As for the performance Gildart Jackson is, to date, the best narrator I could ever have imagined, and sets a new standard for me going forward. However, Tai-pan is a great novel in its own right, exciting from start to finish, and has one of the best endings I have ever read. Shogun was a brilliant novel, and the same can be said of Tai-pan, however it doesn't quite compare with the latter the story is less thoughtful, and less an exploration of the differences in Western and Eastern values, and more about swashbuckling, intrigue, and politics. Hong Kong as it transforms into a British/Western trade Enclave and military Bastion in the Orient. Tai-pan, chronologically speaking, picks up where Shogun left off, set in 18th C. Like most people, the first James Clavell novel I read (that is, listened too) was Shogun, his epic novel about feudal Japan as witnessed through the eyes of a stranded Englishman.
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