Cambridge University Press, 227 pp., $49.95
Just over two thousand years ago, China's first great historian, Sima Qian, decided to include a chapter on assassins in his long history of his newly united homeland. He chose five men as representative examples of those who had tried to kill Chinese leaders, and he explained the reasoning behind this decision in a brief note appended to the end of the chapter. In Burton Watson's excellent translation, it reads: 'Of these five men, from Ts'ao Mei to Ching K'o, some succeeded in carrying out their duty and some did not. But it is perfectly clear that they had all determined upon the deed. They were not false to their intentions. Is it not right, then, that their names should be handed down to later ages?'[1]
Review, 4010 words
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