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Asian Americans - Fiction & Literature, Thrillers, Police Stories, Character Types - Fiction
Strangers at the Gate by Leonard Gross β€” book cover

Strangers at the Gate

by Leonard Gross
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Overview

In anticipation of Communist China's takeover of Hong Kong in July 1997, tens of thousands of residents are fleeing to San Francisco, Vancouver, and other parts of the world. Focusing on this unprecedented wave of emigration - much of it illegal - former foreign correspondent Leonard Gross has crafted a dramatic, fast-paced thriller about an ugly crime of racial vengeance that exposes an intricate triad underworld taking root on North America's West Coast. Leading the San Francisco investigation is an idiosyncratic descendant of Gold Rush pioneers named Zachary Tobias, a self-described double oxymoron - he's rich, Jewish, and a cop. As Zack delves more and more deeply into the case, his search for the source of the Hong Kong connection grows into an overpowering personal crusade, which causes him to sacrifice his job, his credibility, and the woman he loves in order to learn the truth.

The highly acclaimed author of The Last Jews in Berlin now presents a frighteningly realistic, gripping novel about the transfer of Hong Kong's Triad underworld to America's West Coast as 1997 approaches--an ambitious international thriller that foreshadows tomorrow's headlines.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Hong Kong crime comes to San Francisco in this political/police procedural that begins with the mutilation of a San Francisco newscaster by unidentified Asians. The burden of solving the crime falls upon Captain Zachary Tobias of the Gang Task Force of the SFPD. Though Tobias is laden by Gross (coauthor with Pierre Salinger of Mortal Games) with would-be idiosyncrasies (being a Jewish cop, for one), he's not so unique: his independent wealth is shared by a number of other fictional cops, including David Lindsey's Stuart Haydon, and how many cop-heroes aren't idealist liberals in a corrupt system? Nor will readers be surprised when Gross is told by the police chief, ``You're off the Maggie Winehouse case.... And stay the hell away from Jimmy Chang. Those are orders.'' But Tobias is at least persistent, following clues from the waterfront right up to the toniest houses on the hill, with stops in Hong Kong and Vancouver. Meanwhile, Gross showers, and sometimes inundates, the narrative with detail about various locales and their endemic crimes. Excepting the author's chilly, clichd excursions into character, this impressively well-researched story simmers along smartly, bringing into dramatic focus the ongoing influx of Hong Kong criminals into the U.S. in the face of the impending 1997 takeover by China. (Aug.)

Library Journal

Independently wealthy, Jewish, and cultured, Zach Tobias of the San Francisco P.D. is no stereotypical cop. When local TV anchorwoman Maggie Winehouse becomes the victim of a violent and disfiguring crime at the hands of two Asian assailants, Zach senses that it's only the tip of an international iceberg. Maggie has hosted a local news program about Asian immigration into San Francisco, and Hong Kong triads equipping for political changes in 1997 may be threatened by possible exposure. After an inexplicable suspension from the force, Zach encounters roadblocks from Vancouver to Hong Kong. The case ultimately unravels Zach's love life, career, and self-image. Gross (Mortal Games, with Pierre Salinger, LJ 2/1/88) has penned a stunner of a novel that is as sensuous a romp through San Francisco, Canada, and Hong Kong as it is a riveting prelude to tomorrow's headlines. Highly recommended. [Previewed in Prepub Alert 4/15/95].Susan A. Zappia, Maricopa Cty. Lib. Dist., Phoenix

Book Details

Published
August 1, 1995
Publisher
Random House Inc (T)
Pages
439
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780679428350

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