The Tao of Poison. A novel.

A poisonous maiden, a Daoist sex cult, and a violent anti-government rebellion.

Polyandry—one or more males moving in and sharing the wife’s bed with her husband’s consent in exchange for money or labor—was common among the impoverished in Imperial China, though illegal, and the polyandrous Yan family in rural Shaanxi Province take in two carpenter brothers. When one brother is convicted of murder after killing their neighbor in a dispute, a constable threatens to expose the family’s rumored polyandry and extorts sex from their beautiful 17-year-old daughter, Qiezi. Having grown up in the mountains, Qiezi has a preternatural knowledge of botanical medicines. She’s also addicted to the psychoactive, poisonous datura flower, and the toxins in her system are fatal to the constable. Now on the run as a murder suspect, she leaves a trail of sexual carnage wherever she goes. But a larger cataclysm awaits her when she gets caught up in the White Lotus Rebellion (1796-1804), which caused the deaths of 200,000 rebels, government troops, and civilians. Picaresque action, dark humor, and irony unfold in this visceral and cinematic novel.

Historical note: The Tao of Poison is extensively researched, including the author’s own travels to the scene of the rebellion in the Hubei-Shaanxi-Sichuan region to soak in the environment. Several novels have been published on the much better-documented Taiping Rebellion (1850-64) in China. This is the only novel in English on the White Lotus Rebellion. The sole Chinese novel on the rebellion, Wang Zhanjun’s The White-Clad Warrioress [Baiyi Xianü] (1982), was not used as a basis for The Tao of Poison. My inspirational model would have to be Patrick Süskind’s Perfume.

TABLE OF CONTENTS:
Chapter 1: The poison maiden
Chapter 2: The haunted pagoda
Chapter 3: The bath
Chapter 4: The nunnery
Chapter 5: Purple Cloud Palace
Chapter 6: The obscene temple
Chapter 7: The Magu goddess
Chapter 8: The apothecary shop
Chapter 9: The inquest
Chapter 10: The bandits
Chapter 11: The executioner
Chapter 12: The ring of fire

BUY THE BOOK:


Amazon paperback
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Link to bibliography of research for The Tao of Poison

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MORE FICTION BY ISHAM COOK:
Lust & Philosophy. A novel
The Exact Unknown and Other Tales of Modern China
The Kitchens of Canton. A novel
The Mustachioed Woman of Shanghai. A novel

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Published on August 10, 2025 05:46
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Isham Cook

Isham Cook
Literary disruptions of an American in China
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