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

Posts from the ‘Writing’ category

Bangkok Beat Final

 

Sunday, December 14th 2014. A day that will live if not in infamy than in incredulity. For it was on that day that the bureaucratic battle by Chris Catto Smith and his wife Mook was lost and the historic Check Inn 99 sign, seemingly forever located between Sukhumvit 5 and 7 was finally taken down by workmen to make more headroom available for bicyclists. Because as everyone knows, bicycling is one of the great recreational activities Bangkok is famous for on Sukhumvit Road. As Chris drove home the point so clearly last night as he recounted his horror tales of dealing with the Thai government: he thought he was dealing with a psychopath when in reality it turned out it was the creation of a cycle path. (See Check Inn 99 Facebook page for details).

Cycle Path

Psychopath or cycle path on Sukhumvit Road? You be the judge.

CheckInn

A piece of history is now gone – The iconic Check Inn 99 sign

Workman

Workman follow orders of Thai government and remove historic landmark

Nothing Lasts Forever

(All photographs courtesy of Chris Catto Smith and Mook at Check Inn 99)

But fear not. The memories of the Check Inn 99 sign will live on in the imaginative rendition by noted novelist and cartoonist, Colin Cotterill in the soon to be released book, BANGKOK BEAT detailing the colorful history of Check Inn 99. Over the past 7 months a lot of time and effort has been taken by members of the Check Inn 99 family to properly compile the needed information and pictures. For the first time the written and photographic history of Check Inn 99 will be detailed in book form, along with previously published popular essays from this blog. It will be released initially as an E book and then as a paperback, the latter which will be available at Check Inn 99, this web sight and other sources by early 2015.

The table of contents will follow closely the foundational quote of Thailand Footprint by Henry Miller:

Develop an interest in life as you see it; the people, things, literature, music – the world is so rich, simply throbbing with rich treasures, beautiful souls and interesting people. Forget yourself.

In addition to the storied history of Check Inn 99 the book will delve into the interesting people, things, literature and music of Bangkok and the region.

The Check Inn 99 sign is no more. But it will live on on the cover of BANGKOK BEAT. Stay tuned to this new page for more details including a complete Table of Contents coming soon. The artwork is so good by Colin Cotterill, I’m posting it twice:

Bangkok Beat by Kevin Cummings

 BANGKOK BEAT available since June 8th, 2015

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Pop Darrell-AUG Options-B

Pop Darrell’s Last Case by former New Yorker and longtime Bangkok resident Dean Barrett is set in New York City and is full of entertaining Chinese mysticism, culture, weapons and war legends.

Pop Darrell is a living but retired legend of the New York City Police Department. He’s a tough old timer and old school with a slew of trophies from his younger days as a pugilist. Pop’s longtime wife has recently passed away from cancer leaving Pop with only his grown kids and a faulty heart to pass the remaining days. A pact he made with his wife is interrupted by screams and a knock on the door of Pop’s house by an attractive young Chinese woman followed closely by her two assailants. A bullet intended for Pop’s temple comes in handy soon after. So begins this thriller of a read, which is part police procedural, part martial arts tutorial and part Chinese fantasy with a dose of the New York City dominatrix scene thrown in, just for fun.

The writing is character driven in more ways than one. The unlikely subjects of Feng Shui and calligraphy play important and interesting roles. How the Chinese perceive and define character and energy through these elements was woven seamlessly into this action packed novel.

The page count comes in at just under 300 pages. Barrett, like a good baseball pitcher, changed the pace, worked quickly and kept the action flowing with a rather high 75 chapter count, many of them ending in cliff hanger style.

The story takes an interesting twist when Pop has some strange dreams and starts to understand things that were previously a mystery. Pop, for reasons that are unclear initially, has become the chosen one and soon takes on a double life as a crime solver and transformed crime fighter.

Pop is determined to work this case against protocol with the help of his old friend in blue and his nephew private investigator, Alan who takes a romantic interest in Judy, the door knocking lady in distress. Comedic moments are present as well, particularly the relationship Pop strikes up with a colorful New York street person named LeRoy. The bad guys after Pop are inhumane and later inhuman. Barrett gets the cruelness across perfectly with his depiction of an ancient Chinese torture scene involving that multi-purpose plant, bamboo.

