Sign of the Qin
In long-ago China, Prince Zong, the mortal young Starlord chosen to save humankind from destruction, joins the twin outlaws, White Streak and Black Whirlwind, to fight the Lord of the Dead and his demon hordes.
A volcanic eruption releases a vanguard of demons, sealed away for centuries beneath the earth. Soon after, the Emperor's first son is born, marked with the sign of the Qin-the brand of the outlaw! Could the child be the new Starlord, destined to restore justice to the land? The emperor plots to kill his only heir before the boy can usurp his throne. But the assassin is foiled by a mysterious monk whose magical tattoos foretell the future, and a trickster monkey who longs for immortality. A host of warring guardians must ultimately unite to help the Starlord unlock the kung fu secrets of the Twelve Scrolls and save the earth from destruction.
Awards & Citations
A Publisher’s Weekly Editor’s Pick
A Spring/Summer Book Sense Children’s Pick
A Book of the Month Club featured Main Selection
Selected by People Magazine as one of six “Spring’s Best Kid’s Books.”
School Library Journal Editor’s Pick
A VOYA (Voice of Youth Advocates) Top Shelf selection
A Capitol Choice selection
Shortlisted for the Printz Award (American Library Association)
Where to Buy
Reviews
“I devoured SIGN OF THE QIN in a single enchanted night. It is a beautifully crafted book—its fantasy beguiling and believable, its action sequences springing to life in your head like the best kung fu movie ever made, its prose elegant, its philosophies wise. What can I say? Don’t deny yourself the boundless pleasures of this book.” —Clive Barker
"L.G. Bass is a totally original voice. Her plot lines interweave hypnotically and her characters are bursting with energy and inventiveness. Most people would get at least a trilogy out of the material L.G. Bass uses for just one book…It is so refreshing to read a book that has almost invented its own genre.” —Eoin Colfer, Author of the Artemis Fowl books
“Fantasy readers looking for a change from conventional swords and sorcery will likely become enthralled." —Publisher’s Weekly, Starred Review
“This book is teeming with monsters, dragons, deities, tricksters and demons—drawn largely but not exclusively from Chinese myth—plus an array of larger than life heroes and villains of both sexes. Readers are propelled from the lush opulence of the Emperor’s palace to the filthy slums outside it, from musty swamps to the Gobi’s desolation, from Heaven to the Netherworld…The action scenes are compellingly wild and wooly and if…Monkey steals the show (along with everything else that isn’t nailed down,) all the main players are equally strong, vivid characters…” —John Peters, New York Public Library, School Library Journal, Starred Review
“Wonderful and original. Bass effortlessly combines Chinese history and mythology with more conventional fantasy elements and a healthy dose of kung fu to create a unique and absorbing adventure.” —Voice of Youth Advocates
“This book blends mythology, fantasy and martial arts in a Crouching Tiger,Hidden Dragon-like style tale.” —Jennifer Brown, People Magazine (Spring’s Best Kid’s Books)
“SIGN OF THE QIN is the best and most comedic hot action kung fu fantasy movie that I’ve ever read." —Richie’s Picks, 5 Stars
“SIGN OF THE QIN is the kind of book I would have loved—as an all time favorite when I was in my teens. It’s for kids who grew up on Hong Kong martial arts movies, Japanese video games and anime; it’s for fans of Dragonball, StormRiders and Final Fantasy…" —Steve Ross, Vroman’s Bookstore, Pasadena, CA
“SIGN OF THE QIN took me back to a magical time in ancient China, a time when mythical gods and spirits crossed between our world and theirs. Monkey, my favorite character, guides all those with a capacity for Monkey luck and magic through each suspenseful adventure. Now the Monkey King truly travels West!” —Linh Thai, kung fu teacher and documentary filmmaker
“A page-turner with short action-loaded chapters. If you enjoyed C.S. Lewis’ The Chronicles of Narnia, you will appreciate this story of epic adventure, full of hilarious, sinister, charming and vivid characters." —Dear Reader, Square Books
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From chapter 1:
Some say the newborn’s first cry was so loud it summoned the Lord the Dead and his demons from the Netherworld. Others say it called the ancient Starlord Hung Wu down from Heaven to help the kingdom of Han in its hour of need. From the moment Prince Zong first announced his arrival, the moon rocked in the sky and nothing was ever the same in the province of Shandong.
