Review: Pirate Queen: The Curse
Posted: Thursday, March 12, 2009
by ngoldman
Norm Goldman
Author: R. Allen Downey
ISBN: 10:14196900868: 13:978-1419690860

R. Allen Downey once again reminds his readers what an unexpected bombshell a book can turn out to be. In Pirate Queen: The Curse Downey uses all kinds of goodies such as pirates, British M16 secret agents possessing telekinetic powers, Jewish ghosts or dybbuks, a ghastly torture chamber used at the time of the Spanish Inquisition, ghouls, and voodoo curses. All of these and a host of other props stream together on the pages of this spellbinding novel to create a mesmerizing yarn that seems to live and breathe on its own. In fact, this is one work of fiction you wont just put down and forget about it once you have completed its reading for you will certainly want to hash it over with your friends.
Just to digress, the author informs us that there actually a woman known as Lai Choi San who during the 1920s to 1939 was the most well-known and feared pirate along the coastal waters of the South China Sea. As Downey states, She was both ruthless and elusive. Her reputation was based more on the results of her deeds rather than unreliable, and rare, first hand accounts. In 1939 our legendary lady pirate disappeared without a trace and Pirate Queen: The Curse is the authors speculation on what might have happened and her ultimate fate. Could this be a re-emergence of Lai Choi San?
Back in Hong Kong, the notorious British spy agency, M16 under the leadership of Sir Reginald Truscott-Smythe (Reggie) receives information of the hijacking and in no time summons to his office two of his top agents, an American ex-sailor, Rick Reilly (alias Rick Blaine) and his girl friend and part-time actress Loo Tao-hua (alias Ricki Loo) both of whom possess supernatural powers.
Ordinarily the hijacking would not be a matter for M16, however, Reggie tells his two agents that apart from the gold that was stolen, he had learned from one of his Singapore agents that a spy had infiltrated the highest level of the Peking government and stole a top secret file that would be damaging to their future war plans, defense, and security, not to mention their already murky international reputation. As we are to discover, the file known as the Mao File turns out to be of outmost significance. The task assigned to Rick and Ricki is to find the legendary Lai Cho San and retrieve this file no matter what it takes and how much it costs. To help them resolve the mystery, the two agents are given the code words Red Garter that will assure them of the full co-operation within M16 and the British Navy.
To find Lai and retrieve the Mao microfilm, the two agents waste no time in assembling a very competent team including Reggies wife, a former M16 agent, who comes out of retirement. However, they also realize what a daunting task they have for they dont have a clue as to where Lai is hiding, whether she has discovered what she has in her possession and when she does discover the importance of her booty, how soon she will peddle it to the Reds or the highest bidder.
With relative restraint, Downey dabbles in the use of curses and ghosts and by the time these visitors make their appearance, they are but one more possibility for the mystery in a lodge full of the unanticipated. There are also other threads that create suspense. Can the rag tag team smoothly work together to pull off an unbelievable scam that will trap Lai and prevent a catastrophe from happening?
After reading Pirate Queen: The Curse you will have to concur that
this is a superior and well-crafted piece of fiction with a great
deal of imagination, vibrant characters, plenty of tension and more
than enough of ghoulish scenes. Moreover, it is one of those novels
that take over as you read it, occupying your daydreams, forcing its
claws into your brain and beckoning you back to to the page.
CLICK HERE TO READ NORM'S INTERVIEW WITH R. (RICK) ALLEN DOWNEY
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