Originally published by Futura Books 1974
Pinnacle version 1974
Terry Harknett (1936- 2019) was a UK author of Crime and Western fiction including the notorious Edge series. Pseudonyms include Frank Chandler, George G Gilman, Adam Hardy, Jane Harmon, Joseph Hedges, William M James, Charles R Pike, William Pine, Thomas H Stone, and William Terry.
The Crown Series had three entries
The Sweet and Sour Kill 1974
Macao Mayhem 1974
Bamboo Shoot-out 1975
The basic premise: Grandpa and Grandma Chang have closed their Hong Kong Island tailor shop for the night. Two hoods break in and demand “insurance” money. The Changs reply they have already paid it. Thugs say, too bad, there’s a new company in town, smash up the place, smash up the Changs and burn down the building. Their cop grandson Po Chang is back from a US trip. He arrives on the scene in time to run into the building and grab grandpa Chang for his dying words, …”insurance.” Now with his Australian born boss/partner John Crown they hit the Hong Kong crime underground in search of this new murderous faction moving into their city.
What we have here is violent revenge justice mixed with kung-fu b-movie action. This was originally published in 1974 so that would have been the zenith of both of those genres.
The relationship of the tough talking Australian cop and the more soft-spoken Chinese cop reminded me a bit of Big Trouble in Little China.
Po Chang is the native. He is a master of Kung Fu and is dead set on revenge as he should be. He’s angry and always on the verge of losing control but knows to stop right at the edge of the line. The story focuses mainly on him.
Crown’s introduction starts with him chugging whiskey from the bottle in a brothel. He’s not there for the ladies, he just likes to hangout. He’s an alcoholic macho Australian white guy in a foreign world where he barrels through people with zero regard to proper police procedure. He has a sad backstory where his wife and kid leave him and go back to Australia. It’s great because it’s supposed to justify his bad behavior but the reason they left is all on him. He’s the one who decided to stay in Hong Kong. Maybe to suggest a fallible nature? To give him heart? Sympathy? Eh. I just thought it was funny.
There are hilarious interactions with Po Chang and this well-off woman he met on the plane. He borrows her car and gangsters wreck it. He goes back to her apartment with Crown who proceeds to have an argument with her and then backhands her so hard that she flips out of her chair. She then immediately sleeps with Po while both make cheesy sexual innuendo jokes about outlets and getting into the right places. Post coitus there is knock on the door. More gangsters. She then gets knocked unconscious with the butt of a gun and when she regains consciousness, she spits out a couple more sex jokes and orally attacks Chang’s wang. (Hey! Good enough for them, good enough for me). And this is basically all in one chapter. Her character is comically absurd in its obviousness BUT there is some suggestion that she may have more to do with the plot than just being there when Po needs a car, a home base or to get his willy wet. Does it deliver?
This is an investigation novel worthy of a 70s cop show. It’s seedy and scummy. There is a gay cowboy bar where they use that other F word quite liberally. An uber rich American bad guy on a yacht. There are double crosses, drugs, explosions, tough violent cops, reserved violent criminals, fist fights and shoot outs and god damn kung fu. It was lots of dumb fun.
It could have used a little more kung fu though.