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Bangkok Haunts (Vintage)
Bangkok Haunts (Vintage)

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Author: John Burdett
Publisher: Vintage
Category: Book

List Price: $13.95
Buy New: $7.89
You Save: $6.06 (43%)



New (36) Used (14) from $6.99

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 43 reviews
Sales Rank: 6743

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 368
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 7.9 x 5.1 x 0.9

ISBN: 1400097061
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN: 9781400097067
ASIN: 1400097061

Publication Date: June 10, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Brand new item. Over 3.5 million customers served. Order now. Selling online since 1995. Order with confidence. Code: B20080828211842T

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Bangkok Haunts
  • Hardcover - Bangkok Haunts
  • Hardcover - Bangkok Haunts
  • Audio CD - Bangkok Haunts
  • Audio Download - Bangkok Haunts (Unabridged)
  • Kindle Edition - Bangkok Haunts

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Sonchai Jitpleecheep, the devout Buddhist Royal Thai Police detective who led us through the best sellers Bangkok 8 and Bangkok Tattoo, returns in this blistering novel.

Sonchai has seen virtually everything on his beat in Bangkok's District 8, but nothing like the snuff film he's just been sent anonymously. Furiously fast-paced and laced through with an erotic ghost story that gives a new dark twist to the life of our hero, Bangkok Haunts more than lives up to the smart and darkly funny originality of its predecessors.



Customer Reviews:   Read 38 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Jitpleecheep Rides Again!!!   June 13, 2007
 24 out of 34 found this review helpful

I loved John Burdett's "Bangkok 8" and "Bangkok Tattoo" thus was anxiously awaiting, "Bangkok Haunts", and I was not disappointed. In many ways, these novels get better and better. In Sonchai Jitpleecheep, Burdett has cast a character like no other in literature. When I rhapsodize about Burdett's Bangkok novels to friends and explain that the protagonist is a Buddhist detective who co-owns a whorehouse in Thailand with his mother...they DO look incredulous! But I was hooked from the first pages of the first book.

"Bangkok Haunts" is rich with all the things I loved about the other novels; descriptions of Thai culture, cuisines, religion, history...traffic...the sex trade...ghosts...foreigners...Burdett makes fascinating the not-so-subtle differences between the "Western" and the "Thai" mind-set. This is the kind of stuff that both entertains and enlightens. I don't often agree with Burdett's/Jitpleecheep's opinions on the efficacy prostitution and corruption, but I am always intrigued, interested and better informed for having thought things through. My only quibble with the plot is the frustrating and incomprehensible relationship between Kimberly (the FBI) and Sonchai's trans-gender partner, Lek. I'll suspend my irritation for now, though; maybe that's the next book!



5 out of 5 stars Another ride through the amazing mind of Detective Jitpleecheep   June 28, 2007
 16 out of 18 found this review helpful

The third is the best, as John Burdett returns us to Bangkok and inside the mind of Detective Sonchai Jitpleecheep in this followup to two previous journeys of the extraordinary kind.

The same circle of characters is here, his mother who runs the prostitute pick-up bar; his boss, Col. Vikorn of the Royal Thai Police, also a part owner of the bar, and his female FBI friend who arrives from the US to help solve the crime. They are merely props this time to the story of Sonchai's love affair with Damrong and her demise. Sonchai's continuing erotic experiences with her spirit after death drives him all over Bangkok and to Cambodia a couple of times in pursuit of the killers.

Burdett weaves another story of incredible breadth and depth, a mystery based on sex, enlightenment, some Buddhist thoughts, and pure shock to the conventional Western mind. It is so alien, most times, to American thought and Judaic-Christian morality, that this becomes a fantasy travelling in an eroticized fun house.

Although this is best of the series, you might enjoy it better after starting at the beginning, as the character development builds in several directions, especially with regards to his former assistant and his new one, a transsexual soon to undergo the knife.

The Western morality tale is fairly conventional, as the good guys win; but the Eastern morality is not so certain, did the good guys really win?




4 out of 5 stars "What monsters are we creating?"   June 18, 2007
 11 out of 25 found this review helpful



Working in Bangkok, devoted Buddhist Royal Thai Police detective Sonchai Jitpleecheep believes he has witnessed every depravity known to man; but after viewing a snuff film with a twisted ending, the detective is once more appalled by man's inhumanity to man. In Jitpleecheep's third outing (Bangkok 8, Bangkok Tattoo), Burdett offers an inside view of a different reality, a country driven by enterprise without the banal rationalization of Western mentality. Sonchai views the world at large through a perspective of "functional barbarism": greased by advanced technology, our motives are barbaric, driven entirely by greed. With the aid of FBI Agent Kimberley Jones, currently assigned to uncovering the perpetrators of snuff films, Sonchai admits that the woman brutally murdered in the video is Damrong, his former lover. Currently in a healthier relationship with Chanya, a pregnant ex-prostitute, the detective has never quite recovered from a stormy affair with the murdered woman.

