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

Posts from the ‘Writing’ category

Whether writing a book review is more art or science is a topic for another day. In today’s post I include actual Amazon.com book reviews, not written by me, about some of my favorite books. I have read and liked each and every one of the books listed below. I do not agree with the reviews. But everybody is entitled to their opinion. I don’t lose any sleep over these reviews. I doubt the authors do either. Being an author and getting 1 and 2 star reviews is like being a physician in the USA and being sued for malpractice. It isn’t a question of if. It’s only a question of when. Certain things in life you can always count on: one person’s quatro cinco is another’s acey  deucey. I hope you enjoy them as much as I did. Again, I did not write them. I hope that’s clear :o)

Bangkok 8

BANGKOK 8 by John Burdett

Why this book is listed as a mystery novel escapes me. It is in equal parts a Buddhist pamphlet, a dissertation on the excesses of western perversions and an uninteresting novel with very little mystery in it. I will give credit to the author for a couple of ideas that, if properly developed, may have been enough to form the basis for a mystery. But then he dilutes the story by exhalting the Buddhist philosophy and decrying the bad, bad, BAD influence of western culture, succeeding only in slowing the plot to an unacceptable crawl. Worse yet, instead of revealing clues here and there to give the reader the impression of participating in the solution of the crime, he uses the artificiality of having the Thai detective figuring it all out in his own mind. That way, nothing is revealed until everything is revealed. Perhaps to amend for this, the author tacks on a truly outlandish ending that is so ridiculous even its shock value is weak. The only real surprise to me was that American females are vilified almost as much as their male counterparts, a gross violation of political correctness. But it isn’t the message, or even the agenda that bothered me, it’s the lack of imagination. The author stereotypes, shoots at the usual targets, reinforces commonly held untruths about the military and the list goes on. I am thoroughly baffled by how many people expressed a positive opinion on this book.

Red Night Zone

RED NIGHT ZONE by James A. Newman (formerly released as Bangkok City)

Psychedelic seedy despair and deprivation. I think this was the only book I ever read a “sample” of and just had to get the whole book – only to find out my worst fears were realized (those that almost kept me from getting it since I suspected this….).

The short, terse sentences written in a Hunter Thompson Gonzo (on acid) descriptive style continues throughout the book. It was fun the firt three chapters then got extremely tedious. The convoluted relationships between all the main players felt contrived, too.

Mostly, I was left with feelings of despair and horror, but also head shaking how does this get five star review questions; I don’t want to actually provide spoilers but I expected someone somewhere to have a happy ever after-ish foreign style ending – why I don’t know. Maybe I just had to buy it to believe it because what you read in the narrator’s description of Bangkok – is exactly what you get.

KillingSmile2

A Killing Smile by Christopher G. Moore

This novel takes place almost exclusively in a Bangkok go-go bar…Well let’s be honest whorehouse. The central figure is an expat American who has lived in Bangkok (and this particular bar) for 20 some odd years.

There is a vague central plot, but most of the novel deals with stories about a series of Expats and their experiences in Bangkok.
I’ve been to Bangkok and I found this a dreadful book. It’s as if a group of people spend their entire adult life’s in a low-life LA bar and their only knowledge of the US is what they gained from a bunch of prostitutes.
I bought this book with the hope of learning about the expat experience living in Thailand.
Don’t bother.

CRASHED by Timothy Hallinan

CRASHED by Timothy Hallinan

So a hotshot radio book reviewer said this was a “MUST READ”. So I bought the book and read it.

This book is barely worth reading. The ‘set up’ is absurd. Beyond improbable, it edges over into unbelievable. My reaction? “Oh, come on…”

Plot is stupid: A crook, a burgler,who is blackmailed into ‘doing the right thing’, which also turns out to be criminal. Go figure.

The narrative is ragged, loses focus, there are no characters to like.

Here and there, he scores some very funny lines, but we’re talking pages and pages of narrative for an occasional laugh.

