Noble House

Noble House

1987 paperback edition
Author James Clavell
Country United Kingdom, United States
Language English
Series Asian Saga
Genre Historical novel
Publisher Delacorte Press
Publication date
April 1981
Media type Print (hardback & paperback)
ISBN 0-385-28737-2 (first edition, hardback)
OCLC 233936182
Preceded by King Rat
Followed by Whirlwind

Noble House is a novel by James Clavell, published in 1981 and set in Hong Kong in 1963.

It is a massive book, well over 1000 pages, with dozens of characters and numerous intermingling plot lines. In 1988, it was adapted as a television miniseries for NBC, starring Pierce Brosnan. The miniseries updates the storyline of the novel to the 1980s.

The Noble House also is a nickname of Struan's, the trading company featured prominently in most of Clavell's novels.

Plot summary

Noble House is set in 1963. The tai-pan, Ian Dunross, struggles to rescue Struan's from the precarious financial position left by his predecessor. To do this, he seeks partnership with an American millionaire, while trying to ward off his arch-rival Quillan Gornt, who seeks to destroy Struan's once and for all. Meanwhile, Chinese communists, Taiwanese nationalists, and Soviet spies illegally vie for influence in Hong Kong while the British government seeks to prevent this. And nobody, it seems, can get anything done without enlisting the aid of Hong Kong's criminal underworld. Other obstacles include water shortages, landslides, bank runs and stock market crashes.

In Noble House, Dunross finds his company the target of a hostile takeover at a time when Struan's is desperately overextended. He is also embroiled in international espionage when he finds himself in possession of secret documents desperately desired by both the KGB and MI6. The novel follows Dunross' attempts to extricate himself from all this and to save Struan's, the Noble House.

Background

Struan and Company is based on Jardine Matheson Holdings, which continues to exist as an Asian trading company. The chief character, Ian Dunross, is believed to be a composite character of two real life Jardine Matheson tai-pans, Sir Hugh Barton and Sir Michael Herries.

Rothwell-Gornt is based on Butterfield and Swire, now known as Swire Pacific. Quillan Gornt is based on two Swire tai-pans, John Kidston "Jock" Swire and William Charles Goddard Knowles.

Unlike the other Asian Saga novels, Noble House is not closely based on a specific series of events, but is more a snapshot of the 1960s in Hong Kong, and serves as a capsule history of Jardines in the 1960s, against the backdrop of the impending Vietnam War and the recent Kim Philby defection. The story opens on Sunday, August 18, 1963, and runs through the days immediately preceding the assassination of John F. Kennedy. In 1961 Jardine Matheson became a public company, with the initial offer oversubscribed over 56 times, which is attributed in the novel to tai-pan Ian Dunross. In 1963 the Hongkong Land subsidiary of Jardine (fictionalized as "Asian Properties") opened what was then the Mandarin Oriental Hotel, which has today become one of the world's leading hotels. The Dairy Farm subsidiary of Jardine moved into the supermarket sector in 1964 with the acquisition of Wellcome (fictionalized as "H.K. General Stores"). A Jardine representative office was established in Australia in 1963 (fictionalized as the next assignment of Linbar Struan). The big set-pieces — the fire on the boat and the landslide — are also closely modeled on real events (the Jumbo Floating Restaurant fire in 1971 and the Kotewall Road disaster in 1972). The American-Chinese scientist who defected to China and helped develop the first atom bomb for China, Dr. Joseph Yu, is a fictionalized version of renowned Caltech scientist Dr. Qian Xuesen.

A major difference between the original novel and the later miniseries adaptation is that the television version changes the setting from 1963 to the late 1980s, and updates visible technology and the general atmosphere accordingly. The looming return of Hong Kong to China in 1997 is frequently mentioned, which was not a major concern in the 1960s.

