Bangkok Tattoo: A Royal Thai Detective Novel (2)
Bangkok Tattoo: A Royal Thai Detective Novel (2) book cover

Bangkok Tattoo: A Royal Thai Detective Novel (2)

Paperback – July 11, 2006

Price
$13.44
Format
Paperback
Pages
320
Publisher
Vintage Crime/Black Lizard
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1400032914
Dimensions
5.17 x 0.67 x 8 inches
Weight
8 ounces

Description

“An original, imaginative thriller. . . . Burdett writes like a dark angel.” – Chicago Tribune “You will read on and on, with wide-eyed fascination, some horror. . . and considerable delight. . . . If you’re looking for a good time, look no further.” – The Washington Post Book World “Mesmerizing: a comic tour of the underbelly of Bangkok in pursuit of both a murderer and the sublime.”– The New Yorker From the author of the best seller "Bangkok 8, a head-spinning new novel that puts us back in the company of the inimitable Royal Thai Police detective Sonchai Jitpleecheep. We return to District 8--the underbelly of Bangkok's underworld--where a dramatically mutilated dead body is found. It's bad: he was CIA. It gets worse: the murderer appears to be Chanya--a tough, sweet working girl who's the highest earner at The Old Man's Club, jointly owned by Sonchai's mother and his boss, Police Colonel Vikorn. Alerted by Sonchai, Vikorn quickly concocts a cover-up that involves Al Qaeda and Thailand's porous southern border where, since 9/11, the CIA has been an obviously covert presence. But the truth will be harder to come by, and it will require Sonchai to find an ever-more-delicate balance between his ambition and his Buddhism, while running the gamut of Bangkok's drug dealers, prostitutes, bad cops, worse military, and the pitfalls of his own melting heart (Chanya!)--most of which he can handle. But even Sonchai is not prepared for what he discovers at the end of his investigation. Piercingly smart and funny, densely atmospheric, and--as we already know to expect from John Burdett--packing a surprise at every turn, "Bangkok Tattoo is sensational. John Burdett is a nonpracticing lawyer who worked in Hong Kong for a British firm until he found his true vocation as a writer. Since then, he has lived in France and Spain and is now back in Hong Kong. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Killing customers just isn’t good for business.”My mother Nong’s tone reflects the disappointment we all feel when a star employee starts to go wrong. Is there nothing to be done? Will we have to let dear Chanya go? The question can only be decided by Police Colonel Vikorn, who owns most of the shares in the Old Man’s Club and who is on his way in his Bentley.“No,” I agree. Like my mother’s, my eyes cannot stop flicking across the empty bar to the stool where Chanya’s flimsy silver dress (just enough silk to cover nipples and butt) drapes and drips. Well, the dripping was slight and is more or less finished (a rusty stain on the floor turning black as it dries), but in more than a decade as a detective in the Royal Thai Police, I have never seen a garment so blood-soaked. Chanya’s bra, also hideously splattered, lies halfway up the stairs, and her panties—her only other garment—lie abandoned on the floor outside the upstairs room where, eccentrically even for a Thai whore, she has taken refuge with an opium pipe.“She didn’t say anything at all? Like why?”“No, I told you. She dashed in through the door in a bit of a state holding an opium pipe, glared at me, said, ‘I’ve done him in,’ ripped off her dress, and disappeared upstairs. Fortunately, there were only a couple of farang in the bar at the time, and the girls were fantastic. They merely said, ‘Oh, Chanya, she goes like that sometimes,’ and gently ushered them out. I had to play the whole thing down, of course, and by the time I got to her room, she was already stoned.”“What did she say again?”“She was tripping on the opium, totally delirious. When she started talking to the Buddha, I left to call you and the Colonel. At that stage I didn’t know if she’d really done him in or was freaking out on yaa baa or something.”But she’d snuffed him all right. I walked to the farang’s hotel, which is just a couple of streets away from Soi Cowboy, and flashed my police ID to get the key to his room. There he was, a big muscular naked American farang in his early thirties, minus a penis and a lot of blood from a huge knife wound that began in his lower gut and finished just short of his rib cage. Chanya, a basically decent and very tidy Thai, had placed his penis on the bedside table. At the other end of the table, a single rose stood in a plastic mug of water.There was nothing for it but to secure the room for the purposes of forensic investigation, leave a hefty bribe for the hotel receptionist—who is now more or less obliged to say whatever I tell him to say (standard procedure under my Colonel Vikorn in District 8)—and await further orders. Vikorn, of course, was in one of his clubs carousing, probably surrounded by naked young women who adored him, or knew how to look as if they did, and in no mood to be dragged to the scene of a crime until I penetrated his drunken skull enough to explain that the business at hand was not an investigation per se but the infinitely more challenging forensic task so lightly spoken of as a “cover-up.” Even then he showed no inclination to shift himself until he realized it was Chanya (the perp, not the victim).