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

Posts from the ‘Writing’ category

The footprints of Buddha (Buddhapada) were represented historically even before there were statues of Buddha. The footprints of the Buddha are highly revered in all Buddhist countries, including Thailand. According to the legend, after the Buddha attained enlightenment, his feet made an imprint in the stone where he stepped.

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Phra Phutthabat District in Thailand

Wat Phra Buddha Baat

The district is named after the Wat Phra Phutthabat, meaning temple of Buddha’s footprint. In the 17th century a hunter found a puddle of water which looked like a (oversized) footprint. It was declared a footprint of Buddha and the temple was built around it. It is one of the six most popular temples in Thailand and thousands of people make a pilgrimage there every year.

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The impact of Buddhism can be found everywhere in Thailand on a daily basis if one just pays attention. From daily rituals to spirit houses found outside homes and businesses. As a Californian, I like the Buddhist way in most cases. I have also gotten to know Thai people that have converted to Christianity. But, in my opinion, they are far different than Christians found in the USA because they come from a foundation of Buddhism. In fact, there is not even complete agreement as to whether Buddhism is a religion or a philosophy, meaning that Buddhism and Christianity could and do co-exist. In California, for instance, many would regard it as a philosophy and practice it as such. In Thailand most, but not all, would consider Theravada Buddhism a religion and to practice it, religiously, for lack of a better word, is rather difficult. Most Thais take a serious view of Buddhism but a casual approach to its practice. Again, my opinion alone.

Supreme Patriarch

A picture of the Supreme Patriarch of Thailand. He died on October 24th, 2013

There are times while living in Thailand when one notices the impact of Buddhism more strongly than others. Such is the case now. Last Thursday the Supreme Patriarch of Thailand (Sangharaja) died at the age of 100 years old. The Supreme Patriarch is the head of the order of Buddhist monks in Thailand. The selection process is made by senior clergy and formally appointed by the King of Thailand. The death of the Supreme Patriarch has had a wide effect on Thailand. To some it is felt emotionally, to others the impact is felt in a different way.

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I had planned to write a post today about an upcoming event, to be held in Bangkok. But an order has come down to all Bangkok businesses, that no “joyful entertainment” may be held for 15 days in order to honor the life of the Supreme Patriarch, leaving the status of this event (and thousands of others)on hold. In other words if you are a pub/restaurant you may still serve food and alcohol but live entertainment may be suspended. This effects Thailand’s more notoriously known entertainment venues as well as main stream ones. For the tourist that just got off the airplane yesterday, the Bangkok they had anticipated may be far different than the one that awaits them. Then again, it may not. Things are not always clear in Bangkok. And it would be mild to say there is not always agreement between the Buddhist community and the business community. As an example, some businesses have been known to stay open on Buddhist holidays and serve alcohol, which is prohibited on those days, merely by paying a sum of money to the right person(s). This does not make the Buddhist community happy at all.

As an expat living in Thailand. I like the daily effects of Buddhism. If I were a businessman trying to operate a business in Bangkok, I might take on a different view. One thing is certain in Thailand: nothing is ever certain. So tune in to my next post and find out if an event scheduled for on and around Halloween is on or off? One never knows until one knows, in Thailand. Whether you are seeking clarity or enlightenment, each takes their own time in the Kingdom.

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Siddhartha Gautama AKA Lord Buddha

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Soon, and not because there has been any particular demand, Gop the frog in the coconut shell will be availaIble in Tshirt form. A fashion statement about literature and coconut shells will soon be able to be made. As much as Henry tells me to forget myself, I keep thinking that puts me in the mass market of Tshirt sellers. There must be almost as many Tshirt sellers as there are authors these days. A lot of competition. I notice on Twitter all the authors seem to be “Best Selling” authors. No medium selling authors or poor selling authors only, best selling authors. It makes you wonder, if everyone is, the best, who is average? No one, apparently.

So I thought I’d set my sights on becoming a best selling Tshirt seller for a Thailand blogger. In order to do that one must know their competition. So I developed an advanced algorithm, mainly by walking around and paying attention and came up with this definitive, Top Five Best Selling Tshirts in Thailand:

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#1. Singha Beer Tshirt, also available in singlet for those hotter days.

