Thailand Footprint: The People, Things, Literature, and Music of Thailand and the Region

Posts from the ‘Writing’ category

I have received seven book reviews of Bangkok Beat so far. All positive, thankfully. This one by Christopher G. Moore is the first one I have passed along. I felt it was entertaining enough to re-blog. I hope you enjoy it a fraction as much as I did. Christopher’s blog is also worth exploring for those who take the time to click the link below:

Christopher G. Moore’s Blog – Bangkok Beat by Kevin Cummings.

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henrymiller-tropics

Henry Miller watercolor

“Begin this moment, wherever you find yourself, and take no thought of the morrow. Look not to Russia, China, India, not to Washington, not to the adjoining county, city or state, but to your immediate surroundings. Forget Buddha, Jesus, Mohammed and all the others. Do your part to the best of your ability, regardless of the consequences. Above all, do not wait for the next man to follow suit.”
― Henry Miller, The Air Conditioned Nightmare

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Curiosity may well have killed a lot of cats. But I suspect those cats lived their lives in Sammy Davis Jr. years. Wandering around back alleys and tunnels the sort of which used to exist behind Checkinn99. Those cats didn’t die sitting on or on top of a couch – more likely they were on an awning that gave way in Soi Cowboy. Last Sunday there was a celebration at Checkinn99 and the catalyst was the publication of my very first book, BANGKOK BEAT. Albert Einstein has a few good quotes about curiosity. One is: “The important thing is not to stop questioning. Curiosity has its own reason for existing.”

Curiosity is what built Bangkok Beat. From the first time I met Chris Coles on Soi Cowboy over a decade ago to my first two lunches with Christopher G. Moore. The curiosity continued when I met Collin Piprell in Ari neighborhood to discuss writing, among other things, and later had a meet-up at Cactus bar where I met Dean Barrett and James A. Newman for the first time. Memorable meetings for me. For them commonplace.

Newman would later host Night of Noir I in April of 2013 where I would learn of the noir poetry of John Gartland among the many readers that night. James Newman would, a few days later, invite me to a meet-up at Bus Stop on Sukhumvit Soi 4 where I would meet John Gartland and his new friend and photographer Eric Nelson. Through Eric I would later meet a four time Muay Ying champion by the name of Melissa Ray. Through Melissa I would meet other champions.

Newman being Newman he decided to hold a second Night of Noir less than 9 months later. That night I met the novelists Cara Black and John Burdett among others. A photographer was there that night and he took some amazing photographs – his name is Alasdair McLeod.

I read Tone Deaf in Bangkok a book of non-fiction written by a middle aged American woman and author named Janet Brown, about her adventures in Thailand as a traveler and expat during those times. There are female expats – Janet reminds us of this with truthful writing. I got to know her via email and we would later have dinner together. She brought her friend along, Jim Algie, author of a book of non-fiction called Bizarre Thailand and a book of short stories called the The Phantom Lover and other Thrilling Tales of Thailand. When I stopped off to meet Janet Brown with my wife in Seattle in the summer of 2014 at Elliot Bay Book Company she introduced me to another Seattle resident, Kevin Conroy, who happened to be a regular traveler to Bangkok and it turns out Checkinn99 for over 35 years. There is a picture of Kevin in Checkinn99 from the 1980s in Bangkok Beat which he allowed me to use.