At moments when the plot is runing on empty, he drags in new characters to save the day. Or he comes up with a new skill, or pennys from heaven, or something that saves the day.

NOT WORTH YOUR TIME. OR MINE. Better you watch television.

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain

This book sucks it makes no sense I had to get it for English and it was totally not worth it! Don’t buy

3 Comments

untitled

KILLED AT THE WHIM OF A HAT written in 2011 by former Chiang Mai resident Colin Cotterill is the initial Jimm Juree crime novel. It is set in Chiang Mai and the south of Thailand, where Colin Cotterill, originally from England, now resides. The Jimm Juree series comes after Colin’s hugely successful Dr. Siri crime series, about a Laotian coroner, which won the Crime Writer’s Association, Dagger in The Library Award in 2009.

For the rest of the review, please click the banner below to take you to Chiang Mai City News

CMCN

To further illustrate the cartoonist ability of Colin Cotterill here are two drawings he did for Chiang Mai City News back when he lived in Chiang Mai:

020_cartoon1

020_cartoon3An original Colin Cotterill cartoon can be had for a lot less than an option to make a screenplay out of one of his novels. Go to http://www.colincotterill.com the cartoon chappy for more details …

 

Leave a comment

One of the premier authors that writes about South East Asia is former American attorney, Jake Needham. Jake came to writing novels quite by accident. I have heard recently he is going to go to electronic only sales on his newer books. If true, that is a shame as I have always enjoyed reading and looking at the Jake Needham paperbacks on my bookshelf.

Rather than reinvent the wheel let me tell you of the books I have read by Jake and then steer you to his fine web site and blog towards the end of this post. No one tells Jake’s story better than Jake.  I have never read a book by Jake Needham that I didn’t like. He is a fine writer. I haven’t always agreed with him about politics but that has as much to do with writing fiction as the fact that some people don’t like fish sauce on their fried rice.

One of the first books I ever read after coming to Thailand in 2001 was THE BIG MANGO. It remains one of my Top Ten Bangkok based favorites to this day. The Northern California references were a nice bonus. The Big Mango has big money, big villains and big government involved. Although it’s been awhile since I read it I believe it would hold up well today as good Viet Nam War stories never grow old.

The Big mango cover (18Sept).indd

THE AMBASSADOR’S WIFE was my introduction to the Inspector Tay series set in Singapore. It is another favorite of mine. I like the fact that the body of a murdered woman is found in a room at The Marriott Hotel and that the hotel is named as such. I liked Inspector Tay right away. As a protagonist, Jack Reacher he is not and that is kind of refreshing. Flawed is being kind. But like Lieutenant Columbo he is no dummy and he is good at solving the crime.

AMBASSADORS-WIFE-Jake took quite awhile before he wrote his second Inspector Tay novel and I believe it was due to fan requests and the continued success of The Ambassador’s Wife as the reason that he finally did so. This was, The Umbrella Man, which was the first Jake Needham novel I ever read on ebook format. While I missed the paper format it was still an excellent read. I like the economy of words Jake always manages. It is an under utilized skill by authors in my opinion. The Umbrella Man literally starts off with a bang as terrorists coordinate the bombing attacks on three Singapore hotels and Inspector Tay is caught in the middle in more ways than one.

umbrellaman-thumbnail

Mr. Needham has written four in the Jack Shepherd crime novel series. I have read the first one and need to find time to read more of them. The four in order are: Laundry Man, which I enjoyed and recommend; Killing Plato, which is set on the island of Phuket; A World of Trouble, which I understand has a not so veiled Thaksin Shinawatra theme and the most recent; The King of Macau. In Laundry Man, Jack Shepherd is a former corporate lawyer reinventing himself, as so many expats do in Asia, as a University law professor. Corruption, blackmail and murder quickly become part of Jack Shepherd’s new world. Never boring is the best compliment I can give Jake Needham’s writing.