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#2. The Red Bull Tshirt. Also available in singlet for those hotter days. The grandson of the Red Bull heir finds himself in a bit of a legal mess at the moment. With most of betting money being that he won’t be seeing the inside of a jail cell anytime soon. Google the subject if you are not familiar with the case. A classic example of justice inequity in Thailand.

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#3. The Che Guevara Tshirt. Everybody loves a rebel and the Thai people love Che Guevara. I’ve even seen my share of farangs wearing this Tshirt over the years, which was factored into the algorithm.

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#4. Good Guy Goes to Heaven … Bad Guy Goes to Pattaya. There seems to be some doubt about heaven within some circles. But there can be no doubt about Pattaya. Some may blame the recent fire near Walking Street in Pattaya on those in heaven but that is a post for another day. Without question, perhaps the defining Best Selling non-product endorsing Tshirt ever produced in Thailand. And probably not from the Pattaya City Chamber of Commerce.

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#5. I’m with Stupid. Hand pointing in various directions. I actually haven’t seen that many of the above Tshirt in either Bangkok or Pattaya, I just think more guys should consider buying one. It’s always good to remind oneself of the company one keeps from time to time. What is the harm in that, after all?

So there you have it. The Top Five Best Selling Tshirts in Thailand. If you don’t own at least one, consider yourself out of fashion.

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Thailand Footprint is now six-months old. I hold no illusions as to what it is: it’s a blog but it’s a blog that has been a lot of fun for me and hopefully brought some bits of entertainment to you, the reader.

I had a vision of writing a post thanking in detail all the people that made this blog become a reality. Instead I choose to do the following. I thank the following people and the books they wrote. If you are not familiar with any of these authors, explore them. It will be an exploration that will be rewarded. To Jerry Hopkins; Christopher G. Moore; Timothy Hallinan; Lisa Brackmann; Robert Carraher (book reviewer extraordinaire at The Dirty Lowdown ); Dean Barrett; Collin Piprell; my basketball coach Tom Barry who taught me to respect our janitor, which I remember as much as any other lesson he taught me; Chris Coles; James A. Newman and last but not least that reclusive author and cartoonist in the south – the man with no Facebook or Twitter account, Colin Cotterill.

Thank-you all very much. For your cooperation and your generosity. I hope to do this for at least another six months. And thanks to all the readers. There have been many more than I had thought possible. I thank Henry Miller for that. Every time I would forget myself, the blog became better. Every time I made the blog about me, I could never make that claim. Look at the books below. Pick one that might interest you. Then learn more about it at Amazon.com or order it at your favorite independent bookstore. I am not a writer … but the world still needs them. And I like it that way.

Best wishes,

Kevin Cummings

October 15th, 2013

Bangkok Babylon

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Fear Artist

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The Dirty Lowdown Robert Carraher

Robert Carraher at The Dirty Lowdown (Click picture to visit site) Copyright 2007 Benjamin Burrows Photography

Hangman's Point - Cover for Ebook

Kicking Dogs by author Collin Piprell

Navigating the Bangkok Noir by Chris Coles

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Aging Discracefully

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Classic fictional detectives like Sherlock Holmes, Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple used forensic science as one of their investigating methods while TV series like “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation”, “Bones”, “Law & Order”, “Criminal Minds” and “Waking the Dead”, have glamourised the profession. You’ll now have a chance to watch a real autopsy in Bangkok if you desire according to Supichai Limsiwawongse, a forensic expert at the institute. He is recently on record as saying his team wanted to allow people in to watch their work.

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Death takes on a life of its own at Thailand’s Institute of Forensic Medicine

Bob Dylan’s song, “Death Is Not the End”, plays in an incongruous loop in my head, as I gather up my courage and walk into the Institute of Forensic Medicine (IFM) at Police General Hospital on Bangkok’s Henri Dunant Road, a short walk from bustling Siam Square.