At Checkinn99 I met for the first time Chris Catto-Smith, Jerry Hopkins, Kevin Wood, Ted Lewand, Keith Nolan, William Wait, Clifton Hardy, Chris Wegoda, Peter Montalbano, Steve Cannon, Mark Fenn, John Daysh, Bernard Servello, MOTH, Mama Noi and Uncle Wat. I introduced Timothy Hallinan to the place because he asked me to and I was delighted to do so. I introduced the author Matt Carrell to Checkinn99 because I wanted to. Tim and Matt are both curious people. I like that about them. Before long I realized I had enough material to write a book. So I asked Colin Cotterill, the well known novelist and talented cartoonist living in the south of Thailand if he could draw a book cover for me. And he did. Right away. Damn him. Now I had a great book cover, plenty of material but no book. Life is in the details. I needed a hook for my book. An anchor really. The Checkinn99 history was my anchor – ably assisted by Thom Locke with his great short story – The Beauty of Isaan. Thom and I shared some early and fun times at Checkinn99, just as we did last Sunday when he and his family flew in from Northern Thailand especially for this event. The same James Newman noted above did the introduction for Bangkok Beat while John Gartland compiled an excellent chapter of noir poems. I cannot imagine the book without the contribution of any of these three writers.

I am going to let the pictures tell the rest of the story of a remarkable run of events that really took off when I created this blog four days before Night of Noir 1 and wrote my first blog post: I Am Not A Writer And Why The World Needs Them. That was less than 2 1/2 years ago. Last Sunday, my friend and actor John Marengo, whom I also met for the first time at Checkinn99, read that post, which is included in Bangkok Beat, to a good crowd who came to what was much more than a book launch – it was a celebration of the people, history and stories of Checkinn99, Bangkok and important people and events in my life. Better now than later. I know what’s waiting for me in the long run.

Bangkok Beat became available for purchase as an eBook on Amazon today – the paperback came out June 8th, 2015. But what I learned from writing this book is that it has very little to do with selling books. What it has to do with is more aptly described in Jim Algie’s story, Tsunami –  found in his Phantom Lover and Other Thrilling Tales of Thailand. You’ll learn to appreciate the value of friends and a campfire in Jim’s book and be reaffirmed that in the end it really does come down to good friends, family loyalties and the simple dignity of doing honest work and receiving honest pay. When I think of Chris Catto-Smith, Mook, Kiko, Cherry, Donna, Grace, April, Jesse and all the staff at Checkinn99 I’d say they are batting 1,000.

It’s not about tweets or Twitter followers. I’m certain of that.

Okay, enough with the sentimentality. The following is Bangkok Beat – the Live Version – July 26th, 2015. If you weren’t there, enjoy. If you were there, enjoy it again.

Anatomy of a Celebration

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Door

Welcome to the time tunnel

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Have the Sunday Jazz going on when you start – no down time when Clifton Hardy and Dr. William Wait are in the house. Both Clifton and William are featured in Bangkok Beat with William getting his own chapter.

Kevin Cummings looks on as Alan Parkhouse of the Bangkok Post shakes hands with Bangkok author Dean Barrett

Be very pleased when the author who wrote your back cover blurb, Dean Barrett shows up early along with Alan Parkhouse of the Bangkok Post. Dean Barrett has his own Chapter in Bangkok Beat: Man of Mystery? Yes and No. Thanks to all the media members who came early and stayed late.

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Sign some books now …

Kevin Cummings Bangkok Beat Book Launch

and again …

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Turn the show over to some old show biz veterans – John Gartland and Kevin Wood

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Let Kevin Wood and John from Queen Bee do their thing

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Make sure the guests get along – author, journalist and editor Jim Algie speaking with retired Muay Thai Champion Melissa Ray. Both guests are featured in two chapters each of Bangkok Beat

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Make sure your friend and photographer Alasdair Mcleod is never far away. Alasdair’s photographs are featured in Bangkok Beat and he has one of his poem’s published in there – City Pulse.

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Have another friend and photographer, Eric Nelson in the house in case Alasdair’s battery dies. Eric gets a Chapter in Bangkok Beat called – Keeping Photography Alive in Bangkok and his photographs are also featured.