One of the enjoyable aspects of Pop Darrell’s Last Case is Barrett’s ability to blend the old ways and the old days with present day crime solving technology. There are New York City freaks and Silicon Valley geeks in this present day mystery prominently featuring the NYPD and the city’s crime toughs. This is a well researched, well plotted, Chinese thriller/fantasy, set in New York with many cinematic qualities. I’ll dock Dean slightly for an Elmore Leonard 10 Rules of Good Writing violation when “all hell broke loose” not once but twice within a ten page span toward the end.

Everyone gets around to the reality of dying but not everyone gets down to the business of living. Pop Darrell’s Last Case is, among other things, about how Pop chose to live his life. And how some people live on, whether they like it or not. For readers looking for a good action packed thriller/fantasy, with plenty of Chinese influences and cinematic qualities, I highly recommend Pop Darrell’s Last Case by Dean Barrett. It may well be Pop’s Last Case but fiction fans can hope this will not be Dean Barrett’s last mystery.

Barrett

 The Book launch for Dean Barrett’s, POP DARRYLL’S LAST CASE will be held tomorrow, Tuesday 16 December, 2014 at CheckInn99 between Sukhumvit 5 & 7. Just don’t look for the sign out front.

For more information about author Dean Barrett go to: www.deanbarrettmystery.com

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HenryMiller

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Through it all I learned the value of being humble to the dust, reduced to ashes. Everyone should experience that. Before you can recognize you’re somebody, you have to know you’re nobody. [-] The butterfly was just a lowly worm in its beginning. The worm didn’t live with the moment-to-moment expectation of sprouting wings and taking flight. He lived a useful and productive life, the life of a worm. And he had to die a worm in order to be born as an angel! The spinning of the cocoon is, in and of itself, remarkable. It is as wondrous as the emergence and first flight of the butterfly. – Henry Miller

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The following is one man’s opinion of top 2014 books set in Asia or with an Asian theme, which I recommend as a good Christmas gift for oneself or another:

Ballad of a Small Player

The Ballad of a Small Player by Lawrence Osborne is my Book of the Year. A compelling read about a psychotic gambler set in the high stakes casinos of Macao with ferry boat trips to Hong Kong. It comes with a supernatural twist. Sentence by sentence, Lawrence Osborne is a writer readers will want to experience at a temperate pace.

ForTheDeadTimothyHallinan

A lot of people are saying For The Dead by Timothy Hallinan is the best in the Poke Rafferty series. If his other books were not so good I might agree. The Queen of Patpong is still my runaway winner with The Fear Artist next and Breathing Water also a favorite. But for the development of a family that matters to each other you can’t get any better than Poke, Rose and Miaow in this typical high quality Hallinan thriller.

phantom-lover-and-other-thrilling-tales-of-9780804843881_lg

The Phantom Lover and Other Thrilling Tales of Thailand by Jim Algie easily makes my list. Algie is a pro and it shows in his prose. A creative mix of nine stories all brought together in an ambitious finale about the emotional and physical devastation of the Tsunami of 2004.

Axe Factor

What can you say about Colin Cotterill? He lives down in the south of Thailand with a pack of dogs named GoGo and Beer and Sticky Rice, has no Facebook or Twitter accounts and in his spare time draws great cartoons of frogs in coconut shells, Bangkok and CheckInn99. He also writes a series of novels about a coroner in Laos. The Jim Juree series and The Axe Factor is a fun romp through the north and south of Thailand with one of the wackiest families since the Addams family lived in that mansion on the hill.

TheManWithTheGoldenMindS

Once you’ve had fun with Cotterill get serious with Tom Vater and The Man with the Golden Mind. Vater brings his experience as a travel writer and documentary film maker of The Most Secret Place on Earth about the clandestine CIA activities during the Viet Nam war era and the busy airport in Laos conducting the business of bombing. A complex spy thriller with an intriguing protagonist, which takes place from the mid 1970s to the early 21st century. There is always much to be learned while being entertained in the Vater narrative.

