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Ted Marr
Author
Hundred Beam Bridge
Ted Marr, author
When does ambition to attain a noble goal demand too high a price - risking everything -- family, clan and even life? In this spellbinding saga set in 11th-century China during the Song Dynasty, universal human experiences of survival and ambition, balanced on gender equality, come alive. Explore age-old events of life and death, commitment and infidelity, courage and deceit, loyalty and betrayal, and the conflicting interplay of sexuality, race, and religion – all as relevant today as they were then. Dive into the captivating world of Hasan Arslan, a Gelolu Uyghur master bowyer who armed the Song Imperial Guard with unparalleled weaponry. Risking his life, family, and wealth, he aspired to the upper echelons of the Song Imperial Society. Empowered by Emperor Taizong's gift of jade Pixius, mythical beings with the head of a dragon and the body of a lion, Hasan and his descendants forged their destiny. With distinctive features of green eyes and a larger nose, Hasan stood out from the Han Chinese populace. Hasan’s success in weapon production became a target of some Han Chinese Imperial inner circles. But unlike him, the females in his life shattered the grip of the Han and their traditions. Li Shi Shi, the beautiful and courageous courtesan, befriended his son, and circumstances elevated the Arslans to the upper echelons. When all the Arslan men engage in warfare to fend off Tangut and Jurchen invaders, can two generations of women—Layla, Melod, and Pendo—forge a path to success through their House of Arslan Armory? Escaping Jurchen marauders to a foreign land, Manola and Meimei, the granddaughters, upheave norms of race and culture in their pursuit of stability and wealth. Will their efforts lead to further disaster or uncover fabulous riches? How did Hasan and his kin survive wars against the Tangut marauders from the west and Jurchen invaders from the north? Did the enigmatic Pixius assist in their escape from the Jurchen? Did they reach their promised land at the Hundred Beam Bridge?
Reviews
This gripping historical saga, set in China during the Song dynasty, opens with Hasan Arslan, an expert bowyer who aspires to be designated as an officer of the Imperial Court. Despite the unfair reality that no Gelolu has ever earned his ideal rank, he desires to achieve it with his innovative design of the Gaze Mountain Bow and his calculation of the exact date of the Winter Solstice. Failure in his invention and calculation means severe repercussions for him and his family. As the fight against the Xixia nomads ensues, his devotion to the emperor is tested.

Marr weaves an intricate, unpredictable plot and offers striking insights into the culture that thrived during the Song dynasty. Hundred Beam Bridge sheds light on the beliefs and ethos of the era, such as Hasan's conviction that their heirloom Pixius (a lion body with feathered wings and the head of the dragon) is the source of their prosperity and protection, a blessing he fervently desires to preserve for his family's future, while conveying a powerful message about enduring issues of human society, including racial prejudices, gender identities, diverse religious beliefs, and corruption in politics, all as urgent in the lives of Hasan's sons and grandchildren as they are today.

Scenes of sports, training, and battle are exciting, especially the horrors of siege warfare, and Marr’s interest in military technology, like the development of mechanized crossbows, will appeal to the history-minded. Meanwhile, the story spanning 88 years of rivalry, betrayal, love, and life, illustrates the problems of navigating familial pressures living in the Imperial Court, at a time when matters of inheritance and position held paramount importance. That scope means that the elaborate web of names and lineages demands readers put in some work to keep up, though Marr develops tension over who will survive in the fights against Xixia nomads and the Jurchen Jin Empire—and the fate of key characters’ challenges to traditions and norms.

Takeaway: Rich, sweeping story of war and love in ancient China.

Comparable Titles: Anchee Min's Empress Orchid, Guy Gavriel Kay's Under Heaven.

Production grades
Cover: A-
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: A
Editing: A-
Marketing copy: A

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