The faded, tired-looking white building looks much like any other government facility in Bangkok but knowing what’s behind the doors sends shivers down my superstitious spine. Wisps of smoke hanging in the air and the heavy scent of incense from the shrines around the building amplify the uneasy atmosphere.

The Institute of Forensic Medicine is where the dead are delivered when the way in which they have met their maker cannot be easily explained or where foul play is suspected.

Classic fictional detectives like Sherlock Holmes, Hercule Poirot and…

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Yesterday I went back to Koi Art Gallery on Sukhumvit 31 in Bangkok. I had last been there in April of 2011 for the opening of Chris Coles, Navigating the Bangkok Noir exhibit.

On this occasion I had missed the opening, which was fine with me as it allowed me to talk to Koi Art Gallery Business Development Manager Kruti Mawani one on one about up and coming Thai artist, Kowit Wattanarach and his current art show, which opened Friday, September 27th 2013 and runs until October 30th, 2013. She was helpful and informative about the artist and the exhibit.

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The characters found in the large oil paintings by family man, Kowit Wattanarach are players of the night games painted in a colorful, exaggerated and whimsical fashion.

Midnight Blossom by Kowit Wattanarach

Midnight Blossom by Kowit Wattanarach

Here is an excerpt from the Games of Desire Press Release:

In delving beyond the surface of beautiful faces and bodies, the artist seeks to illustrate the various issues which have been transcended into a national social dilemma for Thailand.
Kowit Wattanarach seeks to stir debate around what has become a national social dilemma: while illegal, Thailand’s dens of ill repute are regulated and supported due to their commercial success. For those who work in the trade – many times, successive generations of women – the outcome of such a career is rarely a happy one.

Boty Girl by Kowit Wattanarach

Booty Girl by Kowit Wattanarach

Through Games of Desire, the artist has thrown into sharp relief the complicated truth and conflicting emotions that exist around this dilemma. Mysterious and seductive, the creatures of the night may seduce men – wittingly or unwittingly – into falling in love with them. And while a semblance of affection exists during these shared moments of beauty, the love one finds here is as real as a paper rose.

Little Dragon by Kowit Wattanarach

Little Dragon by Kowit Wattanarach

Not surprisingly, I learned that most of Kowit’s painting being shown at the Games of Desire exhibit had been sold – there are only three remaining. But whether you are in the market to fill a space below your cathedral ceiling or would just like to see talent on display, it is well worth a trip to Koi Art Gallery on Sukhumvit 31. Complete contact details are shown at the end of this post.

I Don't Want to Make Money I Just Want to be Wonderful

The above painting by Kowit depicts a Marilyn Monroe-like image and is titled: I DON’T WANT TO MAKE MONEY, I JUST WANT TO BE WONDERFUL.

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Kowit obviously does not shy away from controversy. I am sure he has some critics – all successful artists do. But I left the Koi Art Gallery as a fan. If these images look impressive to you on a computer screen I can attest that they look even better at Koi Art Gallery. Drop by if you are in the neighborhood.

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Games of Desire Art Exhibit by Kowit Wattanarach runs until October 30th, 2013. Koi Art Gallery is located at 43/12 Soi Sukhumvit 31 (Sawaddee) Klongton North, Wattana, Bangkok 10110 THAILAND

Gallery Hours are 11:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. Click the Koi Art Gallery picture, above, to go to their Facebook page.

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It’s always possible I’m imagining things, which would be nice, but it seems to me there is a whole lot of complaining going on these days. Don’t get me wrong, I’ve been known to hang in the big leagues of the complaint department. And I can write a first class complaint letter if I think it will accomplish something. I’m talking about those people complaining on the internet. No, not the forum folks, I don’t spend any time there anymore and didn’t pay much attention to the clatter when I did. I’m talking about people writing long essays complaining about everything there is to complain about under the sun, without offering one single solution. And it’s not like the things they are complaining about are new. If you don’t believe me, listen to one of my favorite songs of all time: BALL OF CONFUSION, by The Temptations. A song that first came out in 1970 – 43 years ago. If anyone is going to complain they should do it with the style of The Temptations, because even when they are complaining they balance it out with appreciation. Take a listen if you have the time:

So, it should be clear by now, I’m here to complain about the complainers. If you have never noticed the small tagline by Voltaire in the footer of this blog it states, “Appreciation is a wonderful thing: it makes what is excellent in others belong to us as well.” There is a lot to complain about; no one can deny that. But this is not something new. It seems to me there is also a lot to be appreciated that is going unwritten about or worse, unnoticed.

