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

Posts tagged ‘Tuttle Publishing’

Can you picture your favorite Thomas Kinkade painting? That was a trick question. Can you picture ANY Thomas Kinkade painting? If you can do either, you’ll need to deviate 180 degrees from where you are to enter the bleak, dark world Jim Algie has painted, with brutal honesty, in his fine collection of short stories, THE PHANTOM LOVER and Other Thrilling Tales of Thailand. (Tuttle Publishing, Singapore 2014). ​The book has been available in Thailand bookstores since the beginning of the year. The Amazon.com release date was February 4, 2014, available in paperback or ebook format.
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The Phantom Lover and Other Thrilling Tales of Thailand by Jim Algie
The Phantom Lover is composed of 9 stories; the shortest being a mere 10 pages about a love affair regarding a male feline temptress with a hair fetish – The Vicious Little Monk. The longest and last is, Tsunami at 113 pages or over 1/3 of the book’s 319 total pages, detailing the devastation – physical and emotional – of the 2004 earthquake and subsequent destructive waves, set in Phuket, Thailand. While the first 8 can  be read in any order, Tsunami is best read last as it uniquely serves as an epilogue, returning many of the previously read characters we have gotten to know in an ambitious, imperfect and entertaining novella-like finale.
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The book starts off well, with a personal favorite: Death Kiss of a King Cobra Show, featuring a Thai snake charmer, Yai. For this dear farang reader Algie’s writing style is refreshing in that he creates believable back stories for the Thai people we may have seen many times but never gotten to know or sadly, made no effort to know. Algie’s prose makes us glad we finally did, whether it is a fictional or semi-true tale – the blanks are filled in beautifully. It came as no surprise to me that the two blurbs on the book are from Thailand’s A List of fictional prose, John Burdett and Christopher G. Moore. Yes, the book has the occasional jar head, bar girl, writer/English teacher that doesn’t stretch the reader’s imagination much, but even they tend to be rougher, tougher and more emotionally intelligent than your standard fare. It is the unique Thai characters, like Yai, that stand out for me in this Haunted Mansion ride of a book.
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The Legendary Nobody, creates a believable character and biography for Thailand’s infamous mass murderer, See Ouey. Mr. Ouey is now famously preserved at the Songkran Niyomsane Forensic Medicine Museum located in Bangkok’s Siriraj Hospital. Another real life character that stands out is found in, Life and Death Sentences. A story about Chaovaret Juruboon, whom Algie memorializes in the beginning as: a rock n’ roller, a drinking buddy and Thailand’s last executioner. Both characters are fascinating based on information anyone could Google but it’s the details, some imagined and some true, filled in by Algie, which gave this reader such an entertaining ride. You may feel nauseated on occasion but you’re glad the ticket stub is in your pocket.
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Algie’s brush strokes include a once innocent bar girl who connived retaliation for all the wrongs inflicted upon her by the sordid, perverse and deviant behavior that exists in the Land of Smiles. It ends badly for one customer. Others describe fruit fornicators, necrophilia jokes, criminal philanthropists, a conflicted photojournalist, an honest but corrupt Bangladeshi human trafficker, and farangs living with their illusions and denials. Or worse yet, not living with them.
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Carl Jung was purported to have said, “Knowing your own darkness is the best method for knowing the darkness of other people.” If true, Jim Algie’s shadow must be pitch black and if not a constant companion a friend he can call upon, when needed. In all that darkness are characters trying to make sense of what appears to be a senseless world, sometimes with sardonic wit, sarcasm and black humor other times with the old reliable’s of kindness and caring coupled with an occasional bout of optimism and faith.
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My nit with Algie’s story telling is that he places some great lines in the narrative that would read well in dialogue. As a result the book is dialogue light. An example in Tsunami, a paragraph starts out with: Big tragedies ask huge questions. It concludes with more narrative around a crackling campfire scene about: God and country, death, democracy and in the end what it all came back to was good friends, family loyalties, and the simple dignity of doing an honest day’s work for an honest day’s pay.  Those are moments that convey good values but where I would have liked to have seen more conversation going on as you can read later in the story when Wade confronts a gloomy Yves:
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 “No offense, bud, but I’m kinda getting the feeling that you’ve, uh … lost it.”
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The exchanges from that point on are great at recapping the effects and affects a mass tragedy like the Tsunami of 2004 had on hundreds of thousands of people. Of all the stories my favorite was, The Obituary for the Kaosan Road Outlaws and Imposters. It recalled a time on Khaosan Road in Bangkok, before it became trendy, when people still used pay phones. The back packers, adventurers and petty crooks who lived there found the living was cheap but not always easy. The 47 page story is a ripper of a yarn about the lives and inhabitants of what is now mostly a bygone era in Bangkok. The scene at the airport depicting the commission of an international felony in a pre-technology boarding pass scam is superb. You feel the fear as you read about the knocking knees.
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The Phantom Lover and Other Thrilling Tales of Thailand has something for almost everybody. If you’re the one with the Thomas Kinkade painting above your couch you’ll probably want to give it a pass. But if your tastes run closer to an oil painting by an artist with a severed ear, a Henry Miller watercolor, a Dali pen and ink, a Chris Coles acrylic or even a thumb-tacked poster of Dogs Playing Poker, these thrilling tales are framed beautifully and make for a great read.
For more information about Jim Algie and his books go to: www.jimalgie.club
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Web Sites are like resumes, they need to be reworked or redone from time to time. On Thailand Footprint a new feature will focus on the web site and social media by a footprint maker who is leaving their mark on Thailand or the region. This month’s feature is someone with an impressive and unconventional resume. Bangkok based, Canadian expatriate, one time punk band bass guitar player and singer/songwriter, travel writer and author, Jim Algie. Jim is a self proclaimed weirdsmith but don’t let that well earned moniker detract you from the fact that he is a top shelf wordsmith as well. This is truth, not embellishment. Having just been in Kinokuniya bookstore at Siam Paragon two days ago, I saw Jim Algie’s best selling collection of nonfiction stories, Bizarre Thailand, on a top shelf location. Kinokuniya is selective about the books they carry. The first printing of Bizarre Thailand, which also occupies a good location on my bookshelf, was published by Marshall Cavendish in late 2010 and sold out by mid 2011. All the stories in Bizarre Thailand have original angles or Algie angles if you prefer. Jim answers the questions that if you never asked, while living in Thailand, you should have asked or would have asked if you had seen what he’s seen.

