Winner of the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Fiction
Winner of an AudioFile Earphones Award
A Los Los Angeles Times Pick of Best Books of Summer
An Oprah Magazine Pick of Best Books of the Month
An Indie Next List Pick of the Month
A New York Times Book Review Editor’s Choice of the Week
A Chinese American assassin sets out to rescue his kidnapped wife and exact revenge on her abductors in this New York Times Book Review Editors' Choice: a twist on the classic western
from "an astonishing new voice" (Jonathan Lethem).
Orphaned young, Ming Tsu, the son of Chinese immigrants, is raised by the notorious leader of a California crime syndicate, who trains him to be his deadly enforcer. But when Ming falls in love
with Ada, the daughter of a powerful railroad magnate, and the two elope, he seizes the opportunity to escape to a different life. Soon after, in a violent raid, the tycoon's henchmen kidnap Ada
and conscript Ming into service for the Central Pacific Railroad.
Battered, heartbroken, and yet defiant, Ming partners with a blind clairvoyant known only as the prophet. Together the two set out to rescue his wife and to exact revenge on the men who destroyed
Ming, aided by a troupe of magic-show performers, some with supernatural powers, whom they meet on the journey. Ming blazes his way across the West, settling old scores with a single-minded
devotion that culminates in an explosive and unexpected finale.
Written with the violent ardor of Cormac McCarthy and the otherworldly inventiveness of Ted Chiang, The Thousand Crimes of Ming Tsu is at once a thriller, a romance, and a story of one man's
quest for redemption in the face of a distinctly American brutality.
"In Tom Lin's novel, the atmosphere of Cormac McCarthy's West, or that of the Coen Brothers' True Grit, gives way to the phantasmagorical shades of Ray Bradbury, Charles Finney's The
Circus of Dr. Lao, and Katherine Dunn's Geek Love. Yet The Thousand Crimes of Ming Tsu has a velocity and perspective all its own, and is a fierce new version of the Westward
Dream." —Jonathan Lethem, author of Motherless Brooklyn
Winner of the Carnegie Medal for Excellence
Finalist for the Young Lions Fiction Award
Editorial Reviews
Editorial Reviews
“Saves the western by blowing it to bits. Don’t wait for the movie.” —Wall Street Journal
“A rollicking gallery of Western archetypes.” —Los Angeles Times
“Infused with magic realism…an extraordinary epic with page-turning, often cinematic action that transcends the parameters of genre fiction…impossible to put down.” —Booklist (starred review)
“Narrator Feodor Chin beautifully performs this revenge story…capturing the lyrical flow of the text, voicing authentic-sounding accents, building the mystery and tension, and projecting Ming’s contrasting feelings of passion and rage. Winner of the AudioFile Earphones Award.” —AudioFile
“A fierce new version of the Westward Dream. This is a superb novel.” —Jonathan Lethem, New York Times bestselling author
“The book hums with striking descriptions of an unforgiving landscape.” —New York Times Book Review
“A thriller, a romance, a Chinese American-inflected Western, and an 1860s-set redemption story with Cormac McCarthy overtones.” —Library Journal
A book out of bounds.... Saves the western by blowing it to bits. Don’t wait for the movie. —Marlon James, Wall Street Journal
Lin’s assured debut novel... hums with striking descriptions of an unforgiving landscape. —New York Times Book Review (Editors' Choice)
Tom Lin is a sublimely gifted debut novelist... He offers a window onto a buried history [and] exposes the racism that was, is, and will be at the heart of the American experiment... In McCarthy-like sentences, Lin also pays homage to the arduous journey of Ming and his companions and to the landscape that sprawls around them... Lin’s pilgrims meet their fates in startling, wondrous moments... The body count is high, but so is the level of literary skill and topicality... Lin flips the script: his outlaw is a living, breathing rebuke to white racism, an Angel of Death to the worst perpetrators... While Lin probes American obsessions with race, guns, and myth-making, he also imbues his grittiness with stunning lyricism and a larger spiritual aura. —Oprah Daily
Impressive… As a kind of redemptive imaginative act, Lin has created a poetic and cinematic story centered on a Chinese American sharpshooter. —San Francisco Chronicle
A rollicking gallery of Western archetypes. —Los Angeles Times (Best Books of Summer 2021)
A western gothic revenge tale ripe for a Coen brothers adaptation. —Boston Globe
Part revenge fantasy, part classic bloody tale of the Old West. In this book, things return—people, oceans, violence—but remembering is a choice and the body bears the cost... In this unforgiving landscape, which Lin vividly and meticulously describes in prose whose music is reminiscent of Cormac McCarthy’s, even a rainstorm can take on mythical proportions. —New York Times Book Review
Brilliant. —New York Magazine
Eminently entertaining… There's a lot to love in this expansive debut novel from Tom Lin. The Thousand Crimes of Ming Tsu is a truly cinematic Western. Its vistas and action sequences are perfectly designed for fans of graphic novels and the big screen alike. Similarly, the body count is crafted for an audience that enjoys adrenaline's pulse in its ears. Lin's wordcraft is deft and painterly, whether he's describing a fight scene or a desert… an important, vivid story, with characters led through the landscape by the demands of its plot… I hope we see more of all these stories from Tom Lin in the future. —NPR.org
