I picked this book up because the title caught my attention. "White Tiger? One of the four guardians? Sweet!" Alright, my thought process wasn't exactly like that, but the gist is there. So I see that. There were also two other books out on the shelves, each with a name similar to the first. Hm. A series. Could be interesting.
Well, then I start reading. Let's get into that.
Emma Donahoe is an Australian living in Hong Kong. She finds herself in the employ of Mr. John Chen, a wealthy man who needs a nanny for his young daughter, Simone. John is really the Black Turtle, a powerful Chinese god, guardian of the north. They have the American bodyguard, Leo. He's said to be a big, black ugly guy. Who's gay. He's been with John for years now and has been well-trained by him to protect Simone.
The setting is fantastic. I've never read a book that takes place in Hong Kong. Not and be this authentic. The characters go to and talk about real locations with the fluency of locals. They eat the food and live the life style and there's no sense of force behind it. The author has a love of this place and its people and it shows. I enjoy that. Too often, I read a book about a foreign locale and they stereotype it because, and it's painfully obvious, they've never been there. I'm not talking about fantasy locations. Those play by different rules. Real life locations are much harder to write about, I believe, if you've never been there to experience the place.
I also love the author's attention to the mythology. I love Asian mythology. Well, let's face it, I love mythology of all sorts. Chinese, I haven't had as much experience with by itself, only insofar as it was transferred over to Korea or Japan. I am familiar with some basic characters. I've watched enough Chinese movies over the years to absorb that much. I'll admit that most of my Chinese mythology I know from watching Forbidden Kingdom and from reading Japanese manga. The Monkey King has always been a great favorite of mine. But I like learning more. Kylie Chan did a wonderful job of coloring in my knowledge of some of the Chinese gods.
That apart, I've had some serious issues with this book.
First off, the main character, Emma Donahoe. Late-20s Australian woman working as an English teacher in Hong Kong. Neat. Since I usually see American or British books, this is a new venture for me. Kind of plain, doesn't wear make-up, isn't really into clothes or shoes, slightly overweight. Oh, I'm beginning to like this character. She's going to have to live off her personality. I always love to see that. And then ...
... why in the world does she not have a personality?
No joke. The character has got to be the dullest person in first person and I'm stuck with her for 500 pages. I know I've cracked on Stephenie Meyer's Bella Swan as being an empty shell before but Emma makes Bella into an ocean of personality. There are not even any quirks to this character. It's disheartening. She has no hobbies, aside from a rather amusing game of finding the strangely named locals. She has no spark to her. I can't feel her living. I think she might be a piece of paper ... except I can do more with that. I'm pretty sure I know how to make a boat with a piece of paper.
And the weirdest thing, the other characters make a habit of saying "You're so cold-blooded, Emma." whenever she does anything that speaks of common sense. Or even better: "You're not a normal woman." She never really does anything to warrant either of these comments. She does the sensible thing and she's "cold-blooded?" She uses her brain and she's not a normal woman? I think I might be insulted but it's hard to tell. I'm having problems determining if the other characters are really just idiots. Granted, I'm aware I'm not a normal chick. That's never been in question. But then, I enjoy comic books and video games and can keep up with my guy friends in some friendly insult tossing. I'm also aware there are plenty of other varieties of "not normal women" out there. What really gets me is that Emma doesn't do anything for this label to be given to her. Once she joins the Chen household, she acts like a woman. Down to clothes shopping with glee and doing the weird emotional flip-flops of insanity.
No. Seriously. Flip-flops of insanity. Because there's nothing else to call telling her friends and herself, "I respect his decision, I will not pursue him." and then trying to shove yourself into his arms on the next page. Literally. Crying out stupid lines like "We can make the best of the time we have" and "Don't give up on us." That's really ... enlightened, my girl.
Let's not even start on how she orders a god around.
There's Simone as well. I think the girl is a plot point. I mean, she's a major reason for everything in the book but the character herself is so strange. She talks like a preteen oftentimes but behaves like a toddler. I get it. She's half-god. We'll let the brilliance behind her pass. And she's four so we'll let the behavior pass too. Beyond that, she's a cuteness pull. She gets written off into a myriad of classes until The Cuteness is needed to fill in a blank space in the story. But, like I said, she's a main plot purpose.
Leo, I like. He's amusing. He has random lapses of common sense that make, well, no sense. Forget that he's operating under the same protective faculties for years. He'll breach security because "my fault. I forgot to be more careful." Now, granted, people tend to get complacent after awhile. But this tends to happen when things get more quiet, not as they get more intense. Usually, the attacks go up, the alertness does too.
Ah. We're onto the last main character, Mr. Chen. Not too long ago, I read a book that was told from the point of view of a god. It was very well done. He was arrogant, though he never saw it that way, but mostly fair in his dealings with other people. I say mostly because he was a known brat but he understood fairness. Mr. Chen lacks all godly qualities other than power. Then again, he seems to lack that too, since that's a plot point. He spends most of the book acting aloof as befits a thousands-years-old god, but he has these utterly random moments that seem to be written by a fangirl. If he'd been the White Tiger or the Monkey King, I could accept him laughing himself out of his chair. As the Turtle, it's just jarringly out of character. I'll allow that he can dress like a slob. He's a god; they can dress how they want. But he's thousands of years old. Shouldn't he have ... I don't know, some common sense? There's demons attacking his only kid but he wants to send her to a school? In what universe is that smart. Said demons just got into his home and nearly killed everyone. In what way would a school be safer? And then there's the whole reason for the family's predicament.
He made a promise to a scared woman that he wouldn't change to his True Form. This is essentially killing him. First off, why in the world wold he make this promise? The argument that he was in love doesn't really fly. Buddhism applies to his world view; she'll come back eventually. It's not like he really dies. Second thing, why is he still complying with such an idiotic and dangerous promise? I get the honor thing is strong for the Chinese but I also remember Asians, like pirates in movies, are sticklers for wording choice. Said person the promise was made to has been dead for years, if that doesn't negate the promise, he should have found a loophole by now. I mean, some of the best trickster creatures came from Chinese mythology. He's a danger not only to his daughter but to all the people who fall under him in the pantheon, and considering the close tie of the guardians to each other, he's a danger to them as well. By this point, the Jade Emperor should have stepped in and ordered him to restore his power, promise be damned.
The action is another big let-down. I picked up this book expecting martial arts goodness. I mean, what else do you expect with a cover showing a girl in a martial arts pose. The back flap kind of gives that illusion too. However, much of the action is ghosted over. I can understand not being able to write action but I wouldn't have marketed it as being an action book. It doesn't stand up to that. Besides which, it barely has tension. You'd think with a war brewing and demons popping up more often throughout the book that it'd have more tension. It's strangely lacking. Even the romance lacks spark. It all came across as very forced to me ... but that may have been an extension of Emma's wild mood swinging aggressive "I respect you/take me now!" attitude. I think that was incredibly disappointing.
Overall, this wasn't a very good read. It had a great potential to wow but somehow mismanaged that potential. The pros of gaining knowledge and insight into another culture and society just didn't outweigh the bad character development for me.