Captain Jack Robertson faces an impossible Can he learn to love his violent, drug-fueled jungle prison--or will he die trying to escape?While spying on the Burmese drug-traffic for the CIA, Jack Robertson, a senior pilot for Air America, is kidnapped by a disgraced comrade with an unhealthy addition to drugs, sex, money and power. Dragon Mountain is the thrilling story of Captain Jack Robertson's struggle to stay alive long enough to choose between forging a new life in his captor's jungle fortress, or taking bloody revenge. Will Jack make a doomed break for freedom? Or will the violent forces around him spiral out of control.This action-packed adventure features unforgettable characters--renegade mercenaries, bloodthirsty bandits and corrupt officials--in an exotic Asian setting. Murder, kidnapping, drug deals--and the dark secrets behind covert American operations in Asia--make this a non-stop thriller!
Daniel Reid was born in 1948 in San Francisco and spent his childhood in East Africa. After completing a Bachelor of Arts degree in East Asian Studies at the University of California, Berkeley in 1970, and a Masters of Arts degree in Chinese Language and Civilization at the Monterey Institute of International Studies in 1973, Reid moved to Taiwan, where he spent 16 years studying and writing about various aspects of traditional Chinese culture, focusing particularly on Chinese medicine and ancient Taoist health and longevity systems. In 1989, he relocated to Chiang Mai, Thailand, where he continued his research and writing until 1999, when he immigrated with his wife Snow to the Byron Bay region of Australia, where he now makes his home.
Dan Reid has a long-standing and well-earned reputation as an Asia/Australia-based authority on Chinese cuisine, Taoist philosophy, qigong, Far Eastern travel and other areas of similar interest. But while he may be a reasonably decent writer, he is far less successful as an author. This book only rates a second stars because it was marginally better than his frankly offensive autobiography (see my review here: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...), although his main character in Dragon Mountain - I can't in good conscience call him "the protagonist" - shares the same distasteful traits Reid so proudly trumpeted in his memoir: booze, drugs and sex just cannot be overused, and women are…well, for sex. Period.
I won't go into the plot here - it's thin and dumb and not worth the effort, with the whole thing serving more as a platform for Reid to engage in endless monologuing on "America bad, Asia good;" the aforementioned benefits of endless sex/drugs/booze; and such various pseudo-Taoism hokum as astral projection, "beaming energy from the palms of one's hands," and living well into your 250s, (all stuff that I thought went out of serious consideration with the discrediting of "T. Lobsang Rampa" in the late 1950s). I also have to note that the bad guy is such an over-the-top "evil Chinaman" that I could only picture him as Christopher Walken in "Balls of Fury," rather than someone along the lines of Han in Bruce Lee's "Enter the Dragon," (as I imagine Reid intended); and so far more this:
…than this:
So why did I ever bother reading this? Fair question. I always enjoy reading books by or about people I know, or know-ish, and as Reid and I overlapped for a number of years in Taiwan, we eventually became…I guess I'd say "aware of each other" within the relatively small expat community at that time. And so in spite of his deeply off-putting memoir, when I heard from a common friend that he had also written a novel, I thought hey, that might be a fun read if I ever ran across it, (although I also assumed that was unlikely, as it is unavailable on Amazon, and the only copy currently on eBay is going for $384!).
However…last weekend I attended the excellent Green Valley Book Fair in central Virginia, and to my surprise found a copy there for just $1 - and how could I pass up a savings of $383?? And so there ya go; got it, read it quick (its one redeeming feature being its brevity), and can now add it to my "I read it so you don't have to" list. ALL THAT SAID…if you are at all into the OTHER side of Reid - herbal medicine, Chinese healing, the art of tea drinking, meditation & martial arts, Chinese cooking, etc. - then by all means have at it. Just maybe avoid his journeys into fiction and deeply misogynistic self-aggrandizement.