![]() ![]() Together they set out to find the Great Root of. ![]() He's laughing all the way, and readers who like their fantasy in generous, self-mocking doses may laugh along with him. When the children of his village were struck with a mysterious illness, Number Ten Ox found master Li Kao. The story combines Disney Studios, the Brothers Grimm, and Dungeons & Dragons in roughly equal proportions, with some random sex to liven up the show-which ends on a note so ecstatic it makes Snow White look like a tragedy. Still, if Lu Yu and Li Kao can somehow May him, they will not only save the children but break the spell binding the Princess of the Birds-a lovely mortal separated from her divine lover, the Star Shepherd, when the Duke stole from her the three feathers of immortality. ![]() ![]() Furthermore, the Duke inhabits an impregnable fortress, with a lethal labyrinth, innumerable boobytraps, and an army of bloodthirsty myrmidons. Their complicated adventures bring them up against the satanic Duke of Ch'in, who guards the Great Root of Power and is all but invulnerable because his heart has been removed for safekeeping in a burglarproof casket at the bottom of a spirit-infested frozen lake. The heroes are the stalwart young narrator, Lu Yu (Number Ten Ox), and the sage Lio Kao-cunning, resourceful, alcoholic. With comic-book characters, echoes of Lewis Carroll, and Sinological trappings galore: a ""Novel of an Ancient China That Never Was""-featuring the quest for the Queen of Ginseng, a magical root needed to cure the cataleptic children of the village of Ku-fu. ![]()
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