Authors: David Wingrove
Stamp, Terence | English actor |
The Verve | English pop group |
Young, Neil | Canadian singer-songwriter |
GLOSSARY OF MANDARIN TERMS
Ch’un Tzu | an ancient Chinese term from the Warring States period, describing a certain class of noblemen, controlled by a code of chivalry and morality known as the |
Hung Mao | literally ‘redheads’, the name the Chinese gave to the Dutch (and later English) seafarers who attempted to trade with China in the seventeenth century. |
Ko Ming | ‘revolutionary’. The |
pi p’a | a four-stringed lute used in traditional Chinese music. |
San Kuo Chih Yen I | The Romance of The Three Kingdoms |
Wen ch’a te | ‘elegance’ – this is much more the expression of a concept, that of a certain sense of perfection embodied within that elegance, than a simple |
Yin yueh | ‘music’. Again, the word is used conceptually, almost poetically here. |
Ying Kuo | England, or, more often these days, the United Kingdom. |
AUTHOR’S NOTE & ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
As the reader will have noted, SON OF HEAVEN introduces its major theme – the coming of China – rather late in the day, and for this reason I’ve not felt it
necessary to provide more than the scantest note on Chinese words and phrases used – a mere handful are in the Glossary. Similarly, I do not intend to dwell too long on other matters, except
to say that wei chi is the world’s oldest and most challenging game, known more commonly in the West by its Japanese name, Go.
Thanks this time go out to Brian Griffin for reading the thing in its earliest stages, also to Mike Cobley for encouragement and insights, and to Nic Cheetham, my latest editor and newest
champion, whose most radical suggestion – to remove 70,000 words and reconstruct the novel in two parts – has resulted in this current volume. To Caroline Oakley, who did such a superb
hard edit on the creature, thanks immensely for that, and for telling me – clearly and with good reason – where to end it.
Finally, to Susan and my girls – Jessica, Amy, Georgia and Francesca, a big thank you for enriching my life. To think they were but babes when this began.
Here’s to the journey ahead. Kan Pei!