Laundry Man

Jake Needham, like other well known authors writing about South East Asia, Timothy Hallinan, John Burdett, and Christopher G. Moore, is among a select group that have currently had one or more of their novels optioned to be made into Hollywood movies. As John Burdett once said at the Foreign Correspondent’s Club of Thailand, for a book to be made into a movie about 9 things have to align perfectly. Jake Needham has as good a chance of going 9 for 9 as anyone writing about Asia today.

To learn more about Jake Needham, an American crime novelist in Asia, along with how to sign up for his newsletter, Letters from Asia, go to www.jakeneedham.com

Jake Needham on the streets of Asia

Jake Needham on the streets of Asia

6 Comments

Any author that has, “Frogs of Doom” in their title is worthy of a re-blog. Here is one of the nicest Elmore Leonard tributes I have seen all day: WHAT ELMORE LEONARD TAUGHT US by Tim Byrd

Tim Byrd's avatarUnder An Outlaw Moon

Dutch

Elmore Leonard was one of those great pulp writers who helped create modern fiction and along the way taught many writers how to write. Like the best in any “genre,” he proved that genre doesn’t matter, only quality. Whether you’re writing about cowboys or bank robbers or astronauts or superheroes or ennui-laden academics fucking around on their wives and feeling really really uncertain and depressed while they wash the dishes, the content isn’t what’s important, it’s the skill and insight and art that the writer brings to the tale.

Rest easy, Dutch.

View original post

Leave a comment

In 1952 Henry Miller wrote a book which must have been quite the exercise in self examination. It is called, THE BOOKS IN MY LIFE. I have read about it but have not read it. Miller’s book triggered my desire to write a similar, abbreviated post here. And I still hope to one day. But for now that exercise is too daunting. What I like about Henry Miller is he makes me think. That’s still a good thing. Thanks Henry.

Here is what Henry said that got me thinking lately:

If it be knowledge or wisdom one is seeking, then one had better go direct to the source.  And the source is not the scholar or philosopher, not the master, saint, or teacher, but life itself— direct experience of life. The same is true for art. Here, too, we can dispense with the masters.

That got me thinking about writing, living, authors and books. Because of those four things, living fully is the most appealing thing to me. On this blog one of the most popular posts continues to be: I AM NOT A WRITER … AND WHY THE WORLD NEEDS THEM . And I still consider myself not to be a writer but rather a student of writers. There is a lot one can learn from writers, Henry Miller included.

But there is one book out there that I wish I had written. And I can’t even get my hands on a copy. I haven’t even read it, yet. It is NATIONAL PARKS OF THAILAND by  Dennis Gray, Collin Piprell and Mark Graham. It counts 250 pages with color photos and maps. Last published as a second edition in 1994.

NationalParksThailand

Why do I wish I had written this book among all the books written about Thailand? The simple answer is, I like parks. I always have. When Henry says, “Better go direct to the source” for knowledge or wisdom you can’t beat the great outdoors and nature. Books are good but I’d rather read nature. In fact Henry admits he read too many books. Me too, maybe. I know I have read some bad ones. But I have not been to too many parks, big or small, national or city. Some of my favorite life experiences, most memorable days and life altering events have occurred in parks. More so than libraries or museums. Every detective knows the best footprints are left outdoors.

A handful of the parks that have left their impressions on me are: Auburn Parks and the great American River; Bidwell Park in Chico and their many fresh watering holes for swimming; the Adirondacks in upstate New York; San Juan Island Parks in Washington State; Golden Gate Park in San Francisco where I would run after work; Grand Canyon; Yellowstone; Everglades and the first national park I can recall as a young boy was Yosemite. I was seven. It was a class room of first class. I got poison oak. With that came the start of wisdom and better reading skills.

yosemite-national-park

Yosemite National Park – California

When the tsunami of Christmas 2006 hit Thailand and the world we were in a beautiful and uncrowded national park in Khao Kho in Phetchabun province, Thailand. It was full of flowing waterfalls. I wish I had a copy of NATIONAL PARKS OF THAILAND right now so I could look at a map and get a better handle on where it is, exactly. All I know is, I am thankful we were there that day and not Phuket.

