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Qiu Xiaolong Books in Order

Explore Qiu Xiaolong books in order, with Inspector Chen and Judge Dee reading lists, quick summaries, series notes, and easy where-to-start tips.

Last updated: July 1, 2026

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23 books

Death of a Red Heroine

by Qiu Xiaolong

2000

A young National Model Worker is found dead in a Shanghai canal. Inspector Chen and Detective Yu uncover her hidden life, and soon the case runs straight into party power.

A Loyal Character Dancer

by Qiu Xiaolong

2002

While investigating a murder in Shanghai, Chen is told to assist U.S. Marshal Catherine Rohn in locating a missing witness's wife. The two cases pull him toward human smuggling, divided loyalties, and a wider view of justice.

Classic Chinese Love Poems

by Qiu Xiaolong

2003

Qiu selects and translates well-known Chinese love poems in a bilingual volume. It brings centuries of longing, courtship, and heartbreak into accessible modern English without losing their older emotional world.

Lines Around China

by Qiu Xiaolong

2003

A poetry collection shaped by travel, return, and distance, moving between America and China. Qiu writes about memory, history, and conversation with older Chinese poets in clear, thoughtful lines.

When Red is Black

by Qiu Xiaolong

2004

While Chen is on vacation, Detective Yu takes the lead when novelist Yin Lige is found murdered. The case draws both men back into Cultural Revolution wounds and the strange values of a newly moneyed Shanghai.

A Case of Two Cities

by Qiu Xiaolong

2006

Chen probes corruption around an official who has fled overseas, while a fellow detective's death deepens the stakes. An unexpected trip to the United States opens fresh leads and fresh doubts.

Poems of Tang and Song Dynasties

by Qiu Xiaolong

2006

A bilingual anthology of classic poems from two great eras of Chinese literature. Qiu's translations aim to keep both sense and music, making the collection a welcoming entry point for new readers.

Red Mandarin Dress

by Qiu Xiaolong

2007

A serial killer is leaving young women posed in red mandarin dresses around Shanghai. With the city on edge, Yu works the murders while Chen follows a politically awkward trail that may connect to them.

Years of Red Dust

by Qiu Xiaolong

2008

Linked stories follow one Shanghai lane from 1949 into the reform era. Ordinary neighbors carry the weight of political campaigns, private hopes, and decades of change as the country remakes itself.

The Mao Case

by Qiu Xiaolong

2009

Chen is sent to quietly investigate the sudden rise of a woman linked to one of Mao's former lovers. The case leads into buried secrets, party mythmaking, and the dangers of touching history.

Disappearing Shanghai

by Qiu Xiaolong

2012

Poems and essays accompany black-and-white photographs of old Shanghai neighborhoods. Together they record everyday people, fading streets, and the intimate social life being erased by redevelopment, one lane at a time.

Don't Cry, Tai Lake

by Qiu Xiaolong

2012

A supposed rest near Tai Lake turns into a murder case shaped by toxic water, factory influence, and environmental anger. Chen has to work carefully in a place where industry and politics are tightly bound.

Enigma of China

by Qiu Xiaolong

2013

Chen is asked to sign off on a sensational death that the authorities want settled quickly. As he questions the official story, the case opens onto online rumor, corruption, and the pressure of high politics.

Shanghai Redemption

by Qiu Xiaolong

2014

After embarrassing powerful people, Chen is pushed into a grand new title with almost no real authority. Even from the sidelines, he starts digging into the forces trying to ruin him.

Poems of Inspector Chen

by Qiu Xiaolong

2016

This collection gathers the poems attributed to Chen Cao across the series, along with pieces imagined from earlier stages of his life. It lets readers hear the detective's reflective voice without the casework.

Inspector Chen and Me

by Qiu Xiaolong

2018

Part memoir, part story collection, this slim book explores how Inspector Chen overlaps with Qiu Xiaolong himself. It opens side paths around the series and offers a more personal look at Shanghai, memory, and making fiction.

Hold Your Breath, China

by Qiu Xiaolong

2020

Shanghai's dirty air hangs over a serial murder investigation as Chen is also ordered to watch environmental activists. The double assignment forces him to balance conscience, danger, and survival inside the party system.

Becoming Inspector Chen

by Qiu Xiaolong

2021

As Chen waits to learn whether his career is over, he looks back on his childhood and first cases. The book mixes a present-day mystery with the story of how he became Inspector Chen.

