Lynn Harnett - Mostly Fiction (The Godfather of Kathmandu)
Sonchai Jitpleecheep, pot-smoking Bangkok cop, devout Buddhist and occasional crime abettor, begins his fourth adventure in one of the city’s most popular red light districts, where a wealthy American filmmaker has been murdered in the style of the Hannibal Lecter books on his shelf.
Son of a Thai prostitute (now a Madam) and an American father he has never met, Sonchai, with his English skills and Western sensibilities, is considered most apt for the job. And indeed he is, immediately making the connection between the victim’s books and the hidden cannibalistic aspects of his death.
Sonchai takes no pleasure in this triumph over his ambitious colleague, Detective Sukum, however. He has recently lost his 6-year-old son in a traffic accident and his grief-stricken wife, Chanya, has become a Buddhist nun. “The grim mechanical rituals of the world grind on, monochrome now, and entirely without interest to me; although Lek keeps assuring me I’m going to snap out of it sooner or later.”
For Sonchai, only frequent applications of marijuana and his new Tibetan guru, Tietsin, make life bearable. The Tibetan is not just an immensely powerful, mind-reading lama exiled to Nepal for his revolutionary zeal – he’s also a major heroin trafficker. Sonchai met him at the behest of his boss, Colonel Vikorn, who is trying to gain total control of Bangkok’s illegal trade – currently shared with his archrival, General Zinna. Tietsin claims he is putting the proceeds of his heroin deals into the Free Tibet fight against China.
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