Bangkok 8 by John BurdettBangkok 8 by John Burdett
Narrator: B. D. Wong
Series: Sonchai Jitpleecheep #1
Published by Random House Audio on June 3, 2003
Genres: Mystery
Length: 12 hrs 17 mins
Format: Audiobook
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four-half-stars

Electrifying, darkly comic, razor-edged—a thriller unlike any other.
Under a Bangkok bridge, inside a bolted-shut Mercedes: a murder by snake—a charismatic African American Marine sergeant killed by a methamphetamine-stoked python and a swarm of stoned cobras.

Two cops—the only two in the city not on the take—arrive too late. Minutes later, only one is alive: Sonchai Jitpleecheep—a devout Buddhist, equally versed in the sacred and the profane—son of a long-gone Vietnam War G.I. and a Thai bar girl whose subsequent international clientele contributed richly to Sonchai’s sophistication.

Now, his partner dead, Sonchai is doubly compelled to find the murderer, to maneuver through the world he knows all to well—illicit drugs, prostitution, infinite corruption—and into a realm he has never before encountered: the moneyed underbelly of the city, where desire rules and the human body is no less custom-designable than a raw hunk of jade. And where Sonchai tracks the killer—and a predator of an even more sinister variety.

Bangkok 8 has been on my to-read list for a while, and I finally got around to picking up the audio from the library. Let’s be honest, it was an obvious choice for me. It’s a mystery in an exotic locale and the detective has a philosophical streak.

The murder itself was unique – the snakes in a locked car- and although it’s a shame that Sonchai’s partner was killed too, it was the only reason the crime was actually investigated thoroughly. The cops in Bangkok are mostly corrupt and add in that the US government would really rather at least one of the suspects not be looked at too closely, they likely would have let it drop. Sonchai can’t though and his search for the truth leads us across the city and has us meet drug dealers, prostitutes, and business owners from a variety of backgrounds with a variety of vices and interests.

Sonchai is a complicated man. He’s the son of a prostitute and American soldier, but he’s traveled the world, is fluent in multiple languages, including English, loves quality clothing and perfumes. He spouts Buddhist philosophy and can be encouraged to dance on-stage. He’s not my favorite of detectives, but I do love his contradictions.

I got caught up in the book. The culture and religion, the characters, the justifications of prostitution and for cops taking bribes – it’s a different world than I live in. I don’t know how well it actually represents the Thai people or Buddhism, but I was engrossed. Even the ending worked. People have so many sides, good and bad, but they are more who they are than in lots of European/American settings. They are more open and are allowed to be both pimps and lovers of literature, cop and part-owner of a brothel. Secrets are more open, and even the ones that people try to keep hidden have been caught on video.

I’m looking forward to listening to the next in the series. I liked listening to the audio; it always works well for me when in print I would stumble over the names of places and people, or just glance over them.

About John Burdett

John Burdett practiced law for 14 years in London and Hong Kong until he was able to retire to write full time. He has lived in France, Spain, Hong Kong and the U.K. and now commutes between Bangkok and Southwest France.

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