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Grave Imports (Ray Sharp Mystery)

Grave Imports (Ray Sharp Mystery)
By Eric Stone

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Product Description

A routine investigation into a Chinese art supplies company unearths a smuggling ring. The trail leads through a warehouse filled with looted antiquities in the boomtown of Shenzhen, just north of Hong Kong; to the lair of a vicious ex-South Vietnamese general now living in Thailand; and finally to the murderous Khmer Rouge in the ancient temples and more recent killing fields of Cambodia. Based on the sordid facts of the illegal trade in stolen Cambodian art, GRAVE IMPORTS is a hotpot of high adventure in exotic locales, fascinating characters, high commerce, terrible crime and one mixed-up, reluctant hero trying to shed light into some of the darkest corners of Asia.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #570760 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-09-18
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 328 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
"Grave Imports is a terrific read. Stone's keen eye for the Asian landscape always finds the compelling image, the startling fact. The story is harrowing and believable. And his hero, Sharp, is a refreshingly humble soldier in his fight against what is wrong and evil in the world." -- T. Jefferson Parker, author of "L.A. Outlaws"

"International intrigue at it's best. Stone is master at creating intense suspense and his pacing is pure precision. GRAVE IMPORST should be on every reader's watch list. If you don't have time for a vacation just pick up GRAVE IMPORTS and let Stone export you to a whole new world." -- Jon Jordan, Crimespree magazine

"A multi-course Asian feast of a novel... Dig in, savor the spice, and come back for seconds.". -- Dan Fesperman, author of The Prisoner of Guantanamo

"In this intriguing tale of loss and redemption...Stone takes the reader on a wild ride...a smart and compelling thriller." -- Dianne Emley, author of Cut to the Quick

"The exotic and dangerous East comes to vibrant life...Bristling with fascinating details ...you're in for a...riveting ride." -- Gayle Lynds, New York Times bestselling author of The Last Spymaster

*Stone, Eric. Grave Imports: The Second Ray Sharp Novel. Bleak House: Big Earth. Sept. 2007. c.326p. ISBN 978-1-932557-46-6. $24.95; pap. ISBN 978-1-932557-47-3. $14.95. M (starred review)

Ray Sharp (The Living Room of the Dead) earns a living investigating Asian companies as possible investments for U.S. businesses. A routine probe into a Chinese art-supplies company has Ray following an antiquities smuggling ring from Hong Kong to mainland China to Cambodia. It is 1995, and art smuggling is a money maker for a Vietnamese ex-general, the Khmer Rouge, and every lowlife in Southeast Asia. What starts as a fast-paced thriller turns into a deeper social novel concerned with poverty, slavery, and the best and worst of the human condition. This will appeal to fans of John Burdett and Colin Cotterill, as well as patrons who enjoy exotic Asian settings and a mystery plot with some substance. -- Library Journal, August 2007

Eric Stone knows Asia up, down, and sideways,...it makes you wish you were in on the action...". -- SJ Rozan, Edgar Award winning author of In This Rain

About the Author
Eric Stone worked as a writer, photographer, editor, publisher and publishing consultant. He is the author of the novels Living Room of the Dead and Grave Imports. Additionally, he wrote the non-fiction book Wrong Side of the Wall. He lives in Los Angeles.


Customer Reviews

Raise your pulse and stimulate your mind5
GRAVE IMPORTS kept me up late. Author Eric Stone leads the reader on a thrilling journey to the remote corners of Cambodia, Thailand, and Hong Kong. One can smell the gunpowder, eavesdrop on the cacophony of Chinese dialects, observe the limbless beggars, and taste the sting of pungent chili.
In GRAVE IMPORTS, protagonist Ray Sharp is compelled to investigate a smuggling enterprise that is robbing ancient Cambodian temples of their priceless artifacts. Still recovering from an experience that plagues him with nightmares and occasionally drives him to the bottle, Sharp must confront not only his own demons, but a lawless world of opportunists and manipulators. Though many of the characters are unique and deeply sympathetic, some tread a narrow line between survival and corruption. Sharp can't pass judgment, as the lines he once drew between right and wrong have blurred or moved. I heartily recommend the journey through GRAVE IMPORTS, which will leave you with a racing pulse. It will also have you pondering the clouded moralities of war and enterprise.

Stolen Treasures3
Stolen Cambodian art--statues, parts of temples, icons--illegally sent through Thailand, Vietnam and China to Hong Kong where it is sold, at the time, legally, brings Ray Sharp to his second adventure. The exotic Far East background provides the reader with real glimpses into the people and locales.

Sharp leaves his journalistic career as a result of an unfortunate incident, which leaves him in a depressed state. A good friend, a former CIA spook, now trying to build a corporate investigation firm, hires Ray. He is assigned a routine look into a Chinese art supplies company in which an American client is considering investing. Instead of mundane art supplies, he finds secret stashes of antiquities. The trail leads to an ex-South Vietnamese General now living in Thailand and to the Khmer Rouge, the ancient temples, and the killing fields of Cambodia.

The author's knowledge of the Far East seems to be quite genuine, and the descriptions of the streets and people of Hong Kong, Bangkok and other locations compelling. The story is believable and the characters real. Insights into the cultures of the area, as well as the horrible plunder of artifacts, are lessons well-told.

Ray Sharp explores the darker side of the antiquities trade in Asia5
Ray Sharp is working as an investigator for Due Diligence International, a job that requires a lot of the same skills Ray used to use as a journalist/editor for Asia's largest circulation business monthly. His latest assignment involves looking into the background of one firm because another firm wants to invest some big money. Seems like a fairly easy job.

What Sharp discovers is the huge trade in Asian antiquities. Some places it's legal to sell them, some places not. The borderline between those places is dangerous. Naturally, Sharp winds up there. He runs afoul of a former general, he winds up in a prison camp, and he gets shot at once or twice. None of the women he has more than nodding relationships with come out of this whole.

Stone writes about the dark underbelly of Asia. Readers of THE LIVING ROOM OF THE DEAD will be delighted that Stone's second book is at least as good as his first. Ray Sharp is one of those people who can't just walk away from something; this makes for a tough personal life but a great book. GRAVE IMPORTS is loosely based upon events that happened to Stone; his ability to transform fact into fiction is superb. GRAVE IMPORTS is not always pleasant to read in terms of content; Stone's writing is good enough to make this reader not want to put the book down, no matter what.