually Nate discovers the case is entwined with an international quest for a small stone tablet, (a stele) that might contain the key to ancient China's long-lost link with the West.


In the 1980's, old Beijing's walls and hutong alleyways were disappearing, victims of Deng Xiaoping's proclamation 致富光 荣!(To get rich is glorious!). While juggling teaching English, his business, (and women), Nate seeks refuge at the bar on the roof of the Friendship Hotel with a legation of self-imposed exiles from the both sides of the Cold War. There he enters a netherworld of sex, spies, strange religion and the hidden history of China's Cultural Revolution.

Product Details

PublisherBarckwords Publishing
Publish DateJune 18, 2020
Pages346
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconPaperback / softback
EAN/UPC9781735251400
Dimensions9.0 X 6.0 X 0.8 inches | 1.1 pounds

About the Author

Born and raised in the small Jersey Shore town of Barnegat NJ. Moved to North Jersey suburb at 13 (1964). Went to University of Kansas, graduated (1973), degrees in Economics and History. Worked in various capacities as laborer, heavy equipment operator, became a Land Surveyor (1977). During this period, wrote much of the backstory later incorporated into the The SwiftPad Series. Worked in a Civil Engineering office, managing business. Wrote articles, grant writer of social service agency, involved in local politics, as a Progressive (Eugene Oregon). Went to China, (1984) as English teacher in Xian Medical college, The following year in Beijing teaching at Foreign Language Institute. Returned to the US (1987), married Mary Traeger, son Zach born (1988). Worked at a strip-mall Computer store, then for various companies and organizations as technical lead in various IT specialties, (networking, software development, computer security, systems management) Became a consultant with a tech start up, (2001). Retired from IBM (2014). Presently full time author

Reviews

"Farewell the Dragon is a rigorous examination of personal agency and universal morality. It contains all of the toxic glamour of Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby and a moderate dash of Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code...Barckmann's novel is one that has achieved something rare: It has uncovered a unique corner of twentieth-century culture and delicately sculpted it into a story worth remembering and reading for years to come."

Red City Review

"...Barckmann is reaching for a depiction of time and place and character that rivals more classic tales of flawed individuals struggling with their exotic environments and their own shortcomings...There are similarities also in flaws, introspection, regret ...which echo Graham Greene's characters, "

The US Review

"A compelling read that will have readers sticking with the book long after bedtime. It's hard to put down"

Foreword Reviews

"...Farewell the Dragon brings relationships, sex, international intrigue, religion, politics, and a society in flux to create an examination of human nature that is at once blunt and nuanced."

Poet and author T.L. Cooper

"This book is a cross between a double murder whodunnit and a fascinating and sexually charged romp in China that can sometimes be found in tight expatriate communities (in this case both from within the group and amongst the few Chinese who could interact with them) ... the book is a valuable link between post-revolutionary .and the present... It is also written with a great deal of humor."

Mark Oulton on Goodreads

"A Great Read. Barckmann is a terrific storyteller"

"This Week in America's" Ric Bratton

AMAZON REVIEWS

Jeffrey Kinkley

... One of its attractions is all the odd, intriguing characters from the Chinese expat community in Beijing prior to "Tiananmen" (they're not academic researchers, either--an assortment of Russians, East Germans, Central Europeans, PLO, Mossad, Americans, you name it, and among their Chinese friends, a People's Liberation Army "General's daughter" and a blind erhu player). Advisory: they sleep around with each other relentlessly.

... All the plot threads come together in the end. It reads like a mystery set within a tale of personal exploration in a peculiarly welcoming, and yet rather mysterious foreign environment.

Carl Warner

Farewell the Dragon definitely held my interest, ... Highly recommended.

Laura B. Raynolds

... Barckmann uses the coming-to-an-end of Old China along with events in the plot to enable the reader to experience a universal wistfulness and longing for that perfection in memory that is lost and will never come again. His work is a superb piece of fiction that deserves a wide readership.

Dave

Farewell the Dragon is a very enjoyable look at the Western expatriate community in China


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