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China Run by David Ball — book cover

China Run

by David Ball
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Overview

"Allison realized she'd been awake for twenty-four hours. She hadn't done that since college. It had been the most remarkable twenty-four hours of her life — hours in which, for better or worse, a choice had been made, a line crossed. There was no going back. Each time she thought about it, she felt the same strange shock: She was a straitlaced civil engineer from Denver, huddled in the bowels of a broken-down cargo boat on the Wan Li Chang Jiang, the Yangtze River. Hunted by police, with her stepson and a baby that wasn't legally hers.

"With all that, she was not even heading toward Shanghai, toward home.

"Instead, she was heading upriver, deeper into the heart of China...."

AS FRESH AS TODAY'S HEADLINES — THE CHILLING, SUSPENSEFUL STORY OF A MOTHER, A NEWLY ADOPTED CHILD, AND A FOREIGN GOVERNMENT TRYING TO SEPARATE THEM...

For Allison Turk, the journey to China to claim the daughter she is adopting had been a trying experience, a series of false starts and long waits. Forced to travel without her husband, she makes the trip with her nine-year-old stepson. She hopes it will be a bonding experience, but so far this hasn't happened.

When she finally holds the little girl in her arms, however, she knows that the trip has been worth all the effort and ag gravation. In only two days, she will board a plane for home, taking with her the greatest pride and joy she has ever known.

Then suddenly everything unravels. Summoned to an emergency meeting of the adoptive parents, Allison is told a mistake has been made — a "clerical error." The Americans have been given healthy infants rather than children with special needs, for which they are technicallyqualified, and they are told they must exchange their babies for different children. Allison is faced with a terrible decision: Should she capitulate and surrender the child she has come to love intensely, or risk an attempt to reach the American consulate in Shanghai, where she might at least have a chance to negotiate and keep her baby?

Joining with several other American couples caught in the same dilemma, Allison chooses to run. There is a more sinister reason underlying the nightmare than they know about, and their flight spawns a massive manhunt led by a ruthless police colonel wielding all the terrifying apparatus of a police state. What ensues is tense, dramatic, and totally believable — a race in which Allison not only struggles with her infant daughter and recalcitrant stepson, but is caught in a political tug-of-war that forces her to display a depth of courage and a strength of will she had never known she possessed.

Inspired by a true-life incident, China Run takes the reader on a breathtaking chase across China that is gripping, compulsively readable, and frighteningly real.

About the Author, David Ball

David Ball is the author of Empires of Sand. He lives in the mountains of Colorado with his wife and two children.

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Editorials

Library Journal

Ball follows up his hit debut, Empires of Sand (1999), with an intricate tale of kidnapping and black-market adoptions in China. Unable to conceive, Allison Turke and her husband, Marshall, have finally made the decision to adopt. After several disappointments, they have received a photograph of their baby daughter and are preparing to make the trip to China. A few days before they are to leave, Marshall becomes ill and is unable to travel. Allison decides to take along her nine-year-old stepson, Tyler, hoping that they can use the time to improve their relationship. Once in China, they are kept virtual prisoners in their hotel, as Allison and other parents wait with their babies for final adoption papers. Informed by the orphanage that a mistake has been made and that their babies must be exchanged, Allison and two other women decide to run. Joined by their Chinese interpreter, they travel across the country with the police on their trail. This gripping, tightly woven suspense novel is for all public libraries. Nanci Milone Hill, Lucius Beebe Memorial Lib., Wakefield, MA Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Rich local color mixes uneasily with a conventional-and one-dimensional-chase thriller. Allison Turk brings nine-year-old stepson Tyler along on her Chinese adventure, culminating in the adoption of a beautiful baby girl named Wen Li. Among the other American parents-to-be are rugged Nash Cameron and his too-obedient wife Claire, single mother Ruth Pollard, and three other couples. In the remote Jiangsu province, on the night before the group is to sign the official papers and leave with their new babies, they receive devastating news from the government. The babies are "unfit" for adoption and will be replaced by others the following day. Unable to part with Wen Li after having spent nearly a week with her, Allison decides to make a run for it, Tyler and her new daughter in tow. If they can make it to Shanghai and the American consulate, they know they'll be safe. Ruth Pollard and the Camerons and their babies go along, but the other couples, fearful of reprisals, stay behind. Fortunately, Yi Ling, their Chinese interpreter and guide, is undergoing a crisis of conscience about her government's rigidity, and she responds to Allison's earnest appeal for help. Emboldened by her liberating decision, Yi Ling commandeers a van and speeds the group away. When her boss, Director Lin, learns what's happened, the chase is on-and it continues for nearly 300 pages, by car, boat, and foot as the escapees depend on the kindness of strangers (mostly simple villagers) to avoid discovery. Infighting begins almost immediately, mostly over Nash's efforts to assert control. For Director Lin, finding and returning the babies to the orphanage is a matter of life and death: his. He tries to convince Allison'shusband Marshall to implore (and perhaps betray) her, or the consequences could be dire. Second-novelist Ball (Empires of Sand, 1999) writes evocatively about Chinese society and customs, but his people fail to convince or engage.

Book Details

Published
December 1, 2002
Publisher
Wheeler Publishing
Pages
649
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781587243325

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