Wild Colonial Boy-bookcover

By: Dan Docherty

Wild Colonial Boy

Pages: 236 Ratings: 4.8
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This autobiographical novel narrates the journey of Dan Docherty, a young Glasgow law graduate and karate black belt, who left his traditional Catholic family in 1975 to serve in the notoriously corrupt Royal Hong Kong Police.


In Hong Kong, he learned Chinese language intensively, then drill, musketry and law. A famous Tai Chi master accepted him as a disciple and trained him to become an international full contact champion.


In this book we’ll have a few beers with colourful characters like Big Don and Mountie Dave. We’ll visit exotic locales—Manila, Macao, Singapore… We’ll witness Dan in full contact competition and in street fight action. As they say in the Hong Kong Police, “If you can’t take a joke, you shouldn’t have joined.” 

In 1975, Dan Docherty, a young Scots law graduate and karate black belt, left Glasgow to spend nine years as a Hong Kong police inspector.


As well as serving as a detective and vice squad commander, he also took up Tai Chi and won the 5th Southeast Asian Chinese Full Contact Championships in Malaysia in 1980.


In 1985, he was awarded a postgraduate diploma in Chinese from Ealing College.


He travels extensively teaching Tai Chi and has written four books on the subject.

Customer Reviews
4.8
13 reviews
13 reviews
  • Chris Henney

    The book tells the story of the metamorphosis of a catholic Caledonian Lad into a revered martial artist and a professional police officer. The anecdotal style makes an easy read and has an appeal to a wide ranging audience.
    It begins with tantalizing glimpses into the influences in the author’s formative years that laid the foundations for the tenacity and focus that is apparent throughout.
    Entertaining and occasionally tragic descriptions of the camaraderie of life in The Hong Kong Police Force makes a stark contrast with accounts of darker sides of the lives of the police officers and citizens.
    There are inside the door views of martial tai chi together with behind the scenes accounts of training, full-contact fighting, martial school rivalries and the effective application of the art when patrolling the streets of Hong Kong.
    The final chapters provide the reader with pre tourist views of Beijing, Shaolin and The Wudang Mountains. The book concludes with the author’s return to the homeland and his meeting with his first UK martial student .
    The reader is left anticipating the development of the emerging international tai chi instructor, scholar and traveller.
    That’s another story.

  • Ladan Niayesh Professor of English studies, and Wudang Taichi chuan instructor

    Wild Colonial Boy is the long-awaited memoirs of Dan Docherty, the enfant terrible of the British and European taichi scenes over the past several decades. Though the jacket blurb calls it an ‘autobiographic novel’, what makes it ‘novel’ rather than ‘a novel’ is the wealth of first-hand information it gives on the formative years of an internationally acknowledged martial artist. The account covers the author’s upbringing in his native Scotland and his initial training in karate with no less than Yashinao Nanbu himself, his nine years with the Hong Kong police in the 70s and early 80s, his training years with the brilliantly unorthodox Sifu Cheng Tin-hung, and his years as a competitor and fighter for the system in South-East Asia. As we turn page after page of pleasantly couched anecdotes with witty titles, we follow the perspective of a younger Dan through the legendary ‘Fragrant Harbour’ of the 70s, with its colourful bars, notoriously corrupt police, and thriving martial arts scene walking the fine line between what is legal and what is legitimate. Of particular interest to readers versed in martial arts are the details about master Cheng’s training methods – or lack thereof at times! But the best testimony of that legacy is no doubt the success story of this Scottish student who brought the system back with him and made it possibly the most respected fighting school of taichi in Europe in the following years. But that is a story that would call for a next volume.

  • Anonymous

    Dan Docherty is a remarkable man. I first heard of him in the mid-eighties through my interest in
    martial arts. By the end of the nineties, I had met him and begun training with him. Over the
    years he has told many stories of how he ended up where he is. My feeling has always been;
    you should write this down. Now he has.
    Mr Docherty writes with humour and warmth of his journey from the south Glasgow Alter boy to
    Hong Kong police inspector and south East Asian full-contact international champion. It is way
    more than just Dan’s story, it also tells the story of those who helped him along the way.
    I find it to be deeply interesting and can’t recommend it highly enough.

  • A very enjoyable read.

    Wild Colonial Boy is the latest book by Dan Docherty, teacher, author and an influential figure in the European Tai Chi Chuan community. Dan's latest book is a departure from the usual subject of Tai Chi Chuan and has written an autobiographical novel. Unless you're a student of Dan's, few know about his background and his career in the Royal Hong Kong Police. Some of this has been briefly mentioned in previous books and magazine articles.