Pop Darrell-AUG Options-B

Last but not least is Dean Barrett’s Pop Darrell’s Last Case. This book launches December 16th, 2014 at CheckInn99 at 6:30 p.m. I was given an advance readers copy and finished reading it this week. You can find my recent review here. Dean blends his experience of China and New York City perfectly and his other varied experiences come through as well in a very entertaining fantasy/Chinese thriller.

So that’s my very incomplete top 6 picks for 2014. Next week. Non fiction picks for 2014.

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Axe Factor

The Axe Factor by Colin Cotterill was first published by Quercus in the United Kingdom in 2013 and published in the USA by Minotaur Books in 2014. It is the third Jimm Juree Mystery set in Thailand. Colin is also the award winning author of the Dr. Siri coroner series, set in Laos, numbering nine novels.

A blurb on my book tells the reader, “Cotterill understands people and writes subtle humor like a master.” Library Journal (starred review) on The Axe Factor. No argument here with the people part, including Thai people or the starred part. It’s a book that will make you smile, often, even during the blood and the body parts. As for the humor being subtle? As cutting and sharp as the featured murder weapon would be a more apt description. The mystery is told in the narrative voice of former Chiang Mai resident and investigative reporter, Jimm Juree. Jimm and her eccentric family have relocated to the coast of southern Thailand, in Chumpon province, where they run the Gulf Bay Lovely Resort and Restaurant. In addition to the nucleus of Jimm there is Granddad Jah, a retired Thai traffic cop with a keen sense of detail, character assessment and poor hearing, Mair the somewhat demented and digressive matriarch, and Arny the sensitive bodybuilder nicknamed after his Schwarzenegger idol. The long lost father, a squid fisherman named Captain Kow is introduced for the first time. Only Sissi, the aging transgendered, former beauty queen brother has remained in Chiang Mai.  There she spends most of her time involved on illicit computer activities when not on the phone with Jimm, helping her solve an investigative or personal problem. Dogs are also part of the family. GoGo, Sticky Rice and Beer even get a mention in the acknowledgment of the book, as they should. Their roles are important and comedic, sometimes simultaneously. Chompu, a gay and cheerful Thai police officer makes his recurring role a memorable one, once again.

Clever writing is found throughout this farce of a murder tale. But the improbable is not really so improbable when viewed through Cotterill’s observations and imagination. Lines like, The duty officer was very fond of microwave tuna pie, are found as you read about the lone night policeman known to wait outside the town’s Seven Eleven store.

It’s not all fun, murder and games, however. During Jimm’s investigation into the disappearance of a female doctor, deception, corruption and foul play by a corporate sponsor involved in the production of baby formula plays a prominent role. The message is: natural is better and what could be more natural than mothers’ milk? The subtlety comes in environmental issues, in the form of garbage washing up on the beaches daily or a character wondering in Buddhist fashion, which life form they will return in for the next life, including the possibility of, a barely alive piece of coral.

The smart and sane one in the family, Jimm Juree, finds romance in this tale in the form of expat author Conrad Coralbank, who coincidentally or not has the same initials as the author and has also published a popular fictional series set in Laos. No one is spared from the acerbic wit of Cotterill, including the publishing industry, sex scenes in literature, technology users, authors and perhaps even readers of mystery fiction? The obvious becomes not so obvious in this wild fantasy ride.

As with Killed at the Whim of a Hat, the first in the Jimm Juree series, you get a value added feature in the form of the Chapter Titles. These are English translated signs, found in Thailand, such as Have a Good Fright, seen at a Thai domestic airport and Intercourse for Beginner found on an English Language CD. Blog entries by the murder suspect are skillfully interjected as are emails to and from Clint Eastwood’s Malpaso Production Company, which add to the reading pleasure.

There is a bit of a surprise ending and readers may be left wondering if the rumors Colin Cotterill has given up writing novels for both the Dr. Siri and Jimm Juree series in favor of other artistic pursuits and spending more time with his dogs are true? Fans of Colin Cotterill fiction and intelligent, insightful and humorous writing in general can only hope the rumors are just that.

