A strong, tight story. The pace simply crescendos from the steady start to a frenzy at the end. Somehow, the writer brings a decent amount of Southeast Asian atmosphere into things--except, of course, the view of SE Asian women as submissive, obedient wives and girlfriends; Chase obviously never had one. Although, I would bet that like a great many second tier pulp fiction writers he used setting and feel from so-called first rank writers to pull things off. Here, it's the Viet Minh bombing of the police outpost, which is pulled directly from Graham Greene's The Quiet American. But don't feel too offended on the behalf of Greene, for he was "inspired" in much of his book by Norman Lewis' vastly underappreciated Southeast Asian novel, A Single Pilgrim, which just by chance, I guess, "anticipates" Greene's plot and political characterization. But, back to this work. It's quite a spectacle. And I'm amazed at how Chase kept all the loose ends tied up until the very big chasm at the very end.
And about the central protagonist, Steve Jaffe. He is a unique sort and gives this novel a special twist all its own. Jaffe quickly and convincingly descends from an everyday dullard, just another guy working in a foreign land to a scheming killer possessed with the notion of getting very rich very fast. Like the other characters, except for the innocent Miss Quon, he is without a moral center. There is nobody in this book to hold onto as a reader. Not Jaffe, not the corrupt and even more murderous police. Not the Chinese businessmen out to squeeze every penny they can any dubious opportunity that crosses their path. And not the doomed Miss Quon, who is only cut out to be a victim. There is a just the abyss facing everyone at the end of things in Chase's early 1960s Saigon. And that is remarkable. Because, in his own way, he seems to have seen how things would play out in the region over the next fifteen years. Without ever really being there, JHC drew quite an accurate portrait of the soon to be Southeast Asia of the 1970s and 1980s, where everyone loses, even when they win.