-waterwaterfall-Khao-Kor-Phetchabun

Khao Kho National Park, Phetchabun Province, Thailand

The point of this essay is, listen to Henry. You can read too many books. You can spend too much time at the computer. Henry admits to the former. I readily admit to the latter. The reason I would have liked to have written NATIONAL PARKS OF THAILAND is that I could have gone direct to the source to research the book. The parks are life itself. And I cannot think of a better subject to write about.

Suan-Rot-Fai-1-300x225

Suan Rot Fai, Bangkok Thailand

If you live or are visiting the Bangkok area and want an alternative to Lumphini park, Rot Fai (Train) Park located close to Jutujak market is well worth seeking out for a great respite from city life. Not crowded, even on the weekends, teeming with wildlife. Bicycle rentals are also available if you don’t have your own.

So keep on reading, of course. Used book stores are still cooler than one-click Kindle sales. Buy a second-hand book to take to a park for when you get tired after your long walk or hike. Oh, and if anyone does spot a copy of that National Parks book by Dennis Gray, Collin Piprell and Mark Graham in one of those great old book shops that are disappearing too fast, drop me an email at ThailandFootprint@gmail.com. I’ll go direct to that source lickity split.

12 Comments

For my amusement and hopefully yours, the reader, I include a partial list of search terms that led people to Thailand Footprint in the last four months. My favorite may well be the last one. I hope you find it entertaining and revealing:

 GoogleSearch
who is the proponent of music of thailand 5
pictures of balboa island ca 3
dohassen gault-williams 3
i am not a writer 3
essay of musical thailand 3
the white flamingo james newman 2
nana plaza tukky 2
transvestite waitress 2
spirit photograph music 2
kamen picken eminent air 2
essays and impression of thailand 2
balboa island 2
quotes tagged big sur 2
why the world needs me 2
 thai name mook 1
bar girls in chiang mai 1
christopher g moore books 1
“chris coles” noir 1
 stirling silliphant thailand 1
chiang mai to katmandu 1
thailand expat biographies and essays 1
why the world needs writers 1
spirtaul tattoos footprints w kids feet beach by prints 1
never go to thailand 1
people thing lieterature never go to thailand 1
henry miller 1
colin cotterill new book &july 2013 1
left footprint on literature 1
write a short paragraph about a memorable night that you have had 1
what happened to anna from anna jet bar 1
memorable of myself 1
poems about bangkok city thailand 1
people comment of thailand 1
thai lakorn heaven destined love 1
1
professional opportunities in isaan
flicker+bangkok+1970 1
benny goodman + king of thailand 1
people biography spot Thailand 1
christopher g. moore reviews 1
commercial mastercard wet monk 1
i think we ought to read only the kind of books that wound or stab us. if the book we’re reading doesn’t wake us up with a blow to the head, what are we reading for? so that it will make us happy, as you write? good lord, we would be happy precisely if we had no books, and the kind of books that make us happy are the kind we could write ourselves if we had to. but we need books that affect us like a disaster, that grieve us deeply, like the death of someone we loved more than ourselves, like being banished into forests far from everyone, like a suicide. a book must be the axe for the frozen sea within us. that is my belief.” 1
prophets footprint & buddha’s footprint 1
bangkok in literature 1
photo – footprint 1
who left asia and went to thailand 1
maya angelou quotes when i look back, i am so impressed again with the life-giving power of literature. if i were a young person today, trying to gain a sense of myself in the world, i would do that again by reading, just as i did when i was young. 1
1
mook yup 1
muay thai girl (www.muayying.com) 1
 dean barrett book reviews 1
anais nin miller velvet writing 1
knock to the head foot printing 1
bangkok poetry night 2013 1
blog + thailand + 2013 1
black magic rituals south east asia 1
foot print garage song 1
henry+miller+portrait 1
henry miller disgarding people like books 1
what is a bookshelf full of idols called in thailand 1
to buy in bangkok top king muay thai shorts 1
kickuing dogs piprell 1
patpong thailand 1
musical quotes on footprint 1
dohassen gault williams 1
hallinan tim thailand books 1
peoples comments on thailand 1
people places in thailand 1
thailand the people essays 1
leave your footprint quote 1
people biography spot in thailand 1
bangkok+richer+than+cambodia 1
timothy hallinan poke rafferty series 1
i am not a writer blog 1
i am a writer in the world 1
people things and litrature blog 1
henry miller insomnia series 1
“i still love books. nothing a computer can do can compare to a book. you can’t really put a book on the internet. three companies have offered to put books by me on the net, and i said, ‘if you can make something that has a nice jacket, nice paper with that nice smell, then we’ll talk.’ all the computer can give you is a manuscript. people don’t want to read manuscripts. they want to read books. books smell good. they look good. you can press it to your bosom. you can carry it in your pocket.” 1
give me atleast one example of music of thailand 1
thailand quotes in writing 1
henry+miller+two+heads 1
erotic historical characters in thailand 1
thayland people 1
thailand literature essay 1
no more teachers dirty looks 1
mark twain ever visited thailand 1
quotes on good books left 1
the world needs more writers 1
footprint thailand review 1
 john gartland poet 1
patpong
tom vater cambodia  1
melissa ray 1
fabrizio cassetta art 1
thailand footprints 1
footprints of the buddhas of this ers in thailand 1
people things and literature 1
people places and things with literature 1
footprints into the future kids 1
thailand authors in music and art 1
police ranks shoulder flash in thailand 1
impressions of a muay thai fight in thailand 1
cannibalism in thailand pictures reality 1
impression of people in thailand 1
music in thailand 1
literature writing feather 1
henry miller anais nin 1
soong thai menu 1
book impressions essay 1
peoplething literature never go tot thailand 1
essayist from thailand 1
rick hanson buddha’s brain review 1
 nana plaza to soi cowboy how far?  1
foot print quotes 1
poems about bangkok 1
henry miller insomnia 1
description of places like thailand 1
hemingway’s bangkok 1
flucked strings in thailand and their meanings 1
bangkok poetry 1
character name in foot print without feet lesson 1
a psalm of life by henry wadsworth longfellow filipino translation 1
quote of henry miller wallpaper facebook 1
friends in low places original artist
3 Comments