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Convince the affable Keith Nolan to hang around in-between his two paying gigs that day. Keith shown with Guest of Honor Mama Noi

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Have John Fengler fly down from Chiang Mai on a Saturday, wear his timeless cotton shirt to Checkinn99 and create some Bob Hope buzz on social media

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Try not to be boring while talking to Jim Algie and Chris Wegoda. Chris is featured in The Rocky Horror Show Chapter as he starred as Dr. Frank-N-Furter in the Checkinn99 adaptation. Jim is the author of Bizarre Thailand and The Phantom Lover and Other Thrilling Tales of Thailand and is one of five major contributors to Americans in Thailand.

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Have MOTH come out and do three quick songs. Chris Catto-Smith, Melissa Ray & Kevin Cummings

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Including one rap number from Fast & Furious – Featuring the fast and fabulous Grace

Kevin Cummings and Chris Catto-Smith at launch of Bangkok Beat

Chris Catto-Smith on the microphone. Kevin Cummings enjoying the show.

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Try not too talk to much. Can’t win them all.

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Bring up Muay Ying Melissa Ray and present her with her All Time Hits Award for most traffic on this web site for a single-day and all time. Melissa Ray to steal a line from Muhammad Ali, is simply, “The Greatest of All Time.” On Thailand Footprint and I’m sure her Mom would agree.

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Next up was Jim Algie being presented with his Reincarnation Lifetime Achievement Award – well earned

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Music of the Heart Band were then presented with copies of Bangkok Beat – No one in the audience looked at the book

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Bring back the Big Dog for the evening John Gartland as the readings began

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James A. Newman reading his introduction to Bangkok Beat.

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Terrific job by John Marengo reading I AM NOT A WRITER and Why the World Needs Them written by Kevin Cummings

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John Gartland reading The Beauty of Isaan as the author Thom H. Locke and others look on followed by The Eye AKA The Mamba Hotel loosely based on Checkinn99 and its characters. A Chapter of John’s verse is contained in Bangkok Beat

Crowd Scene

Have a packed and appreciative audience which included the author of a stellar novel, Hunters in the Dark, sitting at the bar

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Bring Back Kevin Wood and MOTH

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K Wood killing it – long time now. L to R: Jesse, Cherry, Donna, Grace, Kevin Wood, Kiko

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Check in on special guest Victoria Kirkwood and her date to see how they are doing

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John Fengler and John the owner of Queen Bee during a break in the action

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Collin Piprell an author, an editor, a mentor and a friend with another friend, Eric Nelson

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Allow for a moment at the end of a long journey

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My wife and family who had been upstairs having dinner with Melissa Ray finally arrive. It was a good night. One I have no plans to repeat for 2-3 years anyway. If you got this far you deserve some music from Music of the Heart Band. Go back and have a listen if you haven’t yet or do it again. Why not? If you buy Bangkok Beat today or whenever that would be great. If you don’t that will be okay too. But if you find yourself in Bangkok city and have never been to Checkinn99, do stop in. You never know when greatness will be in the house. Thanks to all the great people who came out on July 26, 2015. Another memorable date in Checkinn99 history, which began in 1957.

bangkok beat

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Special Thanks to the numerous Bangkok Soi Dog #1 Tshirts in Checkinn99 that night – art by Chris Coles

AND A SPECIAL SPECIAL THANKS TO PHOTOGRAPHERS ERIC NELSON AND ALASDAIR McLEOD

I’ll get attribution right one of these days.

Selected highlights from Bangkok Beat book launch as put together by Alasdair McLeod. Very useful guy, Alasdair is …

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HuntersDark

“What is a bad man?”

This is the calm retort the Cambodian policeman and central investigator, Davuth, provides his daughter in Lawrence Osborne’s moody and spirit laden novel, Hunters in the Dark, (Hogarth 2015) before following a set of clues that will see one American underachiever and one English school-teacher cross paths in a tale of double identities and floating indemnity. Investigators in Cambodia pursue for their own personal gain first and foremost without the benefit of much schooling. Davuth survived the history of Cambodia precisely because he comes from peasant stock, yet he wields considerable power over the educated “barangs” that frequent his country for “business or pleasure”.

