
First published in German in 2007; published in translation by Atria on April 14, 2015
I liked The Art of Hearing Heartbeats,  although I had reservations about the novel's late stages. Readers who  loved that 2002  novel will probably like Jan-Philipp Sendker's 2007 novel  less. While both books explore the intersection of the East and West,  The Art of Hearing Heartbeats is fundamentally a love story. Whispering  Shadows is more a novel of international intrigue, although a love story  lurks within its pages. I think Whispering Shadows is a superior novel,  but readers looking for another Art of Hearing Heartbeats might be  disappointed.
Paul Leibovitz is the son of a Jewish father and a  German mother, but only in Asia does he feel at home. The death of his  son in Hong Kong turns Paul into a hermit. Three years after that death,  Paul, now divorced, has an ambiguous interest in a woman named  Christine but he resists the notion of having a girlfriend or, for that  matter, a life. He prefers to brood for fear that moving on will cause  him to lose his memories of his son.
On a rare trip from his home  on Lamma Island to the island of Hong Kong, Paul meets Elizabeth Owen.  Paul has little interest in her problems but when she tells him that her  adult son has disappeared in China, he agrees to contact a friend named  Zhang in the Shenzhen police who might be able to help. Christine, who  has a deep distrust of Chinese officials based on a family tragedy,  urges Paul not to become involved. The discovery of a violent death in  Shenzhen sucks Paul into a quagmire. He doesn't want to get involved,  but destiny or karma intercedes when Zhang asks for his help ... or  perhaps Paul realizes that the time has come to start making choices.
Eventually  the novel shifts to the perspectives of other characters. One is Victor  Tang, a Chinese entrepreneur who has benefitted from the intersection  of criminality and capitalism. Another is Richard Owen, who objected on  grounds of patriotism to his son's plan to close the family's  manufacturing plant in Wisconsin in favor of manufacturing in China. The  final primary character is Zhang. He is a familiar character in  fiction, the honest cop who opposes corruption, although as a Buddhist  in China he doesn't fit the "cop novel" stereotype.
All of the  characters are realistic, in part because their behavior is often less  than ideal. To a degree, they are all selfish and self-absorbed. For  good reason, Zhang is fearful to the point of paralysis. Having rejected  the childhood lies his country told him about the benefits of shared  sacrifice, Tang craves power. Richard is jealous of his son. Christine  is controlling while Paul has walled himself off from emotion and human  contact. They are all wrestling with their pasts and, in the case of the  Chinese characters, with the impact of Mao's China on their pasts. Part  of the novel's intrigue comes from wondering whether the characters  will overcome those issues.
America's progression from Buy  American to Fire Americans, and the notion that the American Dream is  now (in altered form) the Chinese Dream, are among the novel's most  interesting themes. Another important theme is the inability of people  who grow up in a free nation to understand how oppression and the hunger  for freedom shapes behavior. Still another is whether truth exists as  an objective fact or whether truth is what people with power decide it  should be. The cousin of truth is trust. Can we trust those who conceal  the truth? Does the answer depend on the reason for hiding the truth?  Finally, the novel explores the theme of bravery. Doing the right in the  face of risk is an act of bravery, but is it also an act of stupidity  if it will destroy your life without preventing evil from being done?
As  he did in The Art of Hearing Heartbeats, Jan-Philipp Sendker writes of  passion with honesty and intensity, from physical and emotional  perspectives. He gives key characters a variety of interesting  conflicts. Whispering Shadows fails to generate much suspense and the  plot did not grab me on an emotional level, but the interaction of the  characters creates dramatic tension. The story moves forward at a  comfortable pace and reaches a satisfying conclusion.
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