“Where the hell did she get the opium?” my mother wants to know. “There hasn’t been opium in Krung Thep since I was a teenager.”I know from her eyes that she is thinking fondly of the Vietnam War, when she was herself a working girl in Bangkok and a lot of the GIs brought small balls of opium from the war zone (one of them being my almost-anonymous father, of whom more later). An opiated man is more or less impotent—which reduces much of the wear and tear on a professional’s assets—and not inclined to argue about fee structure. Nong and her colleagues had always shown special interest in any American serviceman who whispered that he had a little opium back in his hotel. Being devout Buddhists, of course, the girls never used the stuff themselves, but they encouraged the john to get stoned out of his tree, whereupon they would extract exactly the agreed fee from his wallet, plus a tip somewhat on the generous side to reflect the risk inherent in associating with drug abusers, plus taxi fare, and return to work. Integrity has always been a master word for Nong, which is why she is so upset about Chanya.We both know the Colonel is arriving in his limo, because his damned signature tune “The Ride of the Valkyries” is booming from the stereo as his car approaches. I go to the entrance and watch while his driver opens the rear door and more or less pulls him out (a beautiful cashmere Zegna sports jacket, fawn colored and somewhat crumpled, pants by Eddy Monetti on the Via Condotti in Rome, and his usual Wayfarer wraparound sunglasses).The driver staggers toward me with Vikorn’s arm over his shoulder. “It’s fucking Saturday fucking night,” the driver complains with a glare, as if it’s all my fault. (We prefer not to investigate even capital crimes on Saturday nights in District 8.) The Buddhist path can be much like the Christian in that the karma of others often seems to get dumped on your shoulders from out of nowhere.“I know,” I tell him as I make way to let him pass, and Vikorn, sunglasses now thrust fashionably onto his hairline though slightly askew, also glares at me blearily.There are padded benches in intimate little booths along the back wall of the club, and the driver dumps Vikorn down in one while I get some mineral water from the fridge and hand it to my Colonel, who empties the bottle in a few swigs. It is with relief that I observe the rodent cunning return to those frank, unblinking eyes. I tell him the story again, with a few commercially focused interjections from my mother (“she makes more for us in a month than all the other girls put together”), and I see that he already has a plan to maximize wriggle-room should things get difficult.Within ten minutes he is close to sober, tells his driver to disappear with the limo (he doesn’t want to broadcast that he is here), and is staring at me. “So let’s go up and take her statement. Get an ink pad and some A4 paper.”I find the ink pad that we use for our business stamp (“The Old Man’s Club—Rods of Iron”) and some sheets of paper from the fax machine, which Nong installed for those few of our overseas clients who don’t have e-mail (we tried for hooker.com and similar domain names, but they had all been taken, including oldman.com; whore.org had of course been taken since the dawn of cyberspace, so we had to make do with omcroi.com), and follow him across the bar. He stares at Chanya’s dress on the stool and cocks an eye at me.“Versace.”“Fake or real?”Gingerly I hold it up, hefting the weight of the blood it has absorbed. “Unclear.”He grunts much as Maigret used to do, as if absorbing a clue too subtle for my understanding, and we continue up the stairs, passing the bra without comment. I pick up the panties on the floor outside the room (almost weightless and apparently innocent of bloodstains—they are more a cache-sex than a proper undergarment, with the rear panel no more than a bootlace that divides the buttocks). I hang them over a stray electrical cable for now. Chanya was too stoned to lock the door, and when we enter, she blesses us with a rapturous smile from that awesomely beautiful mouth, before returning to whichever of the Buddha heavens she has escaped to.She is quite naked, stretched out on the bed with her legs akimbo, her full firm breasts pointing at the ceiling (an exquisite blue dolphin is jumping over her left nipple), her long hair shining like a fresh black brushstroke on the white pillow. She has shaved her pubic hair save for the subtlest filigree black line, which seems to point to her clitoris, perhaps as a road sign for drunk and fumbling farang. The opium pipe, a classic of about three feet of bamboo with the bowl two-thirds of the way down, lies beside her. The Colonel sniffs and smiles—as with my mother, the sweet aroma of burned poppy sap holds fond memories for him, though of a radically different order. (He used to trade it up in Laos in the golden years of the B-52s.) The room is tiny and hardly big enough for the three of us when I bring two chairs and set them on opposite sides of the bed. The sex goddess between us begins to snore while Vikorn dictates her statement:“ ‘The farang had been drinking even before he came into my club. He called me over to join him at his table and offered to buy me a drink. I accepted a Coca-Cola while he drank’—ah, let’s see—‘nearly a full bottle of Mekong whiskey. He did not seem to be able to take alcohol very well and seemed confused and disoriented. When he offered to pay my bar fine and take me back to his hotel, I told him he was too drunk, but he insisted, and my papasan, one Sonchai Jitpleecheep, asked me as a special favor to go with the farang, who was very big and muscular and seemed likely to cause trouble if I didn’t.’ ”“Thanks,” I say.