When I first learned that Osborne’s latest novel would feature an English school-teacher set in Cambodia I thought, how unimaginative is that? I also thought this will be a far cry from his embezzling, on the lamb, English attorney who reinvents himself as the high-stakes playing baccarat gambler in Macao, Lord Byron in The Ballad of a Small Player, a novel I enjoyed very much, written by Osborne and published in 2014 (Hogarth).

But just as the American businessman, Simon living by the river in Battambang had come around to the idea of ghosts since living in Cambodia, I’ve come around to the idea that Lawrence Osborne can write about any character whom he wishes to, because he does it with skill and a nuanced imagination. Robert Grieve is the central character – 28 years old, a career English literature teacher from England. His life, like his present day country, is rather bland and ordinary compared to the East. When he has a bit of drowsy luck at the Diamond Club, after a border crossing from Thailand, his fortunes change forever. I see similarities between the Lord Byron and Robert Grieve characters in Osborne’s last two novels: they both assume new identities; interpersonal skills are not their strong suit; neither has any love lost for their former country; they both seem to get thrills they never came close to achieving before; they both wear tailored cloths and enjoy the details of a fine meal. Grieve is not your “cheap haircut, cargo pant wearing English teacher in flip flops.” On the contrary, Osborne gets his digs in at this expat “subculture” on more than one occasion.

Osborne’s characters and settings are equally superb, be they major or minor. The Scottish innkeeper with a penchant for munitions themed interior design I particularly liked, along with the yellow taped grounds and deer that occasionally get turned to a bloody mist. The Dutch artist painting while naked at 3:00 am with two young female models seemed vaguely familiar and believable. Other principal characters are Grieve’s driver, Ouksa, the Khmer doctor Sar, and his beautiful young daughter and love interest for Robert – the Paris educated Sophal. She is contrasted nicely with Simon’s Khmer girlfriend, Sothea who brings a semblance of balance and karmic energy to the story. Osborne gives the reader many details of the characters later rather than sooner, which enriches the story at an enjoyable pace.

But it is Cambodia and Osborne’s art of observation that ultimately seals the deal. Don’t skip a sentence of this atmospheric novel by Lawrence Osborne – you will be cheating yourself. The ending is particularly good although not flawless due to a clumsy transfer of a known vehicle. Osborne shows us the best and worst of the human experience. As the narrator observes while Robert eats at an outdoor terrace on Street 136 in Phnom Penh, “What an easy life it was. Just moments randomly pieced together.”

In other words, the exact opposite of what Lawrence Osborne has accomplished in writing Hunters in the Dark.

This book review also appeared in The Khmer Times as part of The Weekly Phnom Penh

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Vortex

The allegations are true – Matt Carrell does have a good book in him. I cannot speak for Christopher Hitchens but I’ll go on record as stating it is a good thing that Matt Carrell chose to share this book with the world. This is my first read of a Carrell novel and that book is named Vortex. He may well have many others out there- I will find out soon enough as I plan to read more of this UK born author. Carrell reminds me a bit of early Stephen Leather with his confident non-nonchalant writing style. Carrell provides cultural expertise whether that applies to the corporate culture of Hong Kong high finance or Thai culture, politics and customs at all levels of society. The story starts off with an oddly likable character, Andy Duncan employed in an investment firm pulling an immoral financial play which quickly gets him his just due – a promotion. Carrell knows how to wheel and deal in the world of high finance and spins a good yarn while his characters are busy spinning straw into gold – sometimes for their clients, usually for themselves. At its core this story is about income redistribution – not that there is anything wrong with that – unless the Thai mafia, gangsters, hookers, actresses and periodic murders are involved, which they are. Carrell is creative with his murders; he’s not afraid to mix a sniff kiss with his blood – lots of blood. Good on him. If I have a quibble with his writing style it’s that his dialogue reports well but doesn’t always reveal. Carrell writes in a friendly, engaging manner – his office scenes are particularly good – but just as friends don’t always reveal themselves to their friends, I felt the same way about Carrell’s characters, at times. The office politics and after work scenes were spot on – the foibles are there but they could have run deeper. Carrell saves some of his best writing for the end, which has some great cinematic qualities as well as character revealing qualities, particularly the unflattering kind that avaricious men aspire toward. The Bangkok bar scene is more of a pleasant backdrop – this is a book that just as easily could have been set equally between Hong Kong and London but Thaiophiles should be plenty happy with the inclusions and expertise Carrell blends into this financial thriller.Lots of zeros, sex, politics, and murders to keep your attention along with your present day YouTube moment and drugs to boot. Carrel ties things up nicely at the end in a believable and lethal finale. A book about the high life with plenty of low life’s. I will definitely comb over Matt Carrell’s back list to go along with Vortex The End Game, which is next up on my reading list by this author.