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Some subjects you’d think would be fair game for complaining. Like snoring. I once shared a room with a man that I believe weighed well over 350 lbs at a convention in San Diego. That ranks up there as one of the most miserable experiences of my life – even with room service.  But usually if someone is snoring there is a solution: an elbow to the back, a pillow or a late night snack. To be perfectly candid, I appreciate the sound of my wife snoring. Of course, she snores like a purring kitten and I am smart enough not to ask if the feeling is reciprocal.

Snoring

In eight days time, Thailand Footprint will have its 6 month anniversary of being born online. Everything starts with an idea. Next week I will write about how the idea was conceived, how it evolved and the many people that helped deliver it. In other words, I am going to take the time to appreciate and show my gratitude to the many people that helped me with this, a simple blog. It’s kind of amazing, to me anyway, just how many people it involved. I hope you find it interesting. If you don’t, well, you can always complain. For me, writing this blog, in a very small way, is just one less thing I am guilty of not doing.

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PHUKET’S BIZARRE AND BLOODY VEGETARIAN FESTIVAL.

heretostray's avatarHere to Stray

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Warning: The following pictures are of a graphic nature. It is not suitable for sensitive readers.

Have you ever heard of a vegetarian festival? It sounds like a peaceful hipster affair where people celebrate the great significance of the cauliflower doesn’t it? That is what I thought it was at least.

In South Africa, meat is probably one of the most important items on any plate of food that we serve. I think I speak for all Saffas when I say that we would certainly not survive without meat at least once a day and due to my/our love for meat, I always find it extremely strange that there are people that actually choose to live without it.

Now close your eyes and imagine what you think a Vegetarian festival would look like. I bet you see laughing children running around with carrots in their hands, maybe a couple of hippie parents with flowers…

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henry-miller-aron-kalman-lozziprdotcomThe above image is of  a Henry Miller portrait done by famed artist Kalman Aron, a fascinating individual. He was a child prodigy in his youth yet spent time in seven (7) different concentration camps during World War II. His web site is definitely worth spending some time at and can be found by clicking the Henry Miller portrait. Mr Aron is still alive and well, still painting and living in southern California.

There is also a book out about his art: INTO THE LIGHT – The Healing Art of Kalman Aron. If you click the picture below you will learn more about it:

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Without further adieu, Henry’s quote:

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Plots and character don’t make life. Life is here and now. Anytime you say the word. Anytime you let her rip. – Henry Miller

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Criminals come in all shapes, sizes and weights. And when it comes to their intelligence they run the gamut from the brilliant, to dumb and dumber. Thailand Footprint welcomes the opportunity to interview our first crime fiction writer with a degree in criminology, from Melbourne University in Australia. Jarad Henry has worked in the criminal justice system as part of the St Kilda Police Department for the past 10 years. But it is in his capacity of crime novelist and essayist that we interview him here today.  My goal was to think like a criminal while interviewing Jarad. It seems to me that criminals, the smart ones and the dumb ones, are looking to take shortcuts. They want something for nothing. So they steal things. I thought, what the heck, I’ll steal interview questions from people smarter than me. What could possibly go wrong? It seems like the perfect crime …
 Author at St kilda
In 2013 Jarad Henry joined a team of crime authors from around the globe where each author posts a weekly essay about crime fiction or a related issue at one of my favorite blogs, International Crime Authors Reality Check. Jarad’s essays are always thought provoking and well constructed. His criminal justice background is fully evident. His latest essay, WHEN A HIT MAN FALLS THROUGH THE ROOF is about another criminal who thought nothing could go wrong, but it did. It can be found by clicking the picture below:

