The Chinese Maze Murders

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Chinese Maze Murders
recent University of Chicago Press edition - 1996
University of Chicago Press - 1997
Author Robert van Gulik
Cover artist Ed Lindlof
Series Judge Dee
Genre(s) Mystery, Detective Novel
Publisher University of Chicago Press
Publication date 1957
Media type Print (Paperback)
Pages 322 pp (paperback edition)
ISBN ISBN 0-226-84878-7
Preceded by None
Followed by The Chinese Bell Murders

The Chinese Maze Murders is a detective novel written by Robert van Gulik and set in Imperial China (roughly speaking the Tang Dynasty). It is a fiction based on the real character of Judge Dee (Ti Jen-chieh or Di Renjie), a magistrate and statesman of the Tang court, who lived roughly 630700.

This was the first of the fictional mystery stories written by Robert van Gulik. It was based on three actual cases from Chinese criminal investigations. The author, having written the story in English, had it translated by a Japanese friend (Professor Ogaeri Yukio) into Japanese and it was sold in Japan under the title "Meiro-no-satsujin" in 1951. Then the author translated the book into Chinese himself and it was published by the Nanyang Press in Singapore in 1953. Finally Van Gulik published the English language version in 1957. (See Forward to Chinese Maze Murders pgs. V-VI).

The three mysteries: "The Case of the Sealed Room", "The Case of the Hidden Testement", and "The Case of the Girl with the Severed Head" are all based on actual Chinese murder casebooks. The book contains a postscript by the author on the Chinese Imperial Justice system (something that Van Gulik was an expert on).

[edit] Plot introduction

Judge Dee is the magistrate in the fictional border town of Lan-fang. He confronts three mysteries invovling poisoned plums, a mysterious scroll picture, passionate love letters, a hidden murder, and a ruthless robber. These are all somehow linked to the Governor's garden maze.

Lan-fang was the setting for another Judge Dee novel, The Phantom of the Temple and two short stories from Judge Dee at Work.