[Originally published at New York Journal of Books]
“Despite
the classic investigations that Poke leaps into, with violence and threat and
red herrings and regret, Poke Rafferty is a person who cares enough to listen,
to experience, and to change, even in this final volume of the series.”
One of the best loved international crime
fiction series ends this season, as Tim Hallinan’s Street Music is the ninth and final book on his Poke Rafferty
Thrillers (Soho Press). Catching attention in the fourth book with an Edgar nomination for The Queen of Patpong, Hallinan's Poke Rafferty Thailand novels have won wide acclaim.
For readers already following the series, Street Music represents a bittersweet
farewell to the “little family” than Hallinan has nurtured. First there’s been
Poke Rafferty himself, an American writer who settled in Bangkok, won over by
its people and sense of community. Poke’s marriage to Rose, a “bar girl” and
former “Queen” of the Patpong bars, created the frame for their eventual
adoption of a much-battered but creative, caring, and eventually loving
daughter, Miaow, a child of the streets.
Street
Music opens with the presence of a new
member of the family, a baby that’s already been highly controversial earlier
in the series. It’s a boy! But Poke’s not finding “natural” fathering impulses;
Rose’s ever-present set of women friends crowding him out of the bedroom and
onto a lumpy couch has a lot to do with this. But so does the kind of parenting
he’s already been doing, growing into protecting and nurturing Miaow. Her
street roots have engaged her in peril multiple times, and Poke routinely
mobilizes friends, especially one in the Bangkok police force, to help.
What peril approaches Poke and especially
Miaow when a mysterious street women begins to follow him and asks him for a
huge amount of cash as “protection money” to keep her from destroying the
little family? How can Poke handle the resulting chaos without upsetting Rose
and bringing risk to the baby as well? It’s rough when you find yourself lying
to the people you love best, in order to take care of them.
An Afterword by Hallinan recaps his approach
to the series, and the startling effect that setting up a first scene that
involved Poke + wife + daughter + groceries = family. “The word family did the trick,” he explains. “I
barely knew who these people were but the moment I realized they were a family,
I thought that it might be interesting to drop a normal—if intercultural and
self-assembled—family, who are trying to preserve relationships along
traditional lines, into the world capital of instant gratification”—that is,
into Bangkok.
Not only is Poke Rafferty being followed and
blackmailed in Street Music—he’s also
coming to terms with his understanding of poverty, which doesn’t always lead to
crime (although he’d about to find evidence of possible murder). Another former
bar girl, Toots, lays it out for him: “Some lady no good. I poor girl too,
Poke. Then I lucky too much, marry Leon, but before, when I have no money, I
not take. Not good for karma. You
know, you are poor and you good, you win. You poor and you bad, poor win.”
This is exactly the kind of moment that makes
Hallinan’s crime fiction, especially the Poke Rafferty series, so interesting
and unusual: Despite the classic investigations that Poke leaps into, with
violence and threat and red herrings and regret, Poke Rafferty is a person who
cares enough to listen, to experience, and to change, even in this final volume
of the series.
What does Poke learn about Miaow’s original
parent(s), after all this time raising her? How will he come to grips with
being the father of a baby boy, and the husband of a woman who’s just
experienced her own major transition? Which friends will lead him into more
danger to his family, and which will help him walk through it and survive?
Street
Music is very readable without the
earlier books in the series. But it’s a richer read when placed in their
context. Read the others before it or after; chances are, once you’ve entered
Poke Rafferty’s community, you too will experience some of his reasons to
change.
PS: Looking for more mystery reviews, from cozy to very dark? Browse the Kingdom Books mysteries review blog here.
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