HitmanRoof

Last year Jarad’s third novel, PINK TIDE, featuring protagonist and anti-hero Detective Sergent Rubens McCauley, was released – set in the south-west of Victoria, Australia. Thailand Footprint is pleased to welcome our first Aussie bloke, Jarad Henry. Let the joyride begin:
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TF  Which music, books or films have floated your boat recently? (Question stolen from Paul D. Brazill at:  http://pauldbrazill.wordpress.com/
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JH My musical tastes are quite broad, depending on the situation. I like hip hop for the story telling, the craft and the beats, in that order. My iPod is my favorite digital gadget and like an Amex Card, I never leave home without it. There are over 250 separate playlists on it, much of which I have composed myself or mixed together using CDJs and a DJ pre-amp mixer, which I have in my apartment, connected to my PC, like a mini A/V studio.
The genres range from jazz to country rock, to rap and hip hop, modern pop and house music. I still go to nightclubs and always keep up with new music, but at the same time there’s a place in my heart that will always hang on to a few special songs. These are:
Flame trees, Cold Chisel.  
The Living Years, Mike & the Mechanics
Across 110th Street, Bobby Womack
1000 kisses deep, Leonard Cohen
As for books, I  am an avid reader, but have a very particular or fussy taste. Some might even say it’s narrow, but I like crime fiction that is hard boiled, hard core and realistic. The category of noir fits into this, but if i had to name a few authors who are in my top five I’d say:
Michael Connelly, The Poet – and the Harry Bosch series.
Michael Robotham, Shatter
Christopher G Moore, Cold Hit, and the Calvino series
Peter Temple, – The Broken Shore
Leigh Redhead – Thrill City
As for movies. Realistic, confronting and hard boiled, although I am human and do love a laugh. Favorites are: 
End of Watch
Redacted
Mystic River
Sleepers
Animal Kingdom
Tell Them Lucifer Was Here
Made In Australia
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TF When did you know that you were born to be a writer? (Q stolen from Kathy Reinhart atwww.inkdropinterviews.com)
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JH I  was a rebel in high school. After a trip to the US, I was bullied by jealous kids but I fought back, got suspended and landed in quite a bit of trouble. Outside school I hung around with local thugs and losers, who all did drugs and ended up robbing our house. Then I got caught doing graffiti. My parents were at their wits-end and they felt I had some artistic talent that was displaced, so they sent me off to learn ceramics, which I loved and did well in.
Finally my parents were proud of me and as I approached the last two years of school, I decided I wanted two things – to be popular at school, but also do well and to prove that I could do both. In English class one of the core assessment tasks was to write a short story. I wrote a story of an old man watching a young person doing graffiti on a train and what he thought of it. I enjoyed the experience and I ended up getting an A+ for the assignment. It was the first time I’d ever got anything above a C.
I showed my parents and the look of relief and pride was like a drug itself. It felt fantastic. I was going to all the cool parties, had lots of friends and I took the hottest girl in school to the prom, and I was now getting good grades as well. So I worked hard in the final year and ended up getting into Melbourne University, which isn’t easy. It’s the best university in the country, and I scraped in.
There I studied criminology but found it so damn boring I ended up in the library where I found a whole range of books on crime. Biographies of gangsters, drug smugglers, kingpins, detectives, crooked politicians, the works. I loved it. I learnt more about crime in the library than I did in the lectures.
Outside university I was hitting the nightclubs every week where drugs and gangsters were everywhere. Drugs were cheaper than alcohol and no one got into fights on drugs, but the party scene was something that could only be part of your life. You wouldn’t want to live it. A lot of people I knew got right into that scene and many never got out. Some guys I knew (who joined the Army) even got involved in stealing guns and selling them to gangsters in exchange for drugs.
So I had a twofold education. Street smart and school smart. This made a good foundation on which to write a book. It was during these years that I decided to do just that.
I wrote a blurb or synopsis for what would later become my first book, Head Shot. I showed it to my partner at the time whilst celebrating Chinese New Year.
She read it and said,”Sounds pretty good. Is that a book you’re going to buy?”
And I replied, “No it’s a book I’m going to write.”
“Yeah, right,” she said. “Bullshit!”
That was it. The challenge was on. I had to write the book and get it published. It took five years, many re-writes and a lot of persistence, but I didn’t give up until I had it in print. That was about 7 years ago.
JARAD HENRY_HEAD SHOT
 TF  If you were a traveling genre salesman, going from door to door and trying to interest people in a specific genre, what would be your sales pitch for CRIME FICTION? (Q stolen from Timothy Hallinan at The Blog Cabin www.Timothy Hallinan.com)
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JH Crime Fiction has evolved since the old fashioned murder mysteries set in some English mansion where someone ends up dead at a dinner party. In the end it’s always the butler who did it.
These days crime fiction is a lens to look at any social, political or cultural issue you want to read or learn about and be entertained at the same time. It’s part info-tainment, part-atlas, so you can go places you never would on your own.
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 TF Is crime in something you have researched, studied for your books? Is it something you have to do, or does your imagination provide enough fuel for the fire to write crime fiction? (Q stolen from James Austin Farrell at www.chiangmaicitynews.com)
 