August 12, 2013 is Mother’s Day in Thailand. Happy Mother’s Day to all the mothers and to all that have one. Her Majesty the Queen is indeed considered to be the mother of all Thai people. Please enjoy the video and the day, particularly if you are in Thailand.

bouhoursdamien's avatarIci ou Ailleurs

1aQueen
Happy birthday to Her Majesty Queen Sirikit! Long Live the Queen !
… and Happy Mother’s Day !

 

HM Queen Sirikit of Thailand, the second Queen-Regent in Thai history and the longest serving royal consort in the world, is wife to HM King Bhumibol Adulyadej the Great. She was born in 1932 and married the King in 1950. Her birthday on the 12th of August is also Mother’s Day for all Thai people. Her Majesty the Queen is indeed considered to be the mother of all Thai people.

View original post

1 Comment

burmese-light-cover-front-large

The book launch and signing for BURMESE LIGHT by Hans Kemp and Tom Vater has been set for 6:00 P.M., August 22nd, 2013 at Asia Books Central World. This is a stunningly beautiful book, which I had the good fortune to see shortly after it was released in the Chiang Mai Area a few months ago. This should be a good event. Both Hans Kemp and Tom Vater lead interesting lives in addition to being talented in their selective fields. If futher information is needed feel free to email: ThailandFootprint@gmail.com

Burmese Light 2

 

….a visually stunning look at the cultural, geographic, archaeological and ethnic diversity and beauty of a country only now stepping out of the shadows. – Bangkok Post

 

Leave a comment

Henry Miller Quote August

I struggled in the beginning. I said I was going to write the truth, so help me God. And I thought I was. I found I couldn’t. No-body can write the absolute truth.