The Prince’s howl floated up from the Emperor’s private chambers, echoing through the palace halls until it reached the Tower of the Water Clock. There it set off a blare of trumpets, a beating of valves, a shimmering of bells, and a precipitous spinning of gears. The clock’s twelve animal automata began to move all at once, and the sapphire eyes in the head of the monkey rolled from left to right three times.
In his eagerness to view the baby boy, the Emperor signaled his circle of twelve worried counselors to clear the servants from the birthing room. The stubborn nurse would not relinquish her charge for the traditional viewing. She glared daggers at the guards, and insisted that the infant’s first meal was more important than his first meeting with his father. In the headlong rush of events, no one had time to reprimand her.
Clasped firmly in his nurse’s arms, Emperor Han’s firstborn, only minutes old, drank his fill before calmly studying his father with bright eyes. Han saw that the boy was handsome, with a thick cloud of black hair that framed his well-shaped head. He breathed a sigh of relief and felt his fatigue creep back. The long sleepless vigil had taken its toll. His ceremonial robes weighed heavily upon his shoulders and his tasseled cap pressed into his skull, giving him a headache. He signaled his desire to withdraw and turned away but something in the nurse’s protective stance as she cradled the infant set off an alarm bell in his mind and he turned back to take one last look.
At that moment, the cooing of an amorous pair of turtle doves rose in the garden and the infant turned his head. Emperor Han fell back, pale as a ghost. Emblazoned on the Prince’s left cheek was a tiny ink-black birthmark, an exact replica of the sign of the Qin. It looked as if it had been burned into the baby’s face like the brands on condemned criminals in Han’s prisons below. The outlaws of Moonshadow Marsh, the gang most defiant of the Emperor’s authority, identified themselves with this symbol. The Emperor’s own flesh and blood had been born with the mark of the outlaw!
Beside himself with shame, the Emperor roared an order for Silver Lotus, the child’s mother, to be brought before him. Torn from her bed, where she had been resting after the labor of childbirth, she was forced to kneel in the courtyard like a common thief. The Emperor sentenced her to be stripped of all her worldly possessions and banished. By sunrise, she would be gone from his sight forever, or be executed.
The lady’s attendants wailed, tearing their hair and ripping their clothes, mourning the fate of their mistress. Their cries incited the servants and workers. Many in the gathered mob of cooks and kitchen helpers, sweepers and smiths, gardeners and artisans had withstood severe beatings and worse in this very courtyard. The gentle Silver Lotus, the one they called Sacred Mother, had brought them all comfort and charity.
The crowd pushed forward toward the guards. “Sacred Mother,” they intoned, and ironically, “Fortunate Mother.” Some gave her the title that would now never be bestowed upon her: “Venerable Mother.” Silver Lotus ignored the moaning and the lamentations. She rose and with steady hands removed her outer robes, letting them drop to the cold flagstones.
A shocked hush fell over the spectators. The Emperor watched her. For a moment time froze as their eyes locked. Her maidservants rushed to her aid, but she waved them aside, asking in a clear voice for the simple clothes she had worn when she first came to the Forbidden City. Still the Emperor watched as the First Consort, mother of his only child, removed the red-and-gold garments of rank, layer by layer, and let them blow away in the icy winter wind like burnt paper cutouts at the Festival of the Dead.