Inspector Chen and the Private Kitchen Murder

by Qiu Xiaolong

2021

Officially sidelined in a reform office, Chen secretly looks into the murder of a private kitchen assistant. The case around chef Min Lihua echoes an old Judge Dee mystery and rewards quiet patience.

The Shadow of the Empire

by Qiu Xiaolong

2022

In Tang dynasty China, Judge Dee Renjie investigates a high-profile killing while serving under Empress Wu. Poetry, court politics, and moral danger shape every step as he searches for the truth.

Love and Murder in the Time of Covid

by Qiu Xiaolong

2023

During the pandemic, Chen finds himself under tighter surveillance than ever while a string of deaths hints at a serial killer. The lockdown atmosphere makes this case unusually dark, political, and claustrophobic.

The Conspiracies of the Empire

by Qiu Xiaolong

2024

Empress Wu sends Judge Dee to learn what became of the poet Luo Binwang after a failed rebellion. The hunt turns into a tense journey through rumor, murder, and imperial suspicion.

New

The Secret Sharers

by Qiu Xiaolong

2026

Old Hunter asks Chen to find a missing fortuneteller known as X. The search leads back to Tiananmen-era wounds, vanished lives, and Chen's own uneasy memories of fear, silence, and compromise.

Where should I start?

If you want the main Shanghai mysteries: Death of a Red HeroineA Loyal Character DancerWhen Red is Black
If you want Chen under the most political pressure: The Mao CaseEnigma of ChinaShanghai Redemption
If you want a historical mystery: The Shadow of the EmpireThe Conspiracies of the Empire
If you want Shanghai beyond the crime plots: Years of Red DustDisappearing ShanghaiLines Around China

Author bio

Qiu Xiaolong was born in Shanghai in 1953 and grew up in the city that would later become the center of much of his fiction. His family was marked as politically suspect during the Cultural Revolution because his father had once run a small perfume factory. Qiu has written about the fear and humiliation of those years, including having to help write a confession for his father when public criticism could shape a family's fate.

Books were risky, but they mattered.

With schools disrupted and much literature out of reach, he studied English on his own and joined informal lessons in a Shanghai park. That private effort turned into a serious academic path. He later studied English at East China Normal University, earned a master's degree in English literature at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, worked at the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, and began publishing poetry, criticism, and translations in Chinese.

Poetry came first. He translated writers such as T. S. Eliot and W. B. Yeats, won recognition for his own verse, and became a member of the Chinese Writers' Association. Those habits never left him, which is one reason his fiction feels different from standard police procedurals. Poems, quotations, and literary echoes are part of how he thinks on the page.

In 1988 he came to the United States as a Ford Foundation Fellow to work on a book about Eliot. After the Tiananmen Square crackdown in 1989, returning to China became dangerous, and a poetry book already headed for publication there was canceled. He stayed in St. Louis, earned a Ph.D. in comparative literature at Washington University, and also taught Chinese literature and comparative literature there.

That change of country and language changed everything.

Qiu has said that he first wanted to write about China's social transformation, not necessarily a detective novel. The mystery form gave him a practical structure. A policeman could move through every layer of Shanghai, ask questions, read documents, and see what people were trying to hide. That idea led to Inspector Chen Cao, the poet-cop at the center of Death of a Red Heroine, the book that won the Anthony Award for best first novel.

From there came a long run of books including A Loyal Character Dancer, When Red is Black, The Mao Case, Don't Cry, Tai Lake, and Love and Murder in the Time of Covid. Readers usually come for the crimes, but they stay for the wider picture: Shanghai food stalls and private kitchens, old alley neighborhoods under pressure, party bureaucracy, corruption, memory, and the ways private conscience rubs against public loyalty.

His work reaches beyond Inspector Chen. In Years of Red Dust, he tells the story of modern China through one Shanghai lane and the lives of its residents. In Disappearing Shanghai, made with photographs by Howard French, he turns to poems and essays about older neighborhoods and a way of life being erased by redevelopment. He has also published poetry collections such as Lines Around China and Poems of Inspector Chen, translated classical Chinese verse, and more recently moved into historical mystery with the Judge Dee novels. He has long been based in St. Louis with his wife and daughter, writing about Shanghai from a distance that seems to sharpen, not weaken, his connection to it.

Edited by

Richard Reis

Software engineer whose passion for tracking book recommendations from podcasts inspired the creation of MRB.

Anurag Ramdasan

Lead investor at 3one4 Capital whose startup expertise and love for books helped shaped MRB and its growth.

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