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Book Reviews of Wild Prey: An Inspector Lu Fei Mystery (Inspector Lu Fei Series, 2)

Wild Prey: An Inspector Lu Fei Mystery (Inspector Lu Fei Series, 2)
Wild Prey An Inspector Lu Fei Mystery - Inspector Lu Fei Series, 2
Author: Brian Klingborg
ISBN-13: 9781250779076
ISBN-10: 1250779073
Publication Date: 5/17/2022
Pages: 304
Rating:
  • Currently 4.5/5 Stars.
 1

4.5 stars, based on 1 rating
Publisher: Minotaur Books
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

2 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed Wild Prey: An Inspector Lu Fei Mystery (Inspector Lu Fei Series, 2) on + 622 more book reviews
An outstanding crime novel taking place in northern China, southern China and Myanmar, with Inspector Lu Fei going after criminals in the illegal trade of exotic animals.

What I like best in this entertaining and informative series is the complete authenticity of the Chinese background, from little-known cultural customs and snatches of Chinese slang to the dynamics of corruption and crime in that part of the world.

The characters and the plot are fresh, appealing and convincing. Very highly recommended.
cathyskye avatar reviewed Wild Prey: An Inspector Lu Fei Mystery (Inspector Lu Fei Series, 2) on + 2262 more book reviews
Author Brian Klingborg mined all the potential from his first Lu Fei mystery, Thief of Souls, and created a standout in Wild Prey-- even though the treatment of animals and most of the listed cuisine is stomach-churning. From flashes of laugh-out-loud humor to learning Chinese slang to the mind-boggling fact that there are 200 million surveillance cameras in China to the story itself, I was engrossed. Even though there is still the age-old problem of the rich and powerful insisting on being above the law, it is good to learn that China is finally bowing to international pressure and the coronavirus to crack down on the illegal wildlife trade.

Inspector Lu Fei still finds almost no help from his fellow police officers, but at least he does have one friend in a high place-- and two fellow characters to help him carry the load. One, the teenage Meirong, is alternately funny and endearing as she camps out in the police station to shame Lu Fei into finding her sister. Little does she know, he is working on the case, he's just not telling her everything he's doing. The second character helping to carry the story load is the female warlord in Myanmar. She's not your typical thug even though you'd be a fool to turn your back on her. And at least Lu Fei has one person who's not involved in his work. It's the bar owner Yanyan with whom he's passionately in love, although she still seems to be in love with her dead husband. Watching that relationship unfold is interesting, to say the least. Will Lu Fei win Yanyan over? We shall see.

For those of you worried about those animal trafficking scenes and the descriptions of the dishes made from the animals, Klingborg does not go overboard. He knows that a light touch is the best way to proceed and although those scenes are few and of short duration, they still resonate and show the importance of why this trade must stop. We humans have to be intelligent enough to devise new ways to show off immense wealth and to cure erectile dysfunction. Don't we? In Wild Prey, Brian Klingborg shows that there are people willing to put their lives on the line to put a stop to one of the more disgusting ways to prove you're a big shot.