

Whirlwind
Author: James Clavell
Series: Asian Saga #6
Narrator: Derek Perkins
Unabridged: 52 hr 59 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Published: 03/01/2016
Author: James Clavell
Series: Asian Saga #6
Narrator: Derek Perkins
Unabridged: 52 hr 59 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Published: 03/01/2016
James Clavell (1921–1994) was a novelist, screenwriter, director, and World War II veteran and prisoner of war. He is best known for his epic Asian Saga novels, which launched with the 1962 bestseller King Rat, and their televised adaptations. He also wrote screenplays for such films as The Great Escape and The Fly, and was a writer, director, and producer on To Sir, with Love. His books Shōgun, Noble House, Tai-Pan, and Whirlwind were #1 New York Times bestsellers.
Derek Perkins is a professional narrator and voice actor. He has earned numerous AudioFile Earphones Awards and the prestigious Audie Award for Best Narration, as well as numerous Society of Voice Arts nominations. AudioFile magazine named him a Best Voice consecutively in 2014, 2015, and 2016. Augmented by a knowledge of three foreign languages and a facility with accents, he has narrated numerous titles in a wide range of fiction and nonfiction genres.
Since I was in high school, James Clavell has loomed largely among my guiltier pleasures. Somewhere circa age sixteen I plowed through Shogun and Tai-Pan one summer, and came away from them heady with Orientalism: because these books are, really, Orientalism at its pulpy contemporary finest (if that......more
I'm not quick at giving books five stars, but I feel this one deserved the best rating I could give. From beginning to end it was a wonderful read. I couldn't find any part that was boring, too detailed or bungled. To be honoust, although it really were a lot of pages, I still felt I wanted to have m......more
*2020 UPDATE* — Have been thinking about this book lately for some reason, it's almost like a James Bond movie. Might have to revisit this one (and all of Clavell's books) at some point. ____________ I read this one last, and it took me a long time to really get into it. Set in Iran, I was a little pu......more
My least favorite of Clavell's novels, but still worth the read for fans of the Asia Saga. It is related but not, which bings up mixed feelings for me. It kind of feels like Clavell was using a familiar model to tell a modern tale, but that he had added it on after the story had already ended. From......more
Four novels in James Clavell’s Asian Saga down, one (“Gai-Jin”) to go. I first started reading “Whirlwind” when it was newly released back in 1987 when I was a mere 12 years old (but at that point, already a firmly entrenched Clavell fan from having read “King Rat” and “Noble House” and watched the......more
“So abundant in subplots, characters, intrigue, and atmosphere that its 1,000-plus pages seem barely adequate. Some of the most enjoyable reading around.” Daily Mail (London)
“James Clavell does more than entertain. He transports us into worlds we’ve not known, stimulating, educating, questioning…A wonder of detail.” Washington Post
“The author handles the plot with all the confident authority of a ringmaster, keeping a half-dozen themes and a formidable cast of characters moving along at a cracking pace. By the end I was breathless and lost in admiration at the sheer professionalism of it all.” Sunday Telegraph (London)
“Clavell seems to creep inside the very soul of the land and the people…A damn good read.” Boston Herald
“Whirlwind is strongly structured, skillfully plotted, rich in detail, and very entertaining. Clavell brings the grimness and grandeur of an ancient land to life.” San Francisco Chronicle
“Whirlwind is an achievement, distinguishable from dozens of zippy page-turners this year by the density of its experience of modern, tortured Iran. Tremendous readership assured.” Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“Clavell effectively portrays the chilling and bewildering encounters when Westernized lifestyle clashes with harsh ancient traditions.” Library Journal