The Bangkok Girl
by
Sean O'Leary
Level Best Books, 2025
Genre: Fiction
Lee Jenson is a schizophrenic Australian private investigator living in Bangkok, Thailand. He is hired by an Australian family to find their missing daughter Zoe who disappeared in Bangkok. When Jenson accepts the case, the reader is in for a surprise. As Jenson acts like a pit-bull with a never give up attitude, he is forced to go against the sex trafficking ring in Thailand, the Yakuza -Japanese mafia and the international network of sex traffickers who use drugs to keep the girls into the business. Does he find Zoe ? Does he fall in love? Who is the Bangkok girl?
Zipping across Bangkok, Tokyo and Hong Kong, effortlessly, the story is told realistically and without judgement. How do tourists become sex slaves? Is it ignorance or something else? It is a strange narrative that there is no exaggeration and you feel almost resigned to the fate of the girls trafficked except the protagonist doesn't give up. Lee is one heck of a character and keeps making you read.
O'Leary narrative style is clean, the writing crisp and well paced as he takes you on a ride filled with twists, turns and surprises. If you want to know who the Bangkok girl is, read the book to find out.
To buy the book, get it here Amazon
Sunday, 24 August 2025
Book Review : The Bangkok Girl
Friday, 8 August 2025
Book review : NeverEnd by Blake Rudman
NeverEnd
by
Blake Rudman
HellBound Books, 2025
Genre: Fiction
I have read many novels but the prologue of this one was so shocking that it pulls the reader in and keeps them reading the book. Nothing is predictable as all of it comes as a surprise.
Dr. Jon Edom leaves a medical conference on the relation between violence in society and addictive online gaming only to reach home to find his wife Rochelle and his two young sons, Luke and Paul have disappeared into thin air. When he files the complaint, the police suspect Jon though he was miles away during the disappearance. That there are no corpses is puzzling. Step in Rochelle's family who run a cult thanks to Rochelle programming a violent addictive game which brings them loads of money. Then there are the enemies of the cult, and with biblical references, you are in for a ride.
An addictive role playing game. This book reminded me of "Blue Whale" game which made adults do crazy things in real life until it was banned by multiple governments. It also shows the danger of priming in the police department that destroys objective investigation. Priming is a social psychological term which means focusing on something/someone because that is what has been made prominent. But is the story just about that, absolutely not.
Rudman gives a masterclass in writing - how to create tension and terror with simple characterization. He creates chaos without usual terror tricks like spirits and gore as the reader is pulled into the story with its ever increasing tension. As a reader, you know something is off from the beginning but you are not left to ponder what it could be as the next piece of chaos is thrown in. You watch characters unravel at a speed that leaves you dazed and the end is a zinger, though it is not the end. The writing is so crisp and visual that you feel you are seated next to Dr. Jon Edom.
If you are in the mood for a dark thriller page turner, this book would be it.
You can buy the book here on Amazon
Sunday, 3 August 2025
Book Review : Elegance and Evil - a fab weekend read
Elegance and Evil
by DK Coutant
The Wild Rose Press
Genre: Fiction
Cleo Cooper is on a sabbatical in Santa Fe. She misses her home in Hawaii but is shocked to learn that one of the volcanoes have erupted and many of her friends are affected there.. Then one of her acquaintances in Santa Fe, Ginger, is found dead in the desert. The death is by heat stroke according to the police but is it?
The suspects range from the son of a Russian spy to a Saudi Arabian woman who works with abused women in a Center run by Ginger and her.While the FBI is on the case, Cleo Cooper does her own investigation. The moment she begins to investigate, someone tries to kill her. It is not just once multiple attempts are made to kill her but why?
Zipping between Hawaii and Santa Fe, the author ensures logic drives the narrative instead of common prejudice against a particular nationality in a mystery thriller. It was refreshing to read and I learnt in the end, the author is also a geopolitical forecaster. No wonder.
The writing is crisp, fast paced. It would be the perfect read if you wish to curl up with a book for the weekend.
To buy the book , go here Amazon
Book Review : The Case of the Missing Turtles
The Case of the Missing Turtles Mallika Ravikumar Speaking Tiger Books, 2024 Genre : Children's Fiction This is the second book in the...