For more information regarding Colin Cotterill the author, artist, and regular chappy go to: www.colincotterill.com

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Edgar, Macavity and Shamus Award nominee, Timothy Hallinan

CHAPTER ONE

THE RIVER is wider than it should be and it’s the wrong color. Instead of its usual reddish brown, a gift of the topsoil it steals from the rice farmers upstream, it’s a cold, metallic gray-green, the color of the sea beneath clouds. And it runs faster than it should, fast enough to whip up curving rills of white foam where the water quickens over the tops of stones.

Although the sky is bottomless, unblemished blue, the girl can’t find the sun. She sits on the green bank, shadowless, watching the river’s flow, not knowing her name and not very bothered by it. Several names come to her, and they all seem to be hers, but she knows she has only one. If she could see her face, she thinks, if she knew how old she is, she’d know which name to accept.

The landscape offers no clues or indications. There’s nothing but the stunted forest with its ragged, disorderly trees and waist-high scrub, and the wide gray-green river, flowing swiftly toward her and then past her, leaving her here, a stationary dot on its passage to the sea.

A pale distance away, the river bends to the right and disappears behind a faded green treeline. All that water rounding the bend, resolutely silent, unaware of her. But why shouldn’t it be unaware of her? She’s barely aware of herself.

Experimentally, she examines her right hand, holding it just above the ground with its tangled green cover. Her hand is so sharp that it seems closer than it is, and she can see the faint blue map of veins beneath her skin pulse with each heartbeat. She feels the blood rushing through them, a tiny river within her, and that thought draws her eyes back to the larger river, and then upstream to the bend where it vanishes.

And she knows –with no feeling of discovery, but as though she has always known –that up there, out of sight, on the far side of the bend, the river is bringing something to her. Bearing it, whatever it is, on its unstoppable flow.

And it’s something enormous.

She thinks, “I need to talk to my mother” and then the day dims and the girl shivers and realizes that she’s grown suddenly cold.

FOR THE THOUSANDTH time since they began to live together, Rose wakes up shivering and asks herself why Poke puts the air-con on high every night, turning their bedroom into a refrigerator, and then steals every blanket on the bed so he can build a fort against the cold he created.

My mother? She thinks as a tiny scrap of her dream surfaces like a fragment of mosaic and then sinks again. Why would my mother come to me?  Or did she? Mostly, it seems, mostly, it was the river.

Rose never knowingly ignores a dream. Automatically, she checks the time, which is announced in the sleepy-blue numerals of the bedside clock as 2:46. Too late to call. If something is wrong, there’s nothing she can do now. She’ll call first thing in the morning, make Poke bring her the phone while his silly, fancy coffee is dripping and the water is heating for her Nescafe.

Still the dream.

She stretches her arms and her legs and then sits up and reaches for the pack of Marlboro Golds parked permanently on the table, just in front of her big glass ashtray, with this week’s disposable lighter lying obediently on top of it. She knows the smoke will wake Poke, so she makes a silent deal with herself. She won’t hold the lighter in place when she picks up the pack, and if the lighter falls off she’ll put the pack back and go to sleep.

When the pack is in front of her, the lighter is dead center on top.

She palms the lighter and flips open the top of the box, inhaling the rich brown aroma. Even in the dark, the precise white cylinders of the filters are comfortingly clean  and — unused. They promise hours of solitary pleasure. For so many years, the years when she was dancing in the bars on Patpong, being dragged night after night to hotels by sodden, besotted customers, the moment when it was finally over and she was once again alone — free to breath again, free to light up a cigarette that belonged to no one but her, to pay attention to no one’s pleasure but her own– had gleamed in front of her like a lantern seen through dark trees. It said, Here you are. Here you can be safe again. Here you can be you again. 

She flicks the lighter and looks down at the cigarette, so secure, so snug, so right between her long fingers. There’s been one there for so long that she can barely feel it; in fact, sometimes when she lights one it’s just because she’s become aware of its absence. Smoking this one now is just a matter of inches: inches to put the filter between her lips, inches to bring the flame to the tip. But instead of putting it in her mouth, she thinks, I need to talk to my mother, and sees briefly and vividly the river in her dream, broad and gray-green. Breathes in the clean air of the forest.

