Timothy Hallinan, A Nail Through the Heart (2007)
Good Reads meta-data is 336 pages, rated 3.88 by 1,842 litizens.
Genre: krimi.
DNA: Thai.
Verdict: tour de force debut!
Tagline: Bangkok’s mean streets.

He has lived there long enough to speak Thaiglish and, more importantly, to learn the Bangkok glide and now aspires to sweat less. Yes he is a European ex-pat living cheap in Thailand, writing travel guides for the, ahem, adventurous rough travellers. He is tough and cynical, he thinks. Then he meets several people who give him masterclasses in being tough and cynical.
While I found both subject matters at issue repellant [guess], the reader’s nose is not rubbed into it, and I flipped some pages, but the ride is a mile-a-minute with some unusual (to this jaded hack) characters and unexpected twists and turns.
Bangkok itself is the major character, its human tides and lulls, its uneasy relationship with the eponymous river, its scorching days and hotter nights, its sex tourists, its Buddhist rectitude and venal corruption, its crowded streets and desolate corners, the human flotsam and jetsam that have beached there ….from typhoons , revolutions, wars, tsunamis, crimes, and more. The spine and title page but not the front cover have the subtitle: A Novel of Bangkok.

There are corrupt cops, another who quotes English philosophers, a reluctant and apologetic murderer, a murderous murderess war criminal, a sadist worse than the war criminal, a loving niece, two street kids, Go-Go dancer 47, a righteous seeker of vengeance, all in a rich mélange of characters. There are two plots that interweave but do not combine. Deft. There is no Great Attractor that brings everything together.
The aside on the woeful influence of Nescafé appealed to me because I saw the same thing in Greece, where its convenience displaced some of the best coffee in the world with brown glug.

It just about reads itself, and that is partly due to the very short chapters that speed along with energy on the page.
First in a series: Much as I liked this one I am not going to read another one soon. The repellent subject matters leave a long and unpleasant aftertaste. I have had this one on my shelf for a decade or more, the pages have yellowed, before I got around to it. When I got the first Kindle I switched to reading mainly on it, and only lately have gone back to my stash of paper books.

The Bangkok glide is to walk slowly and barely lift your feet leaning a few degrees forward as you almost slide/glide forward: Energy conservation in the perishing climate. Hero can work on that. As for sweating less, well maybe that is covered in the later volume of the series.