JH Part of this I guess is covered in question 2, but people often ask this same question referenced to my work. Yes my job provides a good insight into police procedure and culture, but I wrote my first book before I worked in justice. Also, there are very strict rules about disclosing information so everything I put in my books is in the public domain, and I never write or do appearances, etc, as anything other than Jarad Henry, the writer / author.
Anyway, there was a lot of research through reading what I wanted to write about. I followed crime in the papers, listened to hard core dance music and hung out in raves and clubs where the gangsters did business. Eventually a war started and the gangsters all started killing each other, which became the subject of many books and movies, but I had witnessed it all from both perspectives. 
I could walk into a club or dance party and know who the players were, then go home and write about that scene with a criminology degree and day-job in the justice system filling in the blanks. 
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TF Tell me about PINK TIDE  in 50 words or less – who would you want to play Sgt McCauley if it made it to the big screen?  (I cannot even remember who I stole that question from).
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JH Pink Tide is a story of forbidden love and what is considered an accepted relationship in modern Australia, with all its stigmas, prejudices and flaws built into a lead detective named Rubens McCauley, who would be perfect casting for Russell Crowe.

The long arm of the law extends even to the likes of Russell Crowe, once in awhile ...

Bad boy, Russell Crowe with his date on the Red Carpet at The Academy Awards … er, maybe not …