She lets the lighter go dark and puts the cigarette back in the pack, replaces both objects on the table. The cold presses itself against her. She can feel Poke to her right, can feel, with a mother’s ability to penetrate walls, Miaow breathing safely, asleep in her own room. The city outside pulls at her like a tide in her veins, its straight streets deceptively orderly, a reassuring grid imposed on chaos: need, fear, desire, envy, desolation, hopelessness, the invisible web woven by those on both sides of the karmic wheel, those who curse it and the fortunate ones who accept it as their due.

But up here, in the rooms the three of them share, everything is where it should be. Nothing rolls around. The lines between them are straight and strong. Sometimes when she’s sitting in her spot on the couch in the living room, she imagines them, each lost in whatever he or she is doing but connected nonetheless by a pale, transparent yellow line, like concentrated light. She can walk through the line between Poke and Miaow and feel it go straight through her, warm as the sun.

Poke, she thinks. Warm, she thinks.

She bends down and touches first her left foot and then her right, which may at the moment be the coldest foot in all of Southeast Asia. Poke has his back to her, knees drawn up, the human core of a mountain range of blankets. He sleeps naked, and it’s easy, as she slips the foot between the blankets, to target the warm bare skin on the small of his back.

The mountain erupts, blankets flying everywhere, and whatever he says, the English is too fast for her to follow it. He sits there wild-eyed, blankets pooled down around his hips, breathing like he’s just run a mile, and before he can say anything else, she wraps both arms around his warm neck and pulls him down to her. Says, her mouth inches from his, “Pay attention to me.”

ForTheDeadTimothyHallinan

Timothy Hallinan and his publisher, SOHO CRIME have permitted the use of the beginning of Chapter One from FOR THE DEAD to be used here and at Chiang Mai City News. FOR THE DEAD has been available since November 4th, 2014 and can be found at most online book stores as well as many independent and chain book shops.

This post previously appeared at Chiang Mai City News and can be found there by clicking the banner below.

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Check out the SOHO CRIME web site for many distinguished authors and excellent books on crime fiction that may be purchased direct for a discount, including FOR THE DEAD and a Crime Fiction bundle.

SOHOCRIME

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The task of genius, and man is nothing if not genius, is to keep the miracle alive, to live always in the miracle, to make the miracle more and more miraculous, to swear allegience to nothing, but live only miraculously, die miraculously. Today our attention is centered upon the physical inexhaustibility of the universe, we must concentrate our thought upon that solid fact, because never before has man plundered and devastated to such a degree as today. We are therefore prone to forget that in the realm of the spirit there is also an inexhaustibility, that in this realm no gain is ever lost.

 

Henry Miller

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Chiang Mai Chronicle

This was my first read of a T Hunt Locke novel. Mr Locke is an expat businessman and author living in northern Thailand.

Declan Power is a good old boy in a Mike Hammer kind of way, with a better personality, no tie or hat, a keen sense of humor and a positive outlook on life. Declan is a newspaper man, working for the Chiang Mai Chronicle. He’s always looking for the angle of a story or the right curves for his second gig, a night life oriented column featuring the red light district of Chiang Mai. He’s a man of distinction and taste, particularly if it comes from a Victoria’s Secret catalog or the bottom of a scotch bottle. An old school, red head of Irish decent; he likes his liquor, ladies and smokes. Declan can take a slap to the face and keep on smiling and he’s still agile and adventurous enough to go for the belly flop from the balcony when push comes to shove. Loyal to his friends, lovable and protective of his girlfriend, Oem. I liked Declan.

The novel starts off with an envelope stuffed with cash and a plea from an old foe and missing person. A TEFL (Teaching English as a Foreign Language) scam involving big bucks, which Declan had uncovered as part of a previous investigative series is in the mix. From this modest beginning the mystery expands, cleverly, to an ambitious and entertaining tale. Locke does a good job of blending Thai history, politics, class and corruption while stirring in plenty of sex, violence, murder and gore.

There is also a very good Bangkok elite vs Chiang Mai elite rivalry going on. A primary character is a visiting investigator from the Bangkok branch of the Department of Tax and Revenue, referred to mostly in the novel as, Bangkok Man. Here is a sample of Locke’s narrative voice and dialogue when Declan meets Bangkok Man for the first time:

Bangkok Man smiled. The smile matched his bright tie: pure silk. “Mr. Power, my name is Phitak Pantrem. I have a few questions and I am truly sorry to take up any of your time.”