A thrilling journey that calls to mind beloved Westerns... The Thousand Crimes of Ming Tsu is a smart, modern take on a classic genre that defies expectations and delivers serious entertainment. —Town & Country
Enthralling… an odyssey that is vengeful, lyrical, and supernatural, flipping the script on atrocities committed against Asian Americans. —Oprah Daily (Best Books of June)
Subverting the usual thrust of Wild West stories, Lin makes ruthless Chinese-American outlaw Ming the anti-hero, dispensing vengeance-flavoured justice to those who, in traditional Westerns, are lionised no matter how vicious or racist: sheriffs, judges, bounty hunters, railroad tycoons and their foremen… Meticulous descriptions of everything from campfire scenes by moonlight to the workings of revolvers betray plenty of research done in the field… If Quentin Tarantino doesn’t have Lin’s number already, he soon will. —South China Post Magazine
Infused with magic realism, Lin’s beautifully imagined first novel is an extraordinary epic with page-turning, often cinematic action that transcends the parameters of genre fiction. A brilliant debut, impossible to put down. —Booklist (starred review)
“Lin displays remarkable skill in maneuvering his plot and characters… Ming is a unique figure. He’s a murderer with a strange personal code… but he’s also a score-settling outlaw worthy of True Grit… This is a major work that enlarges our view of the Wild West and marks Lin as a writer to watch.”—BookPage (starred review)—
Ming Tsu’s search for frontier justice and his sense of duty make him a character worthy of our empathy... Certainly there are echoes of McCarthy’s Blood Meridian, but there are also features of Ming’s story, and Lin’s writing, that remind one of Elmore Leonard or even E. Annie Proulx... A startling tale.”—Petoskey News-Review—
Tom Lin’s debut novel is a special pleasure. There’s blood and humor, wit and wide knowledge, in his telling of this revenge odyssey that rambles across the vastness, harshness, and myriad dangers of the Old West. The nuanced prose is firm and evocative, and we have a gritty, luminous, and fantastic take on the era and the people. Ride this one hard, folks, and put it up wet. —Daniel Woodrell, author of Winter’s Bone
In Tom Lin’s novel, the atmosphere of Cormac McCarthy’s West, or that of the Coen Brothers’ True Grit, gives way to the phantasmagorical shades of Ray Bradbury, Charles Finney’s The Circus of Dr. Lao, and Katherine Dunn’s Geek Love. Yet The Thousand Crimes of Ming Tsu has a velocity and perspective all its own, and is a fierce new version of the Westward Dream. This is a superb novel that declares the arrival of an astonishing new voice. —Jonathan Lethem, author of Motherless Brooklyn and The Feral Detective
The Thousand Crimes of Ming Tsu whips through brutal American West landscapes and breathless battles as we follow Ming on his cinematic quest for justice. —Sacramento Bee
The prophet in Tom Lin’s extraordinary novel refers to his friend Ming as a ‘man out of bounds.’ Likewise The Thousand Crimes of Ming Tsu defies the boundaries of genre, at times standing staunchly within a perfectly researched historical world, and then strolling nonchalantly past those barriers into the world of magic and haunted souls. It’s a story that’s both brilliantly vibrant and brutally dark. —Elizabeth Crook, author of The Which Way Tree
Lin creates a wild, wild west hero who, in the name of true love, embarks on an epic quest for gruesome revenge… With dexterous agility, Lin showcases Ming's multi-faceted identity… Ming's story of denial becomes Lin's ingenious assertion of his own Chinese American heritage, his fiction a literal projection of the Chinese American experience onto the page. —Shelf Awareness
Considering the American West and the classic Western from a Chinese American perspective, Lin briskly and beautifully delivers a story that’s at once thriller, romance, redemptive tale, historical, and deadly serious romp.” —Library Journal—
Five stars… I love everything about this book: from the cover— which looks like an old Western movie — to the title, which sounds like an ancient epic, to the story itself… ripe for a Coen Brothers adaptation. —South Coast Today
Lin’s novel employs the classic blood-filled revenge narrative, backdropped by 'the vast disc of the sun slipping earthward,' to focus on characters that this narrative has traditionally excluded. Ming is a Chinese American assassin avenging the kidnapping of his wife, a white woman, by railroad men. Given the deeply troubled history of Chinese immigrants and Chinese Americans in the West, especially as it relates to the building of the transcontinental railroad, Ming’s journey is one with important historic implications, both personal and cultural—not to mention gorgeously cinematic. —Literary Hub
This is a book with no throwaway sentences, no filler... Lin underscores the invisibility of the Chinese to white Americans. —Hyperallergic
Tom Lin was born in China and immigrated to the United States when he was four. A graduate of Pomona College, he lives in California and is a PhD candidate at the University of
California, Davis.
Titles by Author
Details
Details
Format:
Retail CD
Available Formats :
Retail CD
Category:
Fiction
Publisher:
Little, Brown
CDs:
8
Runtime:
9.64
ISBN:
9781549138485
Audience:
Adult
Language:
English
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