 TF Well, Jarad it’s taken me until question number six to see the light. Your own true story may have scared me straight. I’m not going to hang out with the wrong crowd anymore. And I’m not going to steal any questions from other authors and interviewers either. Though I must confess to a bit of plagiarism while I was at University.  No more short-cuts. I don’t want to end up like Russell Crowe after he threw that phone in New York City. You’ve piqued my interest about Pink Tide. Tell me more. What are you particularly proud of that your novel PINK TIDE conveys? And where can our readers find it.
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JH  Hahaha. Nothing to worry about Khun Kevin! Go forth and steal!
I am proud of Pink Tide in the sense that is not a traditional crime novel or story simply about crime. It is about themes of what it’s like to be an outsider, whether that be for the mentally ill, ethnicity, sexual preferences, what religion you practice, where you have grown up or whether or not can play a macho sport like football. In essence, it questions what it means to be Australian and what is considered by the mainstream to be acceptable.
Pink Tide covers all these themes, while at the same time gives the reader a genuine insight into the stress of policing in the modern world where everyone has a phone with a camera in it and everyone has an opinion about how police ought to do their job.
One particularly poignant moment describes a death notification. These are never easy and the scene shows the emotional impact delivering the notice of death to the parents of a young man and the effect it has on a young Asian police woman as well as the victim’s family.
It will be available as eBook soon, but at the moment the best place to buy a copy is online direct from the publisher via the following link:
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TF Tell us about your previous crime novel BLOOD SUNSET and your upcoming novel, HEAD SHOT … how are they similar and how are they different?
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JH Blood Sunset looks at themes of peadophiles and street kids in the red light / party district of Melbourne, known as St Kilda. Again it’s a police procedural but the underlying themes of injustice to children in state care underpins the story. The title itself is also major theme. On hot summer days the sun sets over the bay and half a million people head into St Kilda to party, but every cop and ambulance worker knows that the hotter it gets the more blood will be spilt on the streets through fights, stabbings, brawls and shootings. People go crazy, drink too much and it’s the cops and ambulance officers who have to deal with it. So when they see the sun going down, they call it a Blood Sunset. Blood Sunset can be purchased as a paperback or eBook through Amazon.com.
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Head Shot was initially my first book, the first in the McCauley trilogy , but it has been completely re-written , revamped and modernized to reflect contemporary times and issues. It centers around the issue of police corruption and linkages with the underworld, outlaw motorcycle gangs in particular. Drug trafficking and the notion drug money and the lifestyle being more addictive than the drugs themselves is a core theme also, with many other wise ordinary citizens caught up in a very violent and dirty business.
The Head Shot trailer is good, but it won’t be out until November or December via the publisher first, then as an eBook.
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 TF There is an old lawyer joke that goes something like this: a lawyer is defending a hardened criminal regarding a horrific crime. He goes back to the law office and his law partner asks, “How did it go at trial?” Smiling the lawyer says, “Justice prevailed.” The partner not missing a beat says, “Appeal immediately.” Because of your background in criminal justice, must justice always prevail in your novels? Because as we know in real life it often does not. In other words, could the bad guy ever get away with it in a Jarad Henry novel or do you make sure to dish out an extra helping of street justice? 
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JH Justice never prevails in my books in the traditional sense. While i do create chaos and then restore a sense of order (which is a form of justice), much of the narrative in my books describes how the wheels of justice do and don’t turn. The good guys don’t always win and the bad guys don’t always lose, but somehow the universe eventually takes out its trash and that comes in many ways. 
Pink Tide especially goes into this about how the justice machine doesn’t and cannot ever live up to the complete expectations of what people expect it to. My books don’t proffer solutions, since most of the time the problems are complex and complex problems aren’t easily solved. However, they do highlight the complexities and I hope give the reader an insight into some of the issues the adversarial system faces when trying to restore justice.
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TF  What’s on the horizon on the Pacific Rim for Jarad Henry? What are you working on now? What’s going on in the artistic, book-writing, ceramic factory nowadays?
Jarad - St KildaOutdoors
JH I  have moved on from ceramics and have done a series of paintings to decorate my apartment / condo, which I find enjoyable when I get time and find the muse. As for writing, I’m giving McCauley a rest for a while and focusing on a potential project that involves ghost writing a person’s memoirs. I can’t say too much about it, however it is something that has not been done before and I am currently in discussions with a major publisher about how we might pursue the project.
 
As for my day job, I have applied for a consultancy role as drug analyst with the UN head quarters in Bangkok, which if successful would see me working part time in Thailand and part time in Australia, on the next book project.
I am also working with some brilliant young film makers of Asian background here in Melbourne, assisting them to promote a noir story about losing and saving face for young Australians of Asian background.
The film is called “Made In Australia”, written, directed and produced by Matt Pastor. The trailer can be seen here on You Tube: (Warning:harsh language)

Khap khun na krup Khun Kevin. Great to be a part of all things ASEAN and the Thailand Footprint Site.
Catch you at CheckInn99 for a beer October 25. Mauw mak mak 555
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TF No worries. Thanks for the ride, Jarad. My shout –  wait until you hear, Music of the Heart Band. They are the ducks guts. 
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You can learn more about Jarad Henry and his books by visiting his web page at http://www.jaradhenry.com.au/
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Henry Miller: closet egalitarian, voice of common man, demolisher of classism, more Boss than ‘the Boss,’ etc.Henry Miller Memorial Library. Click link, above, to take you to essay at Henry Miller web site, which includes a mention and link to an additional essay written about Henry Miller and George Orwell by Bangkok based author, Christopher G. Moore.

Bruce

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