Silk was the flavor of the day Declan thought. His jaw remained set. But inside he allowed himself a smile. Silk tie, silk smile, a silky tongue, Bangkok Man had it all. The story, his story, just got richer.

“I’m always happy to help, ” Declan answered evenly.

Also in the yarn are the present day politics of Bangkok and the proud history of Chiang Mai’s great Lan Na heritage along with a devious, sinister and well funded plan to secede Northern Thailand and return it to a glorious if not problematic past. Terror is part of that plan and there are some very savage, brutal and graphic murders taking place in Chiang Mai, frightening the local lassies. To help sell papers the mass murderer is coined the Lan Na Ripper by beat reporter Declan.

Just as Declan has a bit of Mike Hammer in him, T Hunt Locke has some Micky Spillane similarities to his writing style. What I like about Locke as a new on the scene novelist is that he writes. A lot. This is already his second protagonist planned for a mystery series and his third crime novel. He has written two previous books in the Sam Collins series: The Ming Inheritance and Jim Thompson is Alive!

Raymond Chander’s first novel was, The Lady in the Lake. I read it. I thought it was flawed and didn’t particularly like it compared to Chandler’s later work. I’m currently reading, The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway, which was Hemingway’s first novel. It too, I find flawed. The truth of the matter is, whether you are T. Hunt Locke, Raymond Chandler or Ernest Hemingway, writers tend to get better the more they write. My first impression of T Hunt Locke, as a novelist, is that he does a lot of things well – Locke is not bashful about using his imagination. I think he has written an entertaining novel for crime fiction readers, particularly if you like some erotica and Thailand history thrown in.

If The Chiang Mai Chronicle: A Declan Power Mystery was a granite sculpture it would be large in scale, eye catching and artfully crafted. But one that could still use a few more hits with the hammer and chisel. Less can be more. That said, if you are an expat living in Thailand and enjoy a good romp of a mystery with some well researched history, along with an affable protagonist, I recommend The Chiang Mai Chronicle by T Hunt Locke. I look forward to seeing what conclusions Declan comes to and what balconies he might jump from in his next mystery.

At $1.99 on Amazon you get good bang for the two bucks, whether you live in Thailand or anywhere else in the world.

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Dead

FOR THE DEAD by Timothy Hallinan – A Book Review by Kevin Cummings

If you’ve read any of the first five Poke Rafferty Bangkok Thrillers by Timothy Hallinan chances are you became a fan of the series. You do not get the Edgar Award, Macavity Award and Shamus Award nominations and have NBC develop your Junior Bender novels into a television series by Tweeting. You do have to write at least sixteen novels, though, plus a lessor known fact, Tim Hallinan has written a book of non-fiction on the works of Charles Dickens. For The Dead is now available for pre-order at Amazon.com and will be available at quality bookshops beginning November 4, 2014 – just two weeks from today.

One of the more enjoyable posts I have ever written on Thailand Footprint and one of the most consistently read is titled: The Poke Rafferty Series by Timothy Hallinan – King of the Bangkok Fiction Hill? There I discuss Tim’s first five novels in the Poke series. They are in order: A Nail Through The Heart; The Fourth Watcher; Breathing Water; The Queen of Patpong and The Fear Artist. 

Poke Rafferty is an American travel writer. He is a family man with an improbable family blossoming in the mud of an even more improbable city – Bangkok. His wife, Rose, the former lanky Issan country girl was once a Patpong dancing superstar until Poke rescued her or she rescued Poke. Love and marriage followed.  They adopted a homeless street girl named Miaow. As I wrote in that earlier review written almost 18 months ago, “It is the patchwork nuclear family setting, for me, which sets the Poke series apart from much of the other available Bangkok based fiction. That and the brilliant prose of Timothy Hallinan.”