Silver Lotus stood shivering in her yellow slip. She put on the dress she had brought from home four long years before, lovingly stitched by her own mother’s hand, a poor farmer’s attempt to simulate the splendor of the court. She stood there erect and proud, refusing to bow her head or lower her eyes. At last, it was Emperor Han who lowered his, disappearing into a circle of soldiers who ushered him rapidly out of sight.
The youngest of the palace maids stepped forward and offered Silver Lotus her arm. The new mother smiled gratefully and allowed herself to lean upon it. She called for her dulcimer. With great care, she wrapped the instrument in its silken sack and slung it across her back.
In the last year she had grown to hate the Emperor with a passion as strong as the love she bore her new son. To be free of her nightly visits to his bed was a blessing she had prayed to deserve but the granting of her wish seemed to carry with it a death sentence. Her own father had long ago abandoned her and what remained of her family had been dispersed by flood and famine. Without a home, she had no faith she would survive in the world outside the Forbidden City.
The Prince wailed inconsolably in his nurse’s arms. Pulling away from the guards, Silver Lotus ran to him and leaning down, touched her lips to his birthmark, covering with a kiss the sign of the Qin. Her last piece of jewelry, a heavy locket stamped with the sign of the imperial phoenix dangled before the child’s eyes. He reached up to play with it. His mother took the necklace from around her neck and slipped it over the prince’s head so that the phoenix rested on his chest, over his heart where it shone like a golden shield.
“Remember that I love you,” she whispered. “One day, you will rule and truth and justice will reign supreme. Good-bye my little Starlord.”
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This novel began when one of its characters, The Tattooed Monk, paid me a visit in a waking dream. As you can see from the jacket of my book which reproduces that encounter, he had his back to me when he came calling for the first time. He showed me his tattooes but his face was hidden. The way he looked from the back told me a lot about who he was—a master warrior, an oracle, a wise man, modeled on the martial art heroes I admired when my family and I sat around on Sunday evenings watching kung fu movies like IRON MONKEY and THE T’AI CHI MASTER and HERO. He was a figure of power but vulnerable as well. I had to ask myself when this strange scene floated into my brain: who or what is responsible for the end of the world atmosphere here? And the answer to that question led to other questions that needed answers and directed me into my story.
When the German edition of SIGN OF THE QIN came in the mail, I was surprised by the jacket because the Tattooed Monk wasn’t there. It took me a moment to realize the logic of using a portrait of the lead character, the Starlord. Of course, it made perfect sense, but not to me because it was the Tattooed Monk who had been guiding me through. He was my Merlin. He was the key to all the rest.
He was also a mystery. As you live with your characters, you get to know them. There are times, like living with people in real life, when they offer up a lot of information about themselves and you have moments of insight and revelation. There are other times when they remain opaque. Gradually, I figured out that the Tattooed Monk had once had a family but had lost his wife and young child in a fire set by bandits long ago. He had lost his way and become a thief and an outlaw but had been taken in by a holy order of hermetic monks. What is pictured on the jacket is a volcanic eruption that destroyed those monks and their temple. So at the start of the novel, the Tattooed Monk has once again survived a catastrophe that has wiped out all that he loved. It is uncertain whether he will ever allow himself to love again, but why was he not destroyed with the rest? The answer, I realized, was that he was an immortal, destined to take on multiple mortal lives through time. He was heartily sick of his immortality yet he could not die because that would mean victory to his nemesis, Yamu, Lord of the Dead.
You wouldn’t think that the Lord of the Dead would be so much fun to write but he was great fun because I felt free to make him as nasty as I liked. I had never written a really evil character before. Writing Yamu’s voice was a turning point for me because when I heard him speak, I suddenly knew I could actually write this book.
At the time I began SIGN OF THE QIN, Yamu, Lord of the Dead was no abstraction. I live in New York City and I wrote the Prologue describing the Tattooed Monk’s trial by fire soon after 9/11 when smoke was still in the air. We had all been made acutely aware of the basic struggle to survive with some degree of honor in a world that has the technology to self-destruct and so I think there sprung up a desire in me to tell a heartening story, one that features a vastly destructive force but also a hero that could, by calling upon what’s best in himself, lead the earth away from the brink of disaster.