“ ‘He struck me as a man with many problems and talked rather abusively about women, especially American women, whom he called cunts. I think perhaps he had had a relationship that had gone badly wrong and that left him with very strong feelings of bitterness toward all women, even though he claimed to like Asian women, who he said were much kinder and gentler than farang women and more womanly. When we reached his room, I suggested to him that he was perhaps too drunk to make love and that it would be better if I went back to my club. I even offered to give him back my bar fine, but he grew angry and said he could fuck all night and pushed me into the room. He ordered me to undress, and I did so. I was now quite frightened because I had seen a large knife’—do we have the murder weapon?”“A large knife, as a matter of fact—looks like a military thing, solid steel with about a twelve-inch blade. I left it in the hotel room for now.”“ ‘An enormous military-type weapon lying on a bedside table. He started to tell me what he would do to my body if I didn’t gratify his desires. He stripped naked and threw me on the bed, but he seemed unable to get an erection. He started to masturbate to make himself big, then made me turn over onto my front. It was then I realized that he intended to sodomize me. I begged him not to because I never do that sort of thing, and his member now was so big I was sure he would injure me. Still he insisted, without using a condom or a lubricant, and the pain was so great I started to scream. He became very angry and grabbed a pillow to try to stifle my screams, whereupon I completely lost control of my mind because I was sure he would kill me. Luckily I was able to reach the knife, which I swung around behind me while he was still inside me. By chance I seem to have severed his penis. He went into shock at first and stood up, hardly able to believe what had happened. He kept staring at his penis, which was lying on the floor near the bed (it popped out of me and must have fallen off him when he stood up), then he let out a terrible bestial yell and jumped on top of me. I had turned over onto my back, and unfortunately I was still holding the knife in both hands in a vertical position, and it penetrated his lower abdomen when he landed. His struggles only made the wound bigger. I did what I could to save his life, but it took some time to push him off me because he was very heavy. I was too much in shock to call the police, until I realized he was dead and then it was too late. All I could do to show respect was to pick up his penis and put it on the bedside table. My dress and bra had been on the bed and were soaked in blood. I had to put them on before I could leave the room. When I got back to the bar, I stripped off my clothes and ran up to the comfort rooms, where I took a powerful tranquilizer and lost consciousness.“ ‘This statement was taken by Police Colonel Vikorn and Detective Jitpleecheep of Royal Thai Police District 8 while I was in full possession of my faculties. It is true to the best of my knowledge and belief, in testimony of which I hereby set my right thumb print.’ ”I open the ink pad and roll her thumb over the ink, then onto the bottom of the paper. Vikorn, a consummate professional, has neatly ended her report without the need for a second page.“Anything I’ve left out?”“No,” I say in awe. The statement is a masterly mosaic of several standard stories from the Game, artfully interwoven with great economy of language. Still more remarkable in a cop who carries his legal scholarship so lightly, he has laid the foundations for an impregnable defense to a charge of murder or even manslaughter: she used only such force as was necessary to save her life and did not deliver the fatal blow; when she saw how badly he was wounded, she attempted without success to save his life; and she expressed sorrow and respect by her sensitive placing of his severed member in a position of honor. The dead farang’s standard-issue hatred of the opposite sex arising from bitter personal experience of his own countrywomen provides a motive for his aggression and his sexual preferences. “I think you’ve covered everything.”“Good. Give her a copy when she wakes up, and make sure she memorizes it. If there’s anything she wants to change, tell her she can’t.”“D’you want to visit the scene of the crime?”“Not really. Anyway, it wasn’t a crime, so don’t prejudice justice by calling it that. Self-defense is not illegal, especially when by a woman on a Saturday night in Krung Thep.”“Still, I think you’d better come,” I say. He grunts irritably but stands up anyway and jerks his chin in the general direction of the street. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Detective Sonchai Jitpleecheep of the Royal Thai Police returns in his riveting and smokily atmospheric new thriller.A farang–a foreigner–has been murdered, his body horribly mutilated, at the Bangkok brothel co-owned by Sonchai’s mother and his boss. The dead man was a CIA agent. To make matters worse, the apparent culprit is sweet-natured Chanya, the brothel’s top earner and a woman whom the devoutly Buddhist sleuth has loved for several lifetimes. How can Sonchai solve this crime without sending Chanya to prison? How can he engage in a cover-up without endangering his karma? And how will he ever get to the bottom of a case whose interested parties include American spooks, Muslim fundamentalists, and gangsters from three countries? As addictive as opium, as hot as Sriracha chili sauce, and bursting with surprises,
  • Bangkok Tattoo
  • will leave its mark on you.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(210)
★★★★
25%
(175)
★★★
15%
(105)
★★
7%
(49)
23%
(162)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Farang, John Burdett really needs to get off his barstool and learn about Thailand

