CrackdownIn this highly inventive and original Calvino novel, Christopher G. Moore immerse the reader in the noir street life of Bangkok. The journey places you inside a cat and mouse game in the shadowy battleground where art, politics, and rebellion collide in a symphony of intrigue and danger. Set against the backdrop of a post-coup Thailand, behind the city's once-colorful landscape lurks an oppressive presence of a surveillance state and the influence of powerful oligarchs.Khmer Refugees cower in the hidden corners of an abandoned building in the heart of Bangkok. They seek invisibility from the all-seeing eye of the government's watchful agents. Artists, driven by the fires of resistance, channel their creativity into protest art, using their artistic talent to mock, expose and scorn the anti-democratic forces. A small group of university students and a Khmer artist, inspired by a desire for justice and fueled by rebellious spirits, plan action against the oppressive regime, taking to the streets in protest and risking everything for a chance at a brighter future.Vincent Calvino, a weathered and cynical private investigator, finds himself entwined in this treacherous web when he stumbles upon a mysterious murder. As casualties of this unrelenting battle litter the city, each one leaves behind a trail of secrets and unanswered questions. Calvino's journey leads him through a maze of ancient maps, cryptic political graffiti, and the chilling whispers of those who dare to defy authority.In a noir landscape where every shadow hides a potential threat, Calvino becomes the unexpected target of suspicion. As evidence mounts against him, he races against time to uncover the truth and clear his name. With danger lurking around every corner and allies in short supply, he must navigate a world where loyalties shift like the tides and allegiances are fluid.The heart-pounding narrative of "Crackdown" weaves together themes of art as rebellion, the clash of tradition and technology, and the timeless struggle for justice. Calvino's quest for exoneration propels him into a realm where political machinations and personal vendettas converge. As Calvino battles against powerful foes and fights to expose the darkness that lies beneath the surface, he realizes that the fate of a city, and perhaps even a nation, hangs in the balance."Crackdown" is a masterful tale of political suspense, where the battleline between right and wrong blurs amidst the chaos, and the boundaries between hero and villain are remain unstable. Vincent Calvino's journey through this Bangkok noir landscape of mystery and deceit will long linger in the minds of readers as a testament to human resilience and hope in the face of overwhelming odds.
Christopher G. Moore is a Canadian author who has lived in Thailand since 1988. Formerly a law professor at the University of British Columbia and a practicing lawyer, Moore has become a public figure in Southeast Asia, known for his novels and essays that have captured the spirit and social transformation of Southeast Asia over the past three decades.
Moore has written over 30 fiction and non-fiction books, including the Vincent Calvino novels which have won including the Shamus Award and German Critics Award and have been translated to over a dozen languages. Moore’s books and essays are a study of human nature, culture, power, justice, technological change and its implications on society and human rights.
Starting in 2017, the London-based Christopher G. Moore Foundation awards an annual literary prize to books advancing awareness on human rights. He’s also the founder of Changing Climate, Changing Lives Film Festival 2020.
Another brilliant Calvino tale of Bangkok post-coup under the juntas martial law. Worth noting that while Moore's Calvino series can usually be picked up with any book and read as a standalone, this one draws a lot on the previous two and is probably not the best book in the series for newcomers. All that aside I found it one of the best in the series, Moore has perfectly captured the mood of Bangkok and Thailands ever changing culture and politics whilst giving a thrilling ride.
Moore's previous two books are a must for any full understanding of Crackdown. The odyssey that began with Missing in Rangoon and The Marriage Tree seems finally to end up in a bit of a mishmash of transcendentalism and Jungian collective unconscious, all brought up to date with current technology of the web and future musings about it algorithmic fusions of thought and feeling. Yea, and Twitter and Facebook and smartphones are all over the story. That doesn't appeal to me, although it may to others.
What does appeal to me are the chapters about the Cambodian squatters and their subterranean existence in post-coup Bangkok of 2014. Moore clearly thinks Prayuth and the generals who took power were some sort of totalitarian masterminds. Looking back from 2024, that seems a far fetched fear. (Wonder what Moore thinks of the old Thaksinists now firmly back in power and doing all sorts of oligarchical machinations that the generals never dreamed of?) Oh, well. Lots of allusions to Orwell, Graham Greene, and Henry Miller spice up the epigraphs at the start of each chapter. Make of it what you will.
Latest in the Vincent Calvino series this carefully crafted politically-aware crime novel is set in Bangkok during post-coup military rule. Christopher Moore, having delivered fifteen outings in the Vincent Calvino crime series, has perfected the formula and delivers with unflinching certainty each and every time.
Ballard is a rich businessman compromised by high class hooker cum conceptual artist Christina Tangier. If points were to be awarded for character names this is a clear ten out of ten. Tangier finds fame by photographing rich customers (naked with teddy bear) and exhibiting the shots as modern art instillations.
Calvino's client Osborne is a man who shoots henchmen when not examining the potency of his sperm under a high-powered microscope. Osborne hires Calvino to trail his much younger girlfriend Fah who it turns out is studying politics and inventing political graffiti rather than falling for a younger man as first suspected. Quite which is worse Osborne isn’t sure.
One of these characters takes the big sleep in the long river and things become dark.
Crackdown, for this reader, is a book of symbols. This is a book of dusty maps and edgy political graffiti. A book of warnings, predictions; a well plotted social document.
Books set in countries experiencing enormous social change should perhaps be authored by those such as Moore who realize that often truth can only be heard in fiction.