Edward C. Patterson – The Jade Owl

Title: The Jade Owl

Author: Edward C. Patterson

ISBN: 1440447977

Page count: 598 pages

Genre: Fantasy Adventure

Price: $ 21.00 ( $ 3.99 on the Kindle)

Author Bio:

Edward C. Patterson has been writing novels, short fiction, poetry and drama his entire life, always seeking the emotional core of any story he tells. With his eighth novel, The Jade Owl, he combines an imaginative touch with his life long devotion to China and its history. He has earned an MA in Chinese History from Brooklyn College with further post graduate work at Columbia University. Born in 1947, a native of Brooklyn, NY, he has spent four decades as a soldier in the corporate world gaining insight into the human condition. He won the 1999 New Jersey Minority Achievement Award for his work in corporate diversity. Blending world travel experiences with a passion for story telling, his adventures continue as he works to permeate his reader’s souls from an indelible wellspring.

His novel No Irish Need Apply was named Book of the Month for June 2009 by Booz Allen Hamilton’s Diversity Reading Organization. His Novel The Jade Owl was a finalist for The 2009 Rainbow Awards.

Published Novels by Edward C. Patterson include No Irish Need Apply, Bobby’s Trace, Cutting the Cheese, Surviving an American Gulag, Turning Idolater, Look Away Silence, The Jade Owl (Jade Owl Legacy Series Book I), The Third Peregrination (Jade Owl Legacy Series Book II), The Dragon’s Pool (Jade Owl Legacy Series Book III), and Southern Swallow Series (Book I – The Academician). Southern Swallow Series (Book II – The Nan Tu)

Tell us about your book:

Professor Rowden Gray has come to San Francisco following a new opportunity at the East Asian Arts and Culture Museum, only to find that the opportunity has evaporated. Desperate, he means to end his career in a muddle of pity and Scotch, but then things happen. He latches on to a fascinating young man who is pursuing a lost relic that Professor Gray has in fact been seeking. Be careful for what you seek – you may just find it. Thus begins a journey that takes the professor and his companions on a spirited adventure across three-thousand miles of Chinese culture and mystery – a quest to fulfill a warrant long set out to ignite the world in myth and legend. The Jade Owl is the beginning of a series – a legacy that fulfills a terrible truth; and in China, they whisper again. The Jade Owl is the first of a five books series, Book II and III already published.

How long did it take to write the book?

The Jade Owl. Compared with some of my other creations was a relatively short write, started in 2002 as a serialized novel for anotherchapter.com. It underwent seven revisions to accommodate changes brought about by expanding the single novel into a quintology and was finally published in its current form in October 2008.

What inspired you to write the book?

I have a life-long love affair with China and things Chinese, having an MA in Sinology and I have traveled extensively. Originally I thought to write a travelogue — San Francisco, Yosemite, Gui-lin, Shang-hai etc., but I just couldn’t help myself. Once my characters and the hoot bird in the title was on the drawing boards, it consumed me.

Talk about the writing process. Did you have a writing routine? Did you do any research, and if so, what did that involve?

Talk about freelance, I ride my craft without a saddle — that is, no outline and do most of my planning and scenario crafting in my head. If it remains in my head by the time I sit at the computer, it deserves to go into a draft. My characters are worked until the come to life and then they help in the writing process. I write approximately four hours a day in the evening. I have the proverbial full-time day job. I come home, take a catnap, check my emails, eat dinner and then hope to get into the writing zone. As for research, I rely on my experience, degree work and a huge library of Chinese books that has overtaken my dining room. However, food is over-rated, although to look at me, I’ve eaten way too many books. Still, I’m constantly at checking out my facts, even if they play behind the scenes. Like who cares whether the Yellow River flowed north or south of K’ai-feng in 1127 CE? Well, I do, and so will my reader if I lazily feed them hooey.

What do you hope your readers come away with after reading your book?

I try to engage my reader’s mind on every page. Reading is an experience, not just a pastime, and if it is a pastime, it must be a memorable one. I want my work to linger after the last page with the hope that the reader will, perhaps, investigate a little more of me in another one of my books.

Where can we go to buy your book?

The Jade Owl is carried at Amazon.com in paperback (http://www.amazon.com/dp/1440447977) and the Kindle (http://www.amazon.com/dp/B001J54AWO) as well as at Barnes & Noble, Smashwords.com and Mobipocket.com.

Any other links or info you’d like to share?

The Jade Owl at Dancaster Creative – http://www.dancaster.com/tjo.htm

Excerpt:

Ni-men ch’u lai — they are coming.