Vortex End Game

As an aside I am pleased to announce that the Matt Carrell interview conducted at Thailand Footprint will be included in the eBook edition of Bangkok Beat, which will launch on August 8th, 2015 and be in subsequent paperback editions available from Amazon.com. In hindsight I realize it should have been included from the get go. One reason I believe I made this error of omission is that of all the interviews I had conducted the only interview of any author of fiction whose work I had not read was Jack Fielding and, let’s face it, the mop handle story of Nobby Tirpitz made Jack a fitting choice for the book. Now that I have read one of Matt’s novel’s and re-read his excellent interview, which you can read here – the inclusion of Matt’s interview in Bangkok Beat was an easy call to make.

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HenrySilkscreen

Tadanori Yokoo Silkscreen poster for an exhibition of art by Henry Miller, 1968

Paris Review

“I refuse to live this way forever. There must be a way out. I start tomorrow on the Paris book. First person, uncensored, formless – fuck everything!” Henry Miller in a letter written in Paris, France around 1930

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“I want to write about sex and about death.” That was the opening sentence written by Christopher G. Moore on August 20th, 2010 on his great blog http://www.internationcrimeauthors.com for an essay titled: Sir Frank Kermode and Shigeo Tokudo: Scholor and Porn Star. I remember the essay, so I thought I’d borrow the opening line today. I had a pretty good week this week. More good stuff happened than bad. I’ll take that. I want to write about frogs, dogs, books and comedians. It’s just that it doesn’t make for quite as good an opening line. Are you still with me?

Frogs:

Last night I celebrated America’s Independence Day at Checkinn99 with my wife. Our server’s name was Gop. I took that as a good omen given that this blog has a prominent cartoon character by the same name.

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Our server was much better behaved than this one.

Dogs:

Starting today we will be selling Bangkok Soi Dog #1 Tshirts at this web sight and a limited supply at Checkinn99 as well.

Books:

People have been sending in their pictures wearing the Bangkok Soi Dog #1 Tshirts and reading my recently published book, Bangkok Beat. Thanks for that. Here are some of the latest:

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John Fengler of Chiang Mai showing that the former Emergency Medical Technician has not lost his ability to multi-task

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Trevor Bide, fellow blogger and all around good guy

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Muay Thai Champ Melissa Ray sent in a picture from one of two chapters she is featured in

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Peter Lenderink pulls double duty in his Bangkok Soi Dog T while holding a copy of Bangkok Beat

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Special thanks to Chris-Catto Smith for allowing Bangkok Beat to be sold at Checkinn99 beginning last night. Demand was brisk when Chris was in the house. Thanks a bunch. I’ll be there this afternoon during the jazz. Drop on by if you’d like a copy or just want to listen to good jazz music.

