Wednesday, January 08, 2014

The Ming Admiral: A Chinese Odyssey

My friend, author Meemee Phipps, writes:


I have just published The Ming Admiral, my second novel, which got 5 stars from Red City Reviews.
It is available on all ebook sites and in paperback from Create Space. I have ordered some for local sales and people can order directly from me through my e-mail address - meemee.f.phipps@gmail.com

My third book, Destinies Divided, a sequel to Memories in the Bone, is being edited and will be out by March. This is very timely though unplanned, because a third of the book deals with the Chinese involvement with WW1. So I hope it will make a few waves.





The Ming Admiral: A Chinese Odyssey
A synopsis

China 1382

     A new emperor has been on the throne since 1368 and proceeds to cleanse the empire of the supporters of the previous Muslim Mongol dynasty. The village of Kunyang is destroyed and its young taken into slavery. Out of this chaos, an exceptionally gifted boy born with a recessive gene; grows to become the right hand man of the founding emperor’s third son, the Warrior Prince Zhu Di, helping him take the throne from the mandated heir, his nephew.
At the age of seventeen he is chosen by the Prince and made his aide-de-camp. Born Ma He, he is renamed ZhengHe, warrior, poet, diplomat and finally, Grand Admiral of the Treasure Fleet. He falls in love with his childhood betrothed, only to be castrated on the Prince’s orders to prevent a possible usurpation of the Dragon Throne.

     ZhengHe’s adulation of Zhu Di now turns to hate, but he is tied to his destiny to serve him on every front. He is rewarded with the total responsibility of the Treasure Ships, commissioned to sail the world to bring the gifts and refinements of the Chinese Court in exchange for vassalage. A secret agenda is to hunt for the former Emperor Jianwen and his mother, the cruel Empress Dowager Chun Yun who had ZhengHe’s love, AlinYa, murdered before they fled the capital Nanjing.

    Within Zhu Di’s reign, ZhengHe makes six voyages. Amongst other exotic animals he brings back a giraffe to delight the Emperor with the suggestion that it is the Qilin, the heavenly unicorn to mandate his reign. Then a stunning secret forces him to make a secret alliance with Le Loi, a Vietnamese aristocrat fighting for his country’s freedom and it takes all ZhengHe’s diplomatic skills in trading that secret for the surrender of the former emperor hiding out in the jungles of Vietnam.

Eventually, Zhu Di commits his greatest crime against humanity with the execution of two thousand concubines and the eunuchs suspected of cavorting with them. ZhengHe abandons the Emperor in disgust to go on his sixth voyage. In his absence Zhu Di goes off to war against the Mongol Urugtai and dies on the steppes. This necessitates the army melting down countless pots and pans to make a steel coffin to transport his body back to Beijing where, under his orders, his heir and government have to wait for ZhengHe’s presence to bury him.

     With the death of Zhu Di, the most enlightened emperor China has ever known, the mandarins at last have their revenge. The Treasure Ships are grounded, maps and books burnt and ZhengHe is forced into early retirement as the humble harbour master of Nanjing. 

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