Mrs. K’ao — the widow K’ao, stood on the corner of Nan-jing and Fu-ch’ien Streets in busy downtown Shang-hai. Traffic swept the thoroughfare. The People blotted out the pavement with their incessant bustle. The air was crisp, wintry with a slight nip — a nip that had Mrs. K’ao select her black leather jacket this morning when she poked about preparing for work. The sun, however, kissed the sky with a rosal glow that spoke the old adage blood sky in morning, a wet world be warning. However, Mrs. K’ao forsook her parasol having faith that this day would prove fine. New Year had past. The Lantern Festival approached. Her children would dress up as rabbits and parade along the Bund. She would watch the dragon boat races and cast votives on the Wamphoa’s waves, wishing to the old fairy-tale gods for a better year than the year that had passed, a year that made her the widow K’ao.

On the crowded corner, Mrs. K’ao looked to the sky. She smiled. It was her nature to smile. There was never a good reason to breathe gloom on such a fine day. Her children had been washed and primed — readied for school. They sat on the porch of their ramshackle home awaiting the school monitor to pass by their narrow lane. They would scamper to the alley’s edge and join the end of the line — boy and girl latched arm-length to shoulder for their short trek to the People’s Normal School for Government Employees and Workers, for which Mrs. K’ao qualified, being a CTS Agent and a respected guide of the tenth order. She was happy that her children would read and write. She had also been as fortunate. Her father was a cultural minister from an old and respected family — a family whose name survived the admonishments of the little Red Book. The cruel scrutiny of the Cultural Revolution. Survived, yes, but not unscathed. Her brother in Bei-jing had suffered for his opinions, gone now to await them in some alcove in the heaven for recalcitrant thinkers. Still, the family was respected. Still, caution was never shunned.

Mrs. K’ao reached into her handbag. She touched a parcel in the recesses. It was a reassuring touch that provoked a brighter smile and another round of Ni-men ch’u lai — they are coming. She retrieved her compact, flipped it open and checked her appearance. In the mirror, she saw that her hair was perfect, her lips glossed scarlet and the rouge applied appropriately for a smart looking CTS Agent en route to meet her tour. This was Shang-hai, after all, the city of cities. It stood in deep contrast to hazy, bleak Kuang-chou. Shang-hai was European at heart, built along Western imperial lines. It spread its wings west of the sea, from the riverbank to vast verdant farmlands. It held the burning aspirations of twenty million souls. There was no dearth of souls in this city. No restriction on fashion. If you could afford to be fashionable, you flaunted it. One might say that Shang-hai was the liberal side of Mao’s Red Book, like a teenager’s respect for parents when in sight, but eager to flip a finger when these venerables turned their backs.

Make-up in order, Mrs. K’ao looked for the bus. She shaded her eyes now that the sun had inched its way over the domes and enterprising battlements of Nan-jing Street. Beside her was a line of less fashionable workers, hunkered along the curb like crows perched on a clothesline. They smoked battered homespun cigarettes hung from yellowed lips and rotting teeth. Behind her, women trotted out the bed linen, hanging it on lines strung between lampposts and traffic signals. The cinnamon aroma of the morning congee mixed with the stale nicotine stink of second hand smoke. All was in its place. Mrs. K’ao was content. She had a special tour today — a bit of business and a bit of pleasure, and she had arranged everything as ordered. She touched the packet in her purse again, and then smiled (as was her nature). The bus approached. It was a good day, because Ni-men ch’u lai — they were coming.

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comments (5) | Leave a Reply
  1. I’ve read this wonderful novel. Mr Patterson really brings the scene to life, so I got a real feel for what it was like for the characters in China. The story itself was well-plotted and kept me guessing.

  2. Hi Ed, I’m struck by your knowledge of China from the excerpt I just read and will surely look to read the Jade Owl as soon as I finish editing my novel Johnny Oops, which is speculative fiction. Had to laugh when you said you don’t work from an outline. I don’t either. I just sort of go where my characters take me although I generally have an idea, but not the ending. Hate knowing the ending too soon. Makes me rush to it and description suffers.

    Once had a good agent ask for an outline of a novel I was doing. I had to go back through the book and do it chapter by chapter. Didn’t get the agent.

    Regards,

    Arthur Levine

  3. Thank you L.C. Evans for your wonderful comment. I’m delighted that you enjoyed The Jade Owl.

    Edward C. Patterson

  4. Thank you Arthur. I hope you will enjoy The Jade Owl and the other books in the series.

    Ed P

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