Sharing part ownership in the Old Man's Club with his mother, Sonchai supplements his income with long hours at the bar, an accepted practice for most underpaid police. The bar scene is changing, all-nude dancers replacing the tease of strippers, the city's decadence reaching new lows as exhibited in the video. Even the fate of the disturbing snuff film is at risk; Jitpleecheep personally delivers the disk to Agent Jones for retinal analysis lest someone in the Thai police seize an opportunity to sell it on the internet. Third-world countries are infinitely creative when a few dollars profit means survival: "For the poor, birth is the primary disaster." In this case, Sonchai must avail himself of the resources of Colonel Vikorn, the chief of District 8. The corrupt Colonel has much interest in the increasing decadence of the West and its potential.

As the old makes way for the new in a technologically advanced society, the past remains obdurate. Ancestry has its own demands, as does an ancient belief in the ghost world, the faces of the dead crowding out the living. The forensic pathologist doing the autopsy on Damrong spends her off hours filming the antics of this ghost world, a fact Dr. Supatra and Sonchai hasten to obfuscate before the disbelieving farang eyes of Agent Jones. While Agent Jones faces the angst of unrealized and misplaced passion in the katoey world, accepting finally the alternate universe that she discovers in Thailand, Sonchai makes difficult choices, falling from grace for a time, but resurfacing via his enterprising nature. Meanwhile the once-marginalized porn industry, greedily absorbed by corporations, saturates the internet.

In what is both a chilling mystery and indictment of civilization's continuing exploitation of the disenfranchised, Burdett once again captures the essence of Bangkok, corruption balanced with survival. The relentless wheels of commerce roll on, obliterating those who serve as fodder for profit. The bottom line has no conscience, yet the well-meaning continue to actively inhabit their daily lives, incorruptible men like Jitpleecheep fighting to prevail. In the words of the elusive monk, Gamon: "Love is the foundation of human consciousness...It's our constant betrayal of it that makes us crazy." (Note: Do not miss the shocking Appendix.) Luan Gaines/2007.





5 out of 5 stars Exotic thriller that will take you to a different place....   June 20, 2007
 11 out of 11 found this review helpful

I picked this book up last week as I always enjoy a good mystery in an exotic setting and this one filled bill on a number of levels. First off the writing, plotting and character development are excellent. It also is a tight mystery/thriller that kept me guessing, but more importantly this book truly takes the reader to another world. Sonchai Jitpleecheep, is a police detective, a Buddhist and a part owner in a whorehouse. Starting to get the picture? The story starts out with Sonchai showing a female FBI agent, who is also an old friend, a horrific film of an old lover of Sonchai's being murdered. The story takes off from here and there is nothing traditional about this book. I don't want to say more and spoil your fun. But if you are looking for something different this is the book for you! I now have to go back and read this authore earlier books: Bangkok Tattoo Bangkok 8: A Novel.


5 out of 5 stars John Burdett continues to satisfy   June 27, 2007
 8 out of 8 found this review helpful

Detective Sonchai Jitpleecheep, a member of the Royal Thai Police force, is perhaps the only Bangkok cop not on the take in one of the most corrupt police departments in Southeast Asia. The Buddhist monk son of an infamous Thai madam and a Vietnam-era American soldier is detective fiction's most complex cop, as enigmatic and exotic as his nearly unpronounceable name. We john met the multicultural Sonchai in BANGKOK 8 and BANGKOK TATTOO, John Burdett's two bestselling novels that so vibrantly bring to life one of the world's oldest and most fascinating cultures.

In this third installment, Sonchai has settled down in domestic happiness with his pregnant girlfriend in his modest Bangkok apartment. He finds on his doorstep a hand-addressed package. In it is a snuff porn film starring Damrong, a well-known prostitute who once worked in his mother's Cowboy District brothel, with whom he had carried on a brief dalliance. When he checks on her whereabouts, he discovers she is missing and comes to the realization that the killing was not an act --- the murder portrayed in the film was genuine and performed live in front of the cameras.

Damrong's ghost begins to haunt Sonchai's dreams as he launches an investigation into the identity of the film's producers. Over the objections of his superior, General Vikorn, he calls on his FBI colleague, American Kimberley Jones, for help after he learns that she is in Thailand following a lead on the growing number of snuff films being produced in the increasingly lucrative Southeast Asian sex trade. Together they hunt down the highly placed officials and businessmen at the top of a billion-dollar porn industry.

Sonchai's relationship with General Vikorn, who is the epitome of elegant corruption with a penchant for exquisite art collections and high living, is a study in Sonchai's ability to adapt his stringent Buddhist faith and its karmic effects to the harsh realities of crime fighting.

BANGKOK HAUNTS is the darkest of the three novels, which all provide a fascinating portrayal of modern life in Thailand. The clash between East and West is nowhere more deftly portrayed than by Burdett, whose longtime residency in this multicultural society provides him with the background for vivid authenticity in his literate portrayal of its people. The reader is treated to a splendid, intricately plotted thriller replete with the sounds, smells, cuisine and fascinating examination of Buddhism that is at the core of everyday Thai life.

Newly arrived among the venerable handful of literary detective mystery writers, such as James Lee Burke, P.D. James and Elizabeth George, John Burdett continues to satisfy with a series character who grows with each page-turning novel.

--- Reviewed by Roz Shea


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