Authors: Eliot Pattison
I have been careful not to exaggerate the circumstances of the immolations or the situation of Tibetans overall. The core elements of Beijing's conduct described in this book, starting with its reaction to the immolations but including massive prisons, systematic replacement of beloved images of Buddha with images of Mao, widespread arrests without due process, and strict control of monks, nuns, and religious artifacts, all reflect current conditions in Tibet. It is sometimes painful to put that reality into words, and writing about these particular characters was often distressing. But the victims of these suicides, whom Beijing seeks to punish even after death, deserve to be more than statistics. The profound message in what they do is not only about their despairing struggle, it is also about the rest of the world and its priorities. For those interested in learning, and doing, more, the International Campaign for Tibet maintains a sobering chronicle of the suicides, including such personal details as are available, and offers opportunities to get further engaged in the Tibetan cause.
The more I write mysteries set in Tibet the more I realize that the greatest mystery may be the extraordinary resilience of the Tibetan people. Tibetans sometimes suggest that they draw strength from their rugged, powerful land and the deities that inhabit it. Certainly sacred lands remain a vital feature of the Tibetan landscape and in some form have a role in all my Shan novels. The hidden refuge of Taktsang in many ways becomes another character in this book, embodying both sacred traditions and a dissident stronghold while also offering a comforting embrace to long suffering visitors. Scholars would remind us that such spiritual power places represent one of the many ways that early animistic beliefs blended with the teachings of lamas from India to create Tibet's unique form of Buddhism. But sacred lands are not academic or a thing of the past. Earth deities play an important role in many traditional Tibetan communities, creating a reverence for their powerful landscape that affects many aspects of life at the roof of the world. In such places a modest shrine effectively replaces the volumes of environmental laws needed to protect our own lands, just as a tattered prayer flag flapping defiantly over a monastery speaks far more eloquently about these people than hours of political discourse about them in Western capitals. Perhaps the real mystery is not what happened to the Tibetans but what happened to us.
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THE INSPECTOR SHAN NOVELS
Mandarin Gate
The Skull Mantra
Bone Mountain
Beautiful Ghosts
Water Touching Stone
Prayer of the Dragon
The Lord of Death
Bone Rattler
Eye of the Raven
Original Death
Ashes of the Earth
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ELIOT PATTISON
is the Edgar Awardâwinning author of
The Skull Mantra
and six other previous Shan novels. A frequent visitor to China, he has published books and articles on international policy issues around the world. He lives in Oley, Pennsylvania.
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This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously.
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SOUL OF THE FIRE.
Copyright © 2014 by Eliot Pattison. All rights reserved. For information, address St. Martin's Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.
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Cover designed by David Baldeosingh Rotstein
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Cover photographs: mountain © Vadim Petrakov /
Shutterstock.com
; figures on bridge © Steven Goethals
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eBooks may be purchased for business or promotional use. For information on bulk purchases, please contact Macmillan Corporate and Premium Sales Department by writing to [email protected].
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The Library of Congress has cataloged the print edition as follows:
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Pattison, Eliot.
    Soul of the fire / Eliot Pattison.âFirst edition.
        pages; cmâ(Inspector shan tao yun; 8)
    ISBN 978-0-312-65603-4 (hardcover)
    ISBN 978-1-250-03647-6 (ebook)
  1.  Shan, Tao Yun (Fictitious character)âFiction.  2.  Ex-police officersâFiction.  3.  Buddhist monksâFiction.  4.  MurderâInvestigationâFiction.  5.  Tibet Autonomous Region (China)âFiction.  I.  Title.
PS3566.A82497S67 2014
813'.54âdc23
2014031495
eISBN 9781250036476
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First Edition: November 2014