Henry Miller

1 Comment

Thomas Hunt Locke is, among other things, a husband, a father, a businessman, an adventurer, an expat living in Thailand and an author. Not necessarily in that order. He’s a transplanted American. An east coast guy, with Boston ties. It is my impression that he has his life priorities in order. Plus, he and his protagonist, Sam Collins both like CheckInn99 whenever they get a chance to come to the City of Angels. What’s not to like? His second Sam Collins mystery, Jim Thompson is Alive! has dropped recently on Amazon.com and will be available in paperback soon. This follows his debut Sam Collins erotic historical mystery, The Ming Inheritance. Thailand Footprint is pleased to welcome Thom Locke as our Footprint Maker interview of the month.

Author, T Hunt Locke creator of the Sam Collins Historical Mysteries series

Author, T Hunt Locke creator of the Sam Collins Erotic Historical Thriller series

TF Welcome, Thom. Tell me when was the first time you came to Thailand, when did you settle here permanently and what was the attraction to the northern part of Thailand, specifically the Chiang Mai area?
.

THL Hi Kevin. I first came to Thailand in the early 1990’s. I was finishing up my grad school work and delivered a paper at a conference in Singapore. I had a few days free afterward so hopped on a bus and headed north. I’m now coming on my 10th anniversary residing in Thailand. Other than a couple of months in Bangkok I have been permanently settled in the north. I don’t live directly in  Chiang Mai anymore but my family and I still make frequent forays into the Rose of the North. The best thing about Chaing Mai, a city I love dearly, is the balance between culture and modernity. I lack for nothing in the modern context, yet I still can meditate in the ancient temple Wat U-Hmong.

TF I enjoy hearing about expats that have chosen to set up a business in Thailand, as well as enjoy the culture and terrain. Tell me about your business, what do you do exactly? Is it full-time, part-time or somewhere in between?  What do you like best about it and how is running a business in Thailand different than it would be back in the USA?
.
THL I have set up the N.U. Test Prep. Center. My main service is to prepare young university lecturers for the IELTS or TOEFL exams. I also prepare doctors for the USMLE (United States Medical Licensing Exam). I also do quite a bit of work in business communication with the local government agencies. I’m not sure if there is a category above full-time but if there was I would check that box. Most foreigner teachers in Thailand don’t want to teach test prep so it is difficult to find good help. So in a way I’ve become the ‘go to’ guy for that in my community. It is rewarding. The best aspect of my job is the quality of people I come in contact with everyday. It provides me with a very optimistic outlook on Thai society. In the States I was a community college lecturer so I’ve little experience with the business field stateside. My experience here has been fantastic.
.
TF  Your protagonist, Sam Collins – what would readers find admirable and likable about him? Does he have any flaws? I don’t like too many standard questions, but I’ll give you one here: how much of Sam Collins is really T. Hunt Locke? Is he a product of your imagination, part you or a composite of many people whom you have known?
.
The Ming Inheritance ecover
.
THL Sam Collins is a retired Boston City Police detective. He was forced into early retirement due to a scandal within the force and the city as a whole. He exacted revenge on a drug lord who had murdered his wife & son. Sam is deeply flawed but I believe readers can admire the way he has put back the pieces of his shattered life. He’ll never be whole again. Still he’s making an effort to lead a productive life. One reviewer tabbed Sam as being half Indiana Jones & half James Bond. I’ll live with that. Through Sam I try to also shine a mirror on expat life. Many ‘farang’ come over here to either forget, escape, or otherwise forge a new life.  Sam is not Thom however.
.
TF The title of your upcoming novel: Jim Thompson is Alive! A Sam Collins Mystery, is a great one. Most farangs who have spent any time in Thailand and certainly most expats living in Thailand year around know at least something about the Jim Thompson real life mystery. I have taken the tour of the Jim Thompson House in Bangkok, on a very rainy day and it was fascinating, not to mention a gorgeous house. For those readers not familiar with the real life mystery, give us a brief history of the real Jim Thompson and then carry that over into how your story-line came about. Did you have to do a lot of research?
.
The Jim Thompson House located in Bangkok, Thailand is well worth a look