Comedians:

I made a list of my TOP TEN FAVORITE COMEDIANS this week and it made me remember the importance of laughter and the importance of those who made us laugh in the past. Here is one I had not thought of in awhile but I am glad I did:

#4 – Dick Gregory

Dick Gregory

Richard Claxton “Dick” Gregory is an American comedian, civil rights activist, social critic, conspiracy theorist, writer and entrepreneur. Wikipedia
Born: October 12, 1932 (age 82), St. Louis, Missouri, United States
Spouse: Lillian Gregory (m. 1959)
Children: Yohance Gregory, Ayanna Gregory, Stephanie Gregory, more
Books: Nigger: An Autobiography by Dick Gregory –

Great to read that Dick Gregory is alive and well in St Louis, Missouri. Dick never got the credit he deserved as a comedian because he was much more than that. But he was damn funny and a ground-breaking comic, author and civil rights activist and a fine track and field man back in his University days …

And … I am finally able to give proper attribution to one of my favorite morbid jokes of all time. Every syllable is important. Pay attention:

“When I die, I want to go peacefully like my grandfather did – in his sleep. Not yelling and screaming like the passengers in his car.’
Bob Monkhouse (1928-2003)

BobM

That’s my blog post for Sunday, July 5th, 2015. I want to write about sex and about death. Maybe next week. Until then, you’ll have to do with frogs, dogs, books, and comedians.

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To go to the Bangkok Beat Big Cartel Store to purchase a Bangkok Soi Dog #1 Tshirt or a copy of the paperback of Bangkok Beat for Thailand delivery click the cartoon image of the big guy or the coconut shell

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My interview with Jame DiBiasio at Asia Hacks. Thanks, Jame. I always look slimmer next to a Palm Tree. My reflections on Bangkok Noir, Henry Miller and I answer that age old questions, are there too many bargirl novels….

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JameDiBiasio

Hong Kong based author Jame DiBiasio

Thailand Footprint is pleased to interview Jame DiBiasio today. Jame was a featured reader at Night of Noir III held in Bangkok at Checkinn99 this year. He’s based in Hong Kong where his day job is as a financial journalist. Jame writes both fiction and non-fiction and his Val Benson series is published with Crime Wave Press. To make it a bit more fun, Jame will be interviewing me at his blog, Asia Hacks. You can read that interview here. 

Here is some promotional information from Amazon about Cowgirl X:  From California to Bangkok and the Cambodian jungles, Val and Naomi tangle with a playboy tycoon, a porn movie director and a lost Navajo cowboy on the trail of Eriko. But Val has another reason to return to Asia. In her luggage, she carries the hilt of an ancient Cambodian sword that’s said to have magical powers. Soon the girls are pursued by a couple of trigger-happy assassins, an occultist turned politician and the leader of a sinister nationalist cult. All roads lead to Angkor Wat and an explosive finale.

KC: Welcome, Jame. I am pleased to have the opportunity to do this interview with you for many reasons. You are an author of fiction – you’ll have the second in your Val Benson series coming out soon after your initial novel Gaijin Cowgirl, published by Crime Wave Press debuted in late 2013 –  and you are also an author of non-fiction, also with Asian themes. Please tell our readers about your protagonist Val Benson – what adventures will she be getting into on the pages of the sequel, “Cowgirl X”?

CowgirlX

JD: Hi Kevin, and thank you for inviting me onto your blog. Just to let your readers know, I’ll be returning the favor at http://asiahacks.com.

Val Benson, the Gaijin Cowgirl, is a former bar hostess in Tokyo. Her good-time girl lifestyle ended when her number-one tipper, an old man with sinister hobbies, revealed a map to stolen wartime treasure. With yakuza, biker gangs and rogue CIA on her high heels, Val had to get her hands on the loot in the borderlands of Southeast Asia.

As things didn’t turn out exactly as she would have liked – even I lost track of the body count – “Cowgirl X” finds her in Los Angeles two years later plotting ways to bring justice to the perpetrators. She gets sidetracked to chase down a Japanese porn starlet who’s gone missing in LA, which takes her back to Southeast Asia and ultimately to Angkor Wat.