Bizarre Thailand

In addition to the tales of Crime, Sex and Black Magic you’ll find information about strange celebrities, unusual wildlife and the supernatural. My favorite story involved a visit to a well known fertility shrine in Thailand, full of phallus figures of similar shape but various sizes. There the women can pray for conception and the men can pray to cure bouts of impotence, not necessarily in that order.

Fertility Shrine

Follow the, uh, … brick road to the fertility shrine …

As timing would have it, an author whose book I reviewed recently, Janet Brown and Tone Deaf in Thailand, just did a marvelous book review of Bizarre Thailand.  So, rather than review it myself, I steer you to her review at Once a Bookseller, by clicking on the picture of Jim Algie, below:

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Jim Algie with newly made friend … Jim is the one on the right …

Jim’s web site http://www.jimalgie.com has pages for Books, Films, Music and Travel Tales, among others. Jim makes my Top 5 list of favorite book reviewers living in Thailand and is my #1 favorite movie reviewer living in Thailand. His movie reviews are sometimes more entertaining than the movie itself. It is a great web site, which is also undergoing some changes. It should be part of anyone’s blog roll or surf destination for those living in the Kingdom or with an interest in the weird and wacky, travel and/or South East Asia. To go to Jim’s web site, simply click his image, below:

Jim Algie Profile

Jim Algie in a long tail boat near a mangrove forest in the south of Thailand

Timing may not be everything in life but good timing beats bad most every time. My timing was good on my recent trip to Kinokuniya as I was able to have a very helpful employee locate Jim’s newest book, THE PHANTOM LOVER and Other Thrilling Tales of Thailand. The collection of short stories has a February 2014 release date but will probably be available on the shelves of Thailand bookstores now or in the next 30 days. It is available for pre-order at Amazon.com. Your nearest Indie Bookshop may also be able to pre-order. The Phantom Lover is published by Tuttle out of Singapore. I have already sampled the book by reading, THE LEGENDARY NOBODY, a fictional account with many historical facts blended in about the Thailand legend and serial killer, See Ouey. If the rest of the stories are on par with this one, Jim should expect the first printing of these fictional tales to sell out quickly as well. I hope to review the entire book at a later date. For more information about the book and how to pre-order, click the book cover below:

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The Phantom Lover by Jim Algie. Tuttle Publishing – Singapore

Jim is a longtime resident of the Kingdom of Thailand. His web site offers a wealth of information for old hand expats and newcomers alike. While he is a Thailand veteran he is new to the twitterverse of Twitter. Blowing your own horn comes easier for some authors than others. I suspect that publicity is more of an obligation for Jim Algie not his preferred destination. But he does have a Twitter account and I looked at his tweets today. They showed quality over quantity, which I’ll take every time. His Twitter account name is, @jamiealgie and you can go to his Twitter page by clicking the picture below to begin following Jim. The road less traveled is not the path Jim takes. More often, it’s the path few white foreigners have ever taken in Asia. Follow Jim and let the bizarre times roll:

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Click Jim Algie’s guitar to visit his Twitter page

One other hat Jim Algie wears is as moderator for the Open Group on Facebook called Bizarre Thailand. Click the photo below to take you to Jim’s Group Facebook page. It is a great source of information and entertainment about all things not mundane.

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Go directly to Bizarre Thailand Facebook Open Group – Photo credit: Chiang Mai City News

That is my take on Thailand Footprint maker, author, editor, weirdsmith, ex-punk band guitar player, Twitter rookie and Facebook open group moderator at Bizarre Thailand. Jim is many things but he is never boring and I doubt that he is often bored. Life in the Kingdom is bizarre. Ask any expat who lives here. But for the one who knows it best, ask Jim Algie.

For more information about Jim Algie and his books go to: www.jimalgie.club

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