The hero I found, or who found me, was the Starlord, a hotheaded prince born with the birthmark sign of the outlaw and blessed (or cursed depending on your point of view) with two guardians who hate one another and are always quarrelling—the Tattooed Monk and Monkey.
For the character of Monkey, I had a model in Chinese legend—the Monkey King. My trickster who had lived 98 lives and had only one more reincarnation left to prove himself worthy of immortality was based on a traditional folk character very familiar to young people in the East but not as much in the West.
Monkey in SIGN OF THE QIN differs from the classic version found in the four volume JOURNEY TO THE WEST because he’s capable of love—of caring for a child (the Starlord) like a parent. In the process, he learns to weep and also to put someone else’s needs ahead of his own. Monkey is a clown and a con-artist, living moment to moment mostly by his wits but also, he’s a hero who will eventually, by the end, be worthy of immortality. His heroism resides in his ability to love a child and protect that child at all costs.
I gave Monkey a more generous heart than his ancestor, the Monkey King, though I tried to keep him as funny, outrageous and adventurous as the original. It’s one of the miraculously enjoyable aspects of reading and writing fiction that characters born hundreds, no thousands of years ago, are still being reborn to new stories, their lives retold in new ways.
A word about the women characters in SIGN OF THE QIN: many of them are mothers, like myself. Silver Lotus is a mother tragically deprived of watching her son grow up. She has to make peace with the knowledge that due to the urgency of his mission, his childhood has been stolen from him. “Who can be a man without a childhood?” she asks.
Another mother in the book is Mother Gu who married a dragon of the North Sea and gave birth to the twin rebel leaders of the Outlaws of Moonshadow Marsh. I like to think that if I’ve lived other lives, one of them was as a woman warrior. I have a very good time writing battle scenes and my favorites feature warrior women. I was drawn to studying t’ai chi just about the time I started writing SIGN OF THE QIN. I also took lessons in one of the sword forms I mention in my book. Although I live in New York City, part of me is Mother Gu, living in a ramshackle fishing hut on the edge of an ancient marsh, listening to the sound of sea birds.
I think the art of writing character in fiction has something in common with shapeshifting. We are all shapeshifters of sorts. We all have many identities, many selves and we speak in many voices. My readers tell me they are intrigued by the fact that the demon dog Puk in SIGN OF THE QIN is a shapeshifter and has memories of what it was like to be a jellyfish. I believe we all have memories of other lives, or if not memories than imaginative reconstructions that serve to give us a sense of history, a sense of evolution. We are, from the moment we’re conceived and begin life in the womb, shapeshifters. Growing is shapeshifting. And so as I write in the voices of my fictional characters, I shift shapes and grow. Often I experience growing pains and the process is slow. Sometimes, I surprise myself and am catapulted into some new level of understanding.
The Starlord in SIGN OF THE QIN is given the gift of a changing bag, a magician’s prop, referred to as the Many Faces of Hung Wu. He’s not the only character who wears many faces. As I got to know my characters, there were times they needed to wear masks and then be unmasked again as the story moved forward. A disguise in fiction is often not a disguise at all but just another face of many faces a character must wear on a journey of self-discovery.
“We are here until we are somewhere else,” says the Tattooed Monk. And while we’re here, we each travel from our point of departure and we each try our best to call upon the powers we need to live our lives well. Perhaps the art of building and shaping and revealing memorable characters in fiction is not so different or separate from the art of building and discovering our own character as we live our lives. We all take multiple leaps of faith every day just to keep our feet on the ground. And in each leap of faith, we reinvent ourselves. Or again, to quote the Tattooed Monk, “It is a miracle to walk on water and to fly through the sky, but the real miracle is to walk on earth.” —LGB