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Celebrated Cases of Judge Dee
Celebrated Cases of Judge Dee: An Authentic Eighteenth-century Chinese Detective Novel | Robert Hans van Gulik
5 posts | 3 read | 3 to read
Tells of a celebrated seventh-century Chinese magistrate's investigation of a double murder among traveling merchants, the fatal poisoning of a bride on her wedding night, and a murder in a small town
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Bookwomble
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A fascinating glimpse into life in 7th century CE China, translated in the 1940s from a 19th century Chinese manuscript that appears to preserve a genuine account of investigations undertaken by the magistrate of a small city.
Judge Dee is insightful, ethically scrupulous and morally strict, slightly softened by compassion. However, in the context of his culture, the use of torture, graphically described, is a legitimate judicial tool. I found ⬇️

Bookwomble ... these sections uncomfortable reading, but I guess that readers who enjoy "torture porn" movies might get a kick from these sections.
The current Netflix series excludes torture, but includes a few fight scenes, which I had thought was pandering to the modern vogue for adding martial arts to spice up the action, and was pleasantly surprised to read a few examples of Judge Dee's lieutenants exhibiting their "Chinese boxing and wrestling".
⬇️
2w
Bookwomble I really enjoyed this, and will continue with van Gulik's self-penned sequels. 4.5⭐ 2w
The_Book_Ninja Add martial arts to The Great British Bake Off and they got a whole new demographic. Prue Leith using nunchucks on Paul Hollywood?…who doesn‘t wanna see that!? 🥷 2w
Bookwomble @The_Book_Ninja Yeah, I'd like to see Prue knock Paul right on his soggy bottom! 🍰 2w
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Bookwomble
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“They say that reading will attract the spirit of sleep. Let me read a while, perhaps this book will help me pass the time, or else bore me to such an extent that I shall fall asleep.”

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Bookwomble
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"In the end, as a general rule, no criminal escapes the laws of the land."

If only this were true!
Judge Dee has a number of legal recourses not available to the modern judiciary. Were he presiding over the trial of D. Trump, that fellow would certainly have had 100 stokes of the heavy bamboo for lack of respect, and probably the thumb screws for lying!
#FirstLineFridays @ShyBookOwl

Ruthiella From Judge Dread to Judge Dee! 😃 2w
Bookwomble @Ruthiella Ha! Yes! 😄 I suspect each would approve of the other. 2w
The_Book_Ninja I fear the great orange demon is made of Teflon 2w
Bookwomble @The_Book_Ninja He's certainly a slippery customer! 2w
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Bookwomble
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Is one book a #BookHaul ? ?

I've been really enjoying the Netflix series "Judge Dee's Mystery" and decided to get the source material.

Judge Dee was a Tang Dynasty magistrate, three of whose historical cases are translated here, the success of which led van Gulik to write his own stories in a continuing series.

In his introduction, van Gulik comments on the centuries old Chinese tradition of detective novels, considerably predating ⬇️

Bookwomble ... Poe and Doyle in the West.

The looming plate in the foreground is my lunch of garlic mushrooms on toast, washed down with dandelion and burdock, finished off with a cappuccino 😋
3w
TieDyeDude I love the Judge Dee series by Lavie Tidhar about a vampire judge, but I always see this come up in results when I search. I've been interested in checking out his stories. I hadn't heard of the Netflix series.
Dandelion and burdock sounds good! I've never heard of it.
3w
Bookwomble @TieDyeDude The series is good - it's a Chinese production, so it feels authentic, as far as I can tell. As well as the detection aspect, it has some good fight choreography, decent SFX, and interesting supporting characters. I've only read the books introduction, but that in itself is really interesting. I don't think I'm going to keep my intention of finishing another book before starting this one! 😄 3w
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Bookwomble @TieDyeDude D&B is a traditionally Northern drink, fairly unknown in southern England (when I lived there it was like finding hens' teeth coming across a can!). The nearest I can describe it in North American terms would be similar to root beer or sarsaparilla. 3w
rwmg I've got van Gulik's Judge Dee on my wishlist. Maybe next month. I didn't know about the Netflix series. 2w
Bookwomble @rwmg I'm enjoying the book so far. The TV show is probably best described as "inspired by" the book, but I'm loving it on its own terms ? 2w
38 likes6 comments
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erzascarletbookgasm
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Robert Hans van Gulik was a diplomat & writer, best known for the Judge Dee historical mysteries. He first translated the 18th-century detective novel ‘Dee Goong An‘ into English under the tagged title. The main character, Judge Dee, was based on a real statesman & detective who lived in the 7th century, during the Tang Dynasty.
I have read a few of the books & enjoyed them. Sadly, he & the books are not so well known & #underrated.
#newyearreads

Ole Looks interesting. I found several translated to Danish available as ebooks. Will try them. Thanks for sharing 😊 6y
Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks Looks interesting to me too!!! 6y
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