KC: Let’s switch to the non-fiction for a bit. You’ve also written “The Story of Angkor”. Here is a nice quote I pulled off your blog at AsiaHacks.com: “The Story of Angkor is an interesting and somewhat old-fashioned little book, old-fashioned in the pleasant sense that DiBiasio writes well and relies on crafted prose.” – The Asian Review of Books, August 7, 2014. Tell us about your process of writing The Story of Angkor, what does crafted prose mean to you, exactly, and who has been the market for the book to date? 

JD: That review was by Peter Gordon, an erudite and generous person who is a fixture in Hong Kong’s small but growing literary scene. His interests and experience are actually a lot more varied than that. Anyway, the Angkor book emerged at a time when Gaijin Cowgirl was in the publishing wilderness and I was struggling to get another novel going. I’m a history buff and had read quite a lot on Angkor from a few visits, and in 2008 I went with some Hongkie friends with the intention of playing tour guide. It was an act of sheer ignorance. I jotted some notes and began to realize just how little I understood about the place.

By the time I had done some more research and taken notes, I had enough to justify going the whole way and making a book out of it. More ignorance.

I was in for a slog but finally banged something out. Many houses took a pass but Silkworm Books in Chiang Mai saw a glimmer of something in the manuscript. They handed it to David Chandler, the great historian of Cambodia, who returned it to me swathed in his red ink. Very humbling. More work to be done. But Professor Chandler had given me a chance to salvage my reputation. Another year or so of work passed until the book finally saw the light of day.

Crafted prose – I don’t know, other than I kept it short and relied on text rather than pretty photographs to do the job. I just wanted to tell what I thought was an exciting story, or interlinked stories, in a concise way. I cram in an awful lot of information into a little over 30,000 words. The book is deliberately short. I felt people visiting Angkor were not being that well served by the academic tomes trying to explain it. When I’m a tourist I want to know what role the particular set of rocks I’m climbing around played. So I based the narrative of Angkor’s rise, glory and fall around the major monuments.

People who visit Angkor are the obvious target for the book but it should also appeal to anyone with an interest in Southeast Asian or pre-modern history.

Angkor cover

KC: You’re based in Hong Kong as a financial journalist. You travel when you can. Tell me about your experience at the Irrawaddy Literary Festival in Burma and throw in a Tom Vater or Hans Kemp anecdote if you can. That must have been an interesting experience. 

JD: I attended the second Irrawaddy gig, in February 2014. Tom and Hans, the guys behind Crime Wave Press, banged on enough doors to get us in. I wrote a few blog posts from the event, which was marred by domestic political intrigues. The event’s primary financial sponsor was the Htoo Group, backed by a family connected to the military junta and on the US State Department’s blacklist – yet the US State Department and the British high commission were both official supporters of the event. Strikes, veiled threats and fickle ministerial pronouncements made for a real “welcome to Myanmar” moment for the organizers and the participants.

The most uncomfortable moment was when I did a reading of “Gaijin Cowgirl”, with Tom serving as an introducer and interviewer. The small audience had settled down when in came four monks and an interpreter. The monks, given their revered social status, were led to sit in the front row, right in front of us. I proceeded to read from my first chapter, which introduces Val at work in the hostess club, flirting with salarymen, musing on the dark edges of drugs and sexual politics underpinning these places. To four Buddhist monks. I read slowly enough for the interpreter, and I have to assume he was reasonably faithful to what I declaimed. Harrowing and hilarious – what other literary festival puts its authors in such a ludicrous situation? On the other hand, maybe the monks enjoyed it. Literature’s ability to broaden horizons and all that. Well, literature certainly had a field day on that occasion.

One other anecdote: I had gone off to write a blog post. Later, Tom and Hans told me they had been trying to contact me to no avail. Aung San Suu Kyi had been receiving authors in a private room, and Hans got a photo of them presenting her with a copy of his photography book, “Burmese Light”. I could have gotten a pic of Suu Kyi holding up a copy of “Gaijin Cowgirl”! So I had missed out…although I’m not sure it would have been appropriate foisting the novel on her. The cover is kinda racy, and I had already burned the ears of the Sangha.