The Jim Thompson House located in Bangkok, Thailand is well worth a look

THL Let me begin with the last question. This novel has taken me approximately two years to complete. A great deal of research has been put into my latest work. To step back, Sam Collins novels are erotic historical thrillers. I take each part seriously. The history needs to be well researched otherwise the structure of the plot is weakened. I won’t go in to too much detail, but I conducted several interviews with people who were active in Thailand in the 1960’s. You may know Mama Noi from Check Inn 99. Mama was quite the hot item back in the day and she gave me some fantastic information to provide me with a flavor for that era. The most interesting, surprising perhaps, aspect of the research is the portrait of Jim Thompson which emerges when one digs deep. He is not the person one would expect. My admiration for him grew extensively and in this novel I try deliver that portrait in a way that has not been done before. The William Warren book can rightfully be called a vanity effort. Other efforts as well fall way off the mark. I believe if you read Jim Thompson Is Alive! you’ll find you discover a great deal about the man and his motivations. In addition, much of the novel investigates the United States involvement in the Indo-China war, a conflict that Thompson himself was heavily invested in and at odds with U.S. interests.
.
Picture of real life Jim Thompson

Picture of Jim Thompson before his mysterious disappearance

TF What are the benefits of writing, for you? What do you like most about the process from start to finish to publishing? Tell me what you see as the pros and cons in the current publishing climate for independent novelists like yourself?
.
THL Everything I do in my life is something that I absolutely cherish undertaking. From my family to my business to my hobbies to my writing, I’m invested in something I completely dig. More directly, the benefit of writing for me is that I’m able to carve a good story from history. I love stories & I like history so, I figured, why not give it a go. What I adore most about the process are the characters that emerge. Gemma from my first novel was a complete surprise and Tukky from Jim Thompson Is Alive! is a big surprise to Sam and me as well. In the end, writing is something that I absolutely love in the same way some people are passionate about scuba diving or other challenging hobbies.
.
Thom Locke Skidoo (1)
That being said, my books are not free. So it is important for developing a strategy, a business plan if you will. For me there are no downsides in the DIY publishing age. I’m responsible for everything. I am independent by nature so the way the industry is trending is something that is gratifying. That’s not to say I haven’t made mistakes on the business end. I’m still sorting it out. But it has been fun learning from those mistakes. For example, there is absolutely no upside to signing a contract with a company to put your book online. I can upload the novel directly to Kindle with no middleman. Smashwords I have found to be quite good in that they can connect you to many outlets such as B&N and Sony etc. while charging only a nominal fee.In the end, I find the Amazon age to be a blessing for writers such as myself.
.
TF Who are some of your favorite authors – and you can play it safe and name me only the dead ones or take a risk and name the live ones. The middle path is always good so a mix of the two is also fine. And start with your earliest memories of reading, please.
.
THL I’ve been an avid reader since I broke my ankle as a ten year old. I had to sit out baseball that year. My world had come to an end. But out of the abyss came a boy clutching a book in one hand and his treasured baseball glove in the other. As for my favorite writers well Umberto Ecco would have to top the list. Unfortunately I don’t have a great deal of time to read nowadays with my busy schedule. I recently finished Dissolution by C. J. Sansom. I quite like the Matthew Shardlake series. When I was younger I was addicted to Robert Ludlum novels. Truth be told, I don’t have a favorite writer in the sense I have a favorite rock ‘n roll band.
.
TF I’ve heard it advised that being a writer, is like doing the laundry – it never ends. You finish one book and pretty soon it’s, “What have you done, lately?” So I am guessing that after Jim Thompson is Alive! another project may be in the works? If so, what’s the working title and how will it be different and how will it be similar to the first two Sam Collin’s Mysteries?
.
Thom Locke at Backstreet Books in Chiang Mai

