(Editorial Award - A*: full book-length; professionally proofread;
with no extremism)
For sample pages see www.classyliterature.com
"This is the story of a knowing scoundrel, and of what became of
him."
A Coward in Modern China is a travel comedy, crime caper and
adventure - based on the escapades of a willful rascal: bogus
professor Robert Runworth. Set largely in contemporary Beijing, and
partly in California, it is raunchy and mischievous in its plot and
action. Yet the pages are also classically stylish; and
historically detailed in their account of life in China today. The
book is always entertaining, by its exotic setting and fascinating
insights as much as its farcical humor.
Here is a good old-fashioned yarn in the tradition of the
Flashman series. Indeed, Runworth is of mixed American and British
ancestry. The narrator's voice has both an up-to-date quality and
the timeless feel of more classical literature. Its main character
is a thoughtful villain, rather like Dexter.
Therefore, like all truly entertaining but serious literature,
and laugh-out-loud comedies, the 'A Coward in. . .' series is not
for the politically correct.
Written by British author, Jon Lee Junior, who has lived and
taught in Asia for 12 years.
Plot Summary
Main Plot: Runworth was originally a trainee police officer with
LAPD. However, he was fired and had to turn to teaching English
abroad because he was an "accidental and peripheral" figure in the
Rodney King incident. This book sees him twenty years on, and in
need of settling down and getting married. As an ex-pat in China,
the laughable scoundrel hopes for a few more un-threatening years
of 'living like a lord' amongst the local poor. Professor Runworth
has two more secrets. One is that he continues to (fraudulently)
claim a disability benefit from the State of California, for an
alleged back injury. The second is that although Robert Runworth is
a big man physically - he is also a born coward. His bad luck,
then, is that he always seems to find himself in confrontations
which he'd rather avoid. At one point, the hefty and rotund
westerner is faced down by a Chinese peasant with restricted growth
syndrome.
Sub-plot: The college in which Runworth is teaching is involved
in an illegal immigration scam for Chinese students entering the
US. Of course, the rascally Professor Runworth would not hold any
ethical issues with this. However, the campus mailman accidentally
confuses some letters containing Runworth's disability checks from
California with a package of forged US passports. Also, the Beijing
Police and immigration authorities are suspicious that something is
afoot in the college. When they look into Runworth's background,
they realize that they can blackmail him with the threat of
disclosing his past in America. Runworth has no choice but to help
them, as a stoolie.
The Plots Intertwine: The criminal gang which operate the
illegal visa scheme decide to ice the bungling professor who has
accidentally intercepted their mail. Runworth is caught three times
by the gang of conmen. However, they underestimate his cowardliness
and ability to run fast. The first time, he flees from an intended
trap of a bar brawl. The second time, the gang capture Runworth and
decide to feed him to a herd of racing pigs. But, to the shock of
the slender Chinese, the overweight Westerner outruns both the pigs
and his human pursuers.
Indeed, one of the humorous themes of the book is how the
(usually slim) Chinese see us (often overweight) westerners.
Runworth's Women: The bogus Professor of English is an
old-fashioned "licentious rake," and proud of the fact. However,
because he is also a well-paid academic with US citizenship, the
Chinese women he dates always intend to marry him - rather than
only to sleep with him. Eventually, Runworth uses the on-going scam
of illegal student visas at his college to marry two women: one for
money & one for af
General
Imprint: |
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
October 2012 |
First published: |
October 2012 |
Authors: |
Jon Lee Junior
|
Dimensions: |
198 x 129 x 20mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback - Trade
|
Pages: |
380 |
ISBN-13: |
978-1-4802-0845-2 |
Categories: |
Books >
Fiction >
General & literary fiction >
Modern fiction
|
LSN: |
1-4802-0845-0 |
Barcode: |
9781480208452 |
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