Edgar, Macavity and Shamus Award nominee, Timothy Hallinan

Edgar, Macavity and Shamus Award nominee, Timothy Hallinan

In that regard, not much has changed in For The Dead and yet a lot has changed. Miaow is now thirteen years old. For The Dead is, for the first time, primarily Miaow’s story. How best to describe Miaow to the unfamiliar reader? Hallinan does it superbly in the narrative thoughts of Rose:

Miaow, she thinks. The throw-away child, tossed onto a side-walk. As tough as she tries to seem, Miaow worries about everything. She double-checks everything. If she were hanging over a cliff, held only by a knotted rope, she would try and improve the knot. She has no idea how remarkable she is, how smart, how decent, how much she’s loved. Somewhere in the center of her being, Miaow is still the short, dirty, dark-skinned, frizzy-haired, unloved reject who tried to sell chewing gum to Rafferty on his second night in Bangkok.

For The Dead opens with a wonderful upcountry dream sequence. It concludes with heart-tugging laughter. What you get in-between, besides a fast paced thriller featuring technology, pulse pounding chase scenes and contract killings conducted at the highest levels by a corrupt Thai Police force, is what is missing in so many novels today: quality. Page after page of quality. What you read in a Timothy Hallinan novel has importance, it’s useful and it’s entertaining.

In For The Dead, Poke is happy, financially secure for once and learns that his family of three will in nine months time become four. Miaow helps her nerdish Vietnamese boyfriend replace his second lost iPhone with a used model during a skillful negotiation process with a Sikh merchant on a skipped day of school in India Town. They learn later the phone contains pictures of some very dead policeman. Poke would normally be an early confidant but news of Rose’s pregnancy was relayed in an awkward manner, creating domestic strife. Serious jeopardy ensues and leads to the heaviest of hit men.

You could make a good case that in the Poke Rafferty series the last three novels have been the best, although I very much enjoyed Breathing Water. For me, The Queen of Patpong had the perfect mix of thrills, antagonist and family. In The Fear Artist, I found myself missing the family at times, although again the thrills and antagonist were stellar, plus you got the intriguing character of Treasure, whom we last saw disappearing into the fire and explosions of her abusive home. For The Dead puts Poke and family front and center, plus Treasure gets an encore along with two memorable Bangkok street kids. The thrills are still there as is the terrific prose of Hallinan detailing in great depth the best and worst of mankind.  My criticism of For The Dead is the antagonist didn’t live up to the level of evil or consistency of the last two, but Hallinan can take the blame for that one, for setting the bar so high. My suspension of disbelief also had to be ratcheted up a notch for a rather conveniently timed plot solution, no matter how much I wanted it to happen.

The Queen of Patpong is a Bangkok Thriller. My favorite Bangkok thriller of all-time. The Poke series is a Bangkok series when looked at in totality. For The Dead is, first and foremost, a human story – a story about a family and the bonds that hold them together.A story that could play within the backdrop of a dozen cities throughout the world – the corrupt police department and poor rice farmers notwithstanding. And that is not a criticism; that is a compliment to the story-telling ability and the multi-dimensional characters that Hallinan constructs in his writing. The Poke Rafferty series is no longer confined to the genre of Bangkok fiction or a simple mystery – this is first class literary fiction.

We are reminded often that we now live in a world where books, music, authors and musicians have all been devalued. But value is still out there if value matters to you. Smart and appreciative readers will always invest in reading good books by good authors. For The Dead is one such book and Timothy Hallinan has proven time and time again that he is one such author.

Poke_home

(Photo courtesy)

For more information about author, Timothy Hallinan and his novels you can visit his web site at www.timothyhallinan.com

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huay-tung-tao-lake

I stumbled upon these two great times lapse videos by Saengthit Kamlangchai while on Twitter. It was timely as I try and practice, taking in the good as much as possible, despite the dark side of Thailand, which is quite real. The two murders of young backpackers on Kho Tao Island are testament to that. Underneath the music and wonderful images are lots of reasons to be careful – to practice skepticism. A reminder as we returned to the Land of Happiness four days ago. Nevertheless, I enjoyed these two videos and I hope you choose to view at least one of them. Pick your paradise or pick your poison. It all depends on your vantage point:

Bangkok – The Beauty of Faith

Chiang Mai – Light of Heaven

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