Thursday, August 9, 2012

Book Review : “The Fear Artist” by Timothy Hallinan

The Fear Artist

The Fear Artist (Poke Rafferty Thriller)

I spent almost three weeks in Bangkok back in 1973. That was the only time I ever visited…until now. Timothy Hallinan is responsible for this latest trip, and in the middle of a torrential rain no less, with Poke Rafferty for a tour guide. Hallinan knows Thailand well, since he lives there part time, but a lot of people live in a lot of places and can’t impart to the reader the since of immediacy that Hallinan does in his Poke Rafferty novels.

You’ll get wet. You’ll stay wet. You buy and lose umbrellas like you change socks. You’ll drink Singha beer in large bottles. You’ll eat Thai noodles from sidewalk vendors and you’ll weave through pedestrian traffic filled with a melting pot of peoples from all over south east  Asia, India, Australia, England and America. The sense of place is that good. and it should be. Poke Rafferty is a travel writer.

Poke has written what he calls “rough travel” books – Looking for Trouble in the Philippines and Looking for Trouble in Indonesia. He came to Bangkok to write his next book, but fell in love with Rose, the “queen” of the Patpong bars. Together they have adopted a daughter off the mean sidewalks of Bangkok, Miaow. Poke’s life seems to have a will f its own, and at times he feels as if he is in the eye of a typhoon, but Rose and Miaow are his center.

“The Queen Of Patpong” Official Trailer

The Fear Artist is the fifth thriller in the Poke Rafferty series, following the Edgar Nominated The Queen of Patpong. Rafferty is settling into family life and having sent Rose and Miaow to safe ground as Bangkok is in danger of flooding due to relentless rain. He takes the opportunity of having his apartment empty to do a little painting. Carrying two, two gallon cans of paint from the shop, feeling the wire handles cut into his palms and coming to the realization that the four gallons of paint weigh more than he could have imagined. He backs through the doors of the shop on to the wet sidewalk and immediately is bowled over by a very large balding man. The man, Rafferty and two gallons of Apricot Cream and two Gallons of “a sort of rotted eggplant color called ‘Urban Decay – Miaow’s rebellious choice” crash to the sidewalk in the middle of a running crowd.

It takes a moment for Poke to realize that the man has been shot. Before Poke can be whisked away by the security forces who deny, rather forcefully,  the man was shot,  the man gasps out three words in Poke’s ear; “Helen”, “Eckersley” and “Cheyenne”. Rafferty, forced down the street, which he notices is now totally empty – “Bangkok is many things, but it’s never empty”. - and his papers are examined, threats are delivered and barely avoiding arrest Rafferty leaves the scene with what just happened replaying in his mind; the jerk of the body atop his when the bullets first struck. The thrill of having been missed. The odd, somewhat military haircut on the man who he guesses is American. As he makes his way home to his apartment he ponders how so many police could have arrived on the scene so quickly, Bangkok’s traffic does not make for fast response, even with sirens blaring.

A President once said, “The only thing to fear is fear itself”, Now it seems like we’re supposed to be afraid, It’s patriotic in fact and color-coded. And what are we supposed to be afraid of? Why, of being afraid. That’s what terror means, doesn’t it? That’s what it used to mean. – Randy Newman, “A Few Words In Defense of Our Country”

Rafferty arrives back at his apartment, where he has moved all the meager pieces of furniture into the middle of the room in anticipation of painting the walls, but of course the only paint he has now is stuck to his clothing and gobbed in his hair. he attempts to clean himself up, and not being able to accomplish his task, decides to go to a bar. On the way out the door he runs into Andrew, the Vietnamese kid that Miaow has a crush on.

A few hours later, Poke finds his way through the ever-present rain back home only to discover it has been searched. Items moved just barely, but obviously and thoroughly searched.  When there is a knock at the door and it is the tall, arrogant cop from the paint store and he takes Rafferty into custody, he is grilled for hours about what the man said.  But Poke doesn’t really remember, especially when he is half drunk.

Poke is set a drift in a Bangkok that is always looking over its shoulder at the rising level of the Chao Phraya river that threatens the worst flooding since the ‘40s. The city of 14 million is on edge. If the news of Islamic terrorists in the south aren’t enough, the Thai government could fall if they can’t avoid the floods. But the rising water isn’t foremost in Pokes mind as he comes to realize there is nowhere for him to hide from the prying eyes and even his family is threatened.

The second time police show up at his door, he manages a daring and desperate  escape from the rooftop of his  building and begins a new life as a fugitive on the streets. As he learns more about his situation, it becomes apparent that he's been caught up in  the war on terror, and that his opponent is a virtuoso artist  whose medium is fear. This mans talents were honed decades ago where he developed his skills committing atrocities in Vietnam. His only ally is an unemployed spy left over from the Soviet Unions collapse. And he just may be the most untrustworthy ally of all. His only clues, the mans dying words and a laundry ticket.

Hallinan not only writes a relentless-as-the-rain paced thriller, sprinkled with an off beat, cynical humor, but the poignant emotional sides of the characters and the intelligent and beautiful plot and story telling soak the reader’s heart to the skin. The social issues, starkly and honestly portraying the exploitation of women and children will haunt you and lend a sadness but ultimately uplifting side to the story. The theme of the good guys becoming even worse than the bad guys, and the danger of forgetting the lessons of the past strike to the core. This is literary fiction of the first order told in the form of an elegant and intricate thriller.

tim Hallianan

Timothy Hallinan is the Edgar and Macavity nominated author of thirteen critically praised books – twelve novels and a work of nonfiction. In 2011, in the aftermath of the Tsunami and nuclear crisis in Japan, Hallinan edited an ebook of original short stories by twenty mystery writers, SHAKEN: Stories for Japan with all proceeds going to disaster relief. He also contributed a story to the 2011 collection, Bangkok Noir.

Tim currently maintains a house in Santa Monica, California, and apartments in Bangkok, Thailand; and Phnom Penh, Cambodia. He is lucky enough to be married to Munyin Choy-Hallinan.

  • Hardcover: 342 pages Publisher: Soho Crime; First Edition edition (July 17, 2012)
  • Language: English  ISBN-10: 1616951125  ISBN-13: 978-1616951122

Article first published as Book Review : The Fear Artist by Timothy Hallinan on Blogcritics.

 

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