Thom Locke, with daughter, at Backstreet Books in Chiang Mai, pleased to have found one of his favorite authors …

THL I’m folding and pressing my latest as we speak and yeah, I ‘ll begin work on my next project come September. I have a total of ten novels loosely outlined. My next effort will be set in the summertime home of my youth, Cape Cod. It will not be  as sexually charged as the Sam Collins Mystery Series though it will be a historical thriller. The working title is Vinland. I’ll follow that up with another Sam Collins thriller. This will be interesting as it will take Sam out of Thailand. I don’t want to be tied to one locale and I believe Sam gives me great flexibility in that regard.

TF There is a lot of turbulence in the world right now. A lot of dissatisfaction in many different areas. The economy, the political climate, an increasing police state that has been eroding freedoms that you and I have taken for granted for a lifetime as Americans. And yet you come across as a very satisfied individual, that like a lot of expats living in Thailand has taken the road less traveled. Does what is going on in the world today have an impact on your life, in any way, shape or form? And I ask the question because I am genuinely curious about the answer. Some people confuse apathy with focus. I see you as a focused individual.
.
THL It’s an interesting question, Kevin. Tip O’Neill once said all politics is local. Let me just say that I keep my life local. So, in that sense, there is little turbulence or dissatisfaction for me to contend with. Often people involve themselves in so many things they cannot control and in many cases don’t understand. I can control being a good husband/father, a hardworking & successful business owner, and a better writer. Those are my priorities and I try to focus on those pursuits. I also try to have fun in life! Making new friends and developing solid relationships takes precedence over worrying about the state of the global economy. Basically I try to not be an asshole and live the heck out of the one life I’ve been given. In any case I’m an independent so both sides of the political spectrum piss me off!
.

ThomFamily

TF You talked about how your experience with a business in Thailand has been fantastic. Tell me what you like about the Thailand geography, what you like about the Thai people and what you like about Thai culture? Of those three areas, what don’t you like?

THL First, as you know, Thailand is an exquisitely beautiful country. I like to get outside and there is so much to choose from. We try to get into the mountains of Mae Hong Song at least once a year and life would not be complete without at least one trip down south to Krabi or Phuket. Bangkok gets thrown in a couple of times a year as well. That covers a lot of real estate. My wife, being Thai, likes to visit the local shops, markets, and restaurants when visiting such locales. Its a great way to experience the many different cultures that exist within the Thai borders. I think Thai people are generous by nature. Living where I do, off the tourist map as it were, I was a bit of an oddity being one of the few farang around. It was a great way to learn about Thai culture and people. Consider me impressed. If there is one thing I hate about Thailand it is the lack of civility on the roads. Thai drivers are barbaric! And this coming from a Bostonian where bad driving has been elevated to an art form.

TF Thom, we’ve had some fun today. I have a tremendous amount of respect for writers and those writers, like yourself, who write fictional novels. As my guy John Grisham says, “It’s harder than paving asphalt”. So please tell me anything else you would like to, here, that I may have missed about your latest book, but while I am at it, who is your favorite rock n’ roll band? And don’t tell me, Boston.
.
THL Well thank you, Kevin for having me as a guest. As for my favorite rock ‘n roll out-fit that is an easy one. The Kinks! I’ve been a Kinks Kultist since my mid-teens.

Jim Thompson Is Alive! is now available on Amazon.  The paperback will follow in September. I’m beginning work with a Thai film director exploring the possibility of turning this novel into a movie. He’s a good friend and I was happy to hear of his interest. We will meet tonight over 100 Pipers!

Click the cover above to go to Amazon.com USA for more info about JIM THOMPSON IS ALIVE!

Click the cover above to go to Amazon.com USA for more info about JIM THOMPSON IS ALIVE! by T. Hunt Locke

TF Thanks, Thom. I hope to klink glasses with you at CheckInn99 soon.

Leave a comment