    The book starts off with Dan's account of his childhood growing up in Glasgow. We then follow the beginnings of a long journey in martial arts, starting with Karate. After university, we follow Dan's time in the Royal Hong Kong Police, where we learn of his colourful experiences as a police inspector and training under his master the late Cheng Ting Hung. The comradery, conflicts, the arrests and the objectives met are also mentioned. After almost a decade in Hong Kong, Dan then left the Royal Hong Kong Police and returned to Britain.

    I have found Wild Colonial Boy to be a very interesting, entertaining and easy to read. It is satisfactory on a number of levels. If you're a fan of old Hong Kong and what life was like back then or cop stories, then this book is for you. I could relate to Wild Colonial Boy on many levels. Back in the late 70's, I lived along Canton Road with my grandparents, which was only a few blocks from Argyle Street, where Dan once trained. Those days I remember well. Life back then was quite colourful, people worked harder and Hong Kong was a different place to how it is now. We Hongkongers often speak of the collective memory regarding old Hong Kong, but it is nice to read a Westerner's perspective. From Dan's account of his training, one can see that it was not easy. The countless hours invested and balancing that with the duties of being a police inspector. I rather enjoyed the accounts on police work and life in the Royal Hong Kong Police. The scenes were described vividly and whilst reading those chapters, they reminded me of scenes from numerous films I've seen. If you're familiar with the Hong Kong cop and gangster genres, then you'll understand what I mean. Wild Colonial Boy is about eating bitter and embracing the lessons that life throws at you, without which one could never succeed. Thank you, Dan.

  • Dennis Dilday, D.C.

    As a student of Dan's, I enjoyed the book very much. The stories are easy to read and fun to follow; the humor raw, but sincere. No one else could have written this book: the convergence of intellect, education, experience - theory and application - is unique. Of particular interest, as a student, there is plenty of tai chi in the book, applied in many ways. So theory is expressed in the ring, and on the street. And the body of work that is Dan's lineage has been fleshed out and deepened - its value increased immeasurably. The legacy he leaves will not soon be enlarged on. We are all indebted.

  • Roderick Jacob

    Wild Colonial Boy is the account of a young Dan Docherty leaving his home in Glasgow to pursue his dream of becoming a tai chi master practitioner and instructor through a career in the Hong Kong Police Force. On the way, we learn, amongst other things, of the workings of the RHK Police, the seedier side of Hong Kong, the relationship between master and pupil… All told with sensitivity, wit and humility. The chapters are extremely short which makes the book easy to dip in and out of. Having been a pupil Dan’s for three decades, I have heard some of these accounts. It is fascinating to have this part of his life story laid out in this detail. I thoroughly enjoyed reading Wild Colonial Boy and highly recommend it. Looking forward to any next instalment.

  • Kenet Nicholls

    Having known Dan Docherty largely from afar for more than 25 yrs, it was marvellous to string all the bits of story and rumour together. In-person there is never enough time for more than a snippet or two. A larger than life personality fleshed out for readers to see. Dan is both well-read and well trained so it was a pleasure to read about the roots that helped make the man. This is a well put together novelistic journey from Glasgow to Hong Kong and beyond and back to London. There are good stories and plenty for those interested in the making of a great no-nonsense martial artist.
    Having seen photos of Dan both in the 'white silk pyjamas' and now a kilt... I guess I can rest in peace.

  • Peter Maxwell

    Ostensibly, the autobiographical book is first a brief description of the author's childhood and adolescence in Glasgow which is then followed by an account of his time in Hong Kong including the Royal Hong Kong Police, his relationship with tai chi and his sifu Cheng Tin-hung, and his full-contact fights. That overview does not, however, do justice to the book.

    Personally, to my shame, I'm not an avid reader. I will discard most books after the first chapter or two. Rarely, I find an author who I can "get along with" and then I will actively seek out almost everything they have written. Dan Docherty's writings have generally fallen into that latter category. He has a talent for deftly blending the gravely serious with humour, and life's trivialities with wisdom. So I was looking forward to reading Wild Colonial Boy, and I was not disappointed.

    This year has been demanding in many respects. Wild Colonial Boy was perfectly timed: it afforded a brief moment of respite, taking a journey vicariously through a unique period in Hong Kong and within environments that very few of us would ever have experienced personally. There is a sense of a genuine commitment to providing an accurate and faithful account of events, and of trying to convey the world there as it actually was and not an interpretation thereof. The author is also honest and open of his own internal processing of events and how he navigated some very fraught situations.

    Anyway, I would certainly recommend the book to others and indeed have already done so.

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