KC: I’m curious about the differences between writing fiction and writing non-fiction. How are they the same, how are they different and where are the lines blurry? And use your most recent book and novel to illustrate when you can.

JD: They are totally different. Non-fiction calls for creativity but it’s research-based and closer to journalism. The hard parts about non-fiction are ensuring accuracy and being able to explain things in an interesting way. Fiction requires imagination. The hard parts about fiction involve sustained suspension of disbelief, making credible characters, telling made-up stuff that’s worth a reader’s time, constantly putting myself in the heads of fictional human beings…plus thinking about craft. It’s a non-stop emotional, psychological and intellectual engagement. And I’m just writing pulp! Good quality pulp, I hope, with subtexts and deeper purposes, but still…

KC: Lets have some fun with the subject of traditionally published books vs self-published books and paperback books vs eBooks. Opine with a sense of humor whenever possible.

All of it is terrific so long as your readers buy my books. Libraries suck.

KC: That did make me laugh. Lets talk about settings and characters in your two Val Benson novels. How important is it to you to have multiple settings in your novels and where and how do you develop your characters? Tell me about a favorite character other than Val.

JD: “Cowgirl X” is actually a double helix of narratives. Val is one strand, and the other is Naomi Sato, a somewhat lost Japanese native who has been trying to work as a journalist in LA. Here’s where my own background indirectly comes in: I’m a trade journalist, covering a specific industry, as opposed to someone who works for a mainstream, mass market publication. So is Naomi, only her industry is pornography – the only place she could get a job was a rag covering the business of porn. I actually had to Google around to make sure such things exist, and they do – there are a few publications in that vein in California. They mostly cover mundane things around finances, distribution deals, and so on; they’re as ordinary as the titles I work on covering banking and fund management.

As a Japanese national, most of the stories Naomi ends up getting involve the frequent visits by Japanese adult-video producers and performers to LA. (Okay, so it’s not exactly like financial journalism.) One of these young ladies goes missing and an interested party from back home, the head of a religious cult, recruits Naomi to track down the girl. By this time Naomi is already wrapped up in Val’s own pursuits and their stories mesh.

The multiple setting I use in the Val Benson novels are part of the fun. In “Gaijin Cowgirl”, she ran from Tokyo to Hong Kong to Bangkok to the Thai-Burma border. There were also flashback scenes to World War 2 Rangoon and Vietnam-era Thailand. In Cowgirl X, Val goes from LA to Bangkok to the dodgy Cambodia border and finally to the Angkor temples at Siem Reap. There are also flashbacks to Guadalcanal and to Phnom Penh on the eve of its fall to the Khmer Rouge.

All of which is to say, because it’s a lot of fun. The third hallmark of a Val novel is some kind of treasure. In “Gaijin Cowgirl” a map led to a stolen treasure. In “Cowgirl X” there is an ancient sword.

KC. What’s next for Jame DiBiasio?

“Cowgirl X” is out June 30 in e-book format with print to follow a little later. I’ve finished the first draft of another non-fiction book in a similar vein to the Angkor book called “The Story of Bagan”, about that other great pre-modern temple city of Southeast Asia. I’m tinkering with the text and will contact publishers soon. I have another thriller that’s with a US publisher and should see daylight in the spring of 2016. And of course Val Benson will be back, although I haven’t really begun putting that one together. For now, though, I’m enjoying a little break from writing – which after all has to take place exclusively on weekends and holidays, as I have a full-time day job – and spending free time this summer with my wife.

Kevin, thanks for suggesting the exchange of interviews. Different questions, different vibes, all good. Stay cool in Bangkok.

KC: Thank-you, Jame. Best of luck with Cowgirl X. 

To read the blog of Jame DiBiasio go to www.asiahacks.com

Jame’s books may be found at Amazon.com or the Crime Wave Press Web Site

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