I read the first few pages at a friend's house (in Bangkok) and thought this might be better than Bangkok 8, so I went out and bought a copy for my flight home. Burdett's previous novel was a good read despite a heavy dose of Thai stereotypes. Unfortunately, "Tattoo" quickly descends into a poorly informed anthropology lesson about Thailand that meanders through a high concept plot that also concerns things Burdett knows little about. The plot builds on two common SE Asian stores and 1990s headlines about the CIA. The first story line is a variation on a common and truth based Thai tale: the violent death of a US GI/sailor/Marine, whose body is found in a divey bar or sleazy hotel after a joint US-Thai military maneuver (if it happens in Bangkok) or a large organized R&R (if it happens in Pattaya). This happens about once a year and an old colleague of mine used to be the guy who had to handles these. Burdett turns the GI/sailor/Marine into a CIA agent, who seems to be a cross between Graham Greene's Quiet American (based on an actual CIA agent) and Forrest Gump. Story element #2 is a variation on the "Air America" legend of CIA operations in Laos financed by opium dealing, which has been raised and to varying degrees, debunked over the last 30 years. Finally, Burdett adds CIA agents turning for money. Unfortunately, he knows little how CIA agents are recruited, what motivates them or how much they're paid. His agents are oafish characters who make the dead agent look like a genius.