Main characters

Writing

Clavell's first novel, King Rat, was set in Singapore. His second novel, Tai Pan, was set in Hong Kong. After visiting Hong Kong to research Tai Pan in 1963, Clavell returned regularly to the island.[1]

He wanted to write a novel about modern day Hong Kong which used some characters from King Rat and descendants of characters from Shogun. It was the first of his "interlocking novels" he planned to write as part of the Asian Saga.[2]

Clavell says he "wanted to write a story about two Americans who go Hong Kong to try and usurp Noble House and have a lot of adventures. That's all I knew I was going to do beforehand. In the old days - say, Tai Pan - when I got myself in a hole I could always kill somebody. It wasn't that easy in Noble House."[3]

He started in April 1978 but was interrupted by the filming of the novel Shogun. Clavell says the novel took him three years to research and write. He would write every day, five pages a day.[1] He used old newspapers and court records as well as research he had done for Tai Pan. The character "Peter Marlowe" was a surrogate for Clavell himself.[4]

"I think it's one of the best things I've done," said Clavell in a 1980 interview.[5]

Clavell said he made one of the American female characters Armenian because it was "the unexpected thing" and because his friend David Hedison was Armenian.[6]

Clavell described his process:

All I do is write stories. It's very difficult to get people to read these days with television and the like. My intention is to entertain, perhaps illuminate. If I can transplant people into that buccaneering society of Hong Kong, 1963, maybe they'll get something out of it. If someone pays money for my book and feels satisfied, I'm doing my job.. Writing is rewriting... writing is thinking... If you're lucky, you can start dreaming about a book, and if you're very lucky, you want to wake up... My attitude is positive, romantic. I write about men and women who like men and women. I don't write about psychiatric things, like finding the eternal answer to what is life.[7]

The novel was 1,200 pages. It had been reduced 30% with the help of Clavell's editor, Jena Bernkopf.[1] "These things go on until they end," said Clavell about the length. "My secret is I never know what's going to happen from day to day. The last page is all that matters. The rest of it is wind. I only know that once I start, I will finish... People now tell me it ends too soon."[6]

Clavell dedicated the novel to Queen Elizabeth II because "she owns Hong Kong. It belongs to the Queen of England and she has my admiration. You see I was born in the heyday of the British Empire and it's with me forever."[6]

Clavell said any film adaptation of the novel "needn't be set in 1963. Modern day Hong Kong will do. As De Mille said, a tree is a tree, a jet is a jet."[6]

The novel retroactively connects an obscure western movie Clavell wrote and directed in 1960 to the Asian Saga. The film Walk Like a Dragon starred Jack Lord as a character named "Linc Barnett," who is established as an ancestor of a similarly named character in this novel.

Publication

The initial print run of 250,000 copies was the largest in the 17 year history of Delacorte Press. The initial order of 75,000 copies by Waldenbooks was a record for that chain.[8]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Dudar, Helen (12 Apr 1981). "An author at home in Hollywood and Hong Kong". Chicago Tribune. p. e1.
  2. How Japanese can a Westerner feel?: Author Clavell tried to think as his subjects did INTERVIEW By Arthur Unger. The Christian Science Monitor (1908-Current file) [Boston, Mass] 15 Sep 1980: 23.
  3. James Clavell, storyteller Teachout, Terry National Review (pre-1988)34.022 (Nov 12, 1982): 1420.
  4. MAKING OF A LITERARY SHOGUN: CLAVELL By Paul Bernstein. New York Times (1923-Current file) [New York, N.Y] 13 Sep 1981: SM112
  5. "CLAVELL: CHEERS FOR CHAMBERLAIN'S CRAFT: CHAMBERLAIN". Los Angeles Times. 12 February 1980. p. G1.
  6. 1 2 3 4 Rosenfield, Paul (19 April 1981). "AUTHOR JAMES CLAVELL: A LEGEND IN HIS OWN TIME". Los Angeles Times. p. l5.
  7. 'If you're lucky, you can start dreaming about a book'-Clavell Freedman, Adele. The Globe and Mail [Toronto, Ont] 09 May 1981: E.7.
  8. READING AND WRITING: Teamwork Bertram D. Wolfe James Clavell By Edwin McDowell. New York Times (1923-Current file) [New York, N.Y] 12 Apr 1981: BR12
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