Things have changed a lot in China since this story is supposedly taking place, 1983, but I imagine some like strictures in policy and government do remain. The young citizens who are talked about in this novel, the new revolutionaries, are forward-looking and yearning to experiment. And, we have seen where much of their dreams have been too exuberant at times, without any research and rational thought employed to determine if there might be any negative outcome. Like ghost cities of high rises that were built seemingly overnight at great expense, expecting a super influx of people rushing to inhabit them or open businesses that never appeared.
But, at the time our story unfolds, we are looking at a China that created the tragedy of their Cultural Revolution, but before the Tiananmen Square debacle; ruled by old men who know only threats of death and torture to make its citizens submit to their rule. And, at the heart are two Chinese brothers, separated years before; one who came to the United States, and one who remained in Shanghai, then in mainland China. One who became a beloved professor and one who became a jealous, murderous little Chinese bureaucrat. In addition, there is another American professor (friend of the first one), a Vietnamese veteran, who becomes embroiled in the main conflict between the brothers, which includes the theft and smuggling of extremely valuable archaeological artifacts out of China into America.
There're a lot of action and thrills in this book, which kept me tensely occupied without regret of having opened it's covers.