Along the way, Burdett uses his tiresome and didactic "Farang..." device to give us various pieces of misinformation about Thailand. Muslim Malaysians appear where ethnic Chinese Malay usually predominate (the border massage parlors Sungai Golok), Western sex tourists pop up in places where Westerners are rarities, and the description of working girls from NE Thailand borrows from the mythology of young women from the villages of a different region where sex work came to be something of a cottage industry. The Isaan women who serve foreigners come from a different world where they are much less tied to the village, much less respected there, and much more interested in ending up with a foreigner. In one spot, Burdett can't decide if he's in Patpong (which features "ping pong shows" is for tourists) or Soi Cowboy (which is more sedate and for expats) some distance away. These kinds of details wouldn't aggravate if Burdett was less interested in telling us over and over again what he "knows".

Ultimately the plot falls apart with its cartoonish CIA gents (who would be better cast as small town or suburban cops in a xenophobic place like Indiana), its ludicrous assumptions about their motives (Burdett thinks a PhD holding case officer would make as much as a senior administrative assistant), and the tiresome use of his "Farang..." storytelling device. Burdett is skilled in the use of stereotypes about people from the US, although his fellow Brits only do slightly better.

Bangkok has had an explosion of really lame fiction and non-fiction written by expats and graduate students over the past decade. It's entertaining place full of paradoxes, sleaze, corruption, cuteness (the sappy popular culture never seems to make into books), and unexpected places of tranquility. It certainly deserves a decent book and definitely deserves something better than this smug string of cliches and misinformation.
16 people found this helpful
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Insulting

Every page insults with racism, romanticized prostitution and corruption. Burdett's first book, 'Bangkok 8', gave insight into the Thai culture through the character of devout Buddhist Sonchai. In this book, Papasan Sonchai has clearly left the Path.
9 people found this helpful
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Repetitious Tripe

"Tell me Farang", how does it feel to know you threw ten bucks down the toilet. Burdett's first effort was a heroic surprise and garners a charitable 2 stars for this throwaway -- a cynical, cloyish, BORING effort to rake in the cash. A singular dearth of ideas, uncommonly purple prose, and a patronizing view of Thais and Farang alike. Look, if you need a vicarious make-believe Thai thrill whose extreme literary pretentiousness raises it just above a virtual Patpong hand-job, then, well, plunk down your chips and -- the real price tag -- your precious time. I'd awaited this follow-up eagerly. Now I think it would be a tender mercy if Burdett returned to lawyering and laid down his pen.
5 people found this helpful
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Just skip it

Ok like everyone else I loved Bangkok 8... but the characters we know and loved from the first book return here only to insult the reader. Which might have been forgivable had the rest of the book actually been well written which it was not. There was no action no intrigue or even a mystery. The narative is disjointed and in the middle of the book is a very long section of a Thai hooker's exploits in America, completely ignoring Sanchai for nearly 100 pages. So in the end this book was pretty pointless if only to call the reader a dumb Farang on every page.
4 people found this helpful
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Very happy to have found this author!

After reading this book, I sent copies to my 23- and 26-year old sons, who plan to go to Thailand for Christmas. I warned them that this might change their plans--they might just take the next flight out. This author is a real find. His characters are interesting and complex, and his love for the country and people is obvious. When I read a detective story, I don't want to be able to figure out the ending, but I want the author to be "fair"--not to point me to paths the story is never going to take just to keep me guessing. This is such a story. I loved it. After reading this one, the second of the series, I read the first and pre-ordered the third. Oh yeah--should say that there is some gruesomeness involved if that bothers anyone. E.D.
4 people found this helpful
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Sequel to the Instant Classic

This isn't as great as its predecessor, but its still flavorful, perverse and compelling. But I must say that Sonchai seems different from the earlier book. Here he's not quite as thoughtful, his religious musings don't seem as authentic. He's more cynical and jaded - pun intended.
3 people found this helpful
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Awesome!

Burdett knows Bangkok and Thai culture and expertly weaves it into this wonderful, sexy, underground, intellectural whodunnit. Pick it up and you won't put it down. and then when you are finished, you'll crave more!
3 people found this helpful
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Excellent, Like a Japanese Tattoo

Wonderful book by Burdett. I liked it better than Bangkok 8, which I felt was a little too intense and raggedy. This book is intense also, but with greater clarity. I thought the characters were better developed; the plot, though more byzantine and exhuberant, easier to follow. But of course, the star of the book is Bangkok. What a fascinating city! The author's ability to create a (mostly) honest cop, deeply immersed in Buddhism, and steer him through a kaleidoscope of conflicting, shifting cultural boulders to a believeable and compelling ending, is truly a literary tour de force. Very enjoyable book.
2 people found this helpful
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A worthy follow-up to Bangkok 8

As a sequal to Burdett's first novel set in Thailand , Bangkok Tattoo provides a good plot , more bizarre twists and turns then the first book did, and more characters who live in and around the seedy red light industries of Bangkok. As in the first book Americans, specifically CIA agents are used as foils to draw cultural distinctions and to provide some of the mystery and suspense that drives the action.

Burdett writes well, with a healthy dose of humor added in to make his novels entertaining and relatively quick reads.
2 people found this helpful
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Sonchai's Back!

Imagine my surprise when I saw Bangkok Tattoo in the new release section. I snatched that bad boy up right away! I was really excited for another chance to read more about Sonchai, my favorite police detective in the Eastern hemisphere. Another great noir read. The book is well written, characters are well developed and the pace is one in which you can allow yourself to be immersed in the story and Thai culture. I like that Sonchai really wants to be and is a good person but realizes that human morality isn't so black and white and is more gray and murky than most people are willing to admit. Great book!
2 people found this helpful