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Siam Or The Woman Who Shot A Man
 
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Siam Or The Woman Who Shot A Man (Paperback)

de Lily Tuck (Author)
3.3étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (15 évaluations de client)

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From Amazon.com

In Lily Tuck's Siam, the year is 1967 and 25-year-old Claire has come to Bangkok with her brand-new husband, a military advisor. When they first met, James had described Thailand as "not a bad place to live. Everyone's so friendly, everyone's always smiling. And you should see my house--hot and cold running servants, a pool, a garden..." But upon arrival in this exotic locale--which her guidebook, too, extols as the "Venice of the East"--Claire discovers dead dogs floating in the canals, green slime growing on the surface of the pool, and the natives polite but distant. The one person she feels an instant bond with is Jim Thompson, an American silk entrepreneur she encounters at a party. But immediately afterward, Thompson disappears during a trip to the Cameron Highlands, and Claire becomes obsessed with discovering what happened to him.

Siam is a work of fiction. Jim Thompson, however, was an actual person whose disappearance in Thailand has never been solved. Tuck uses this real-life mystery to illuminate her fictional characters' relationships and motivations. It's clear from the first chapter that Claire is a young woman without a solid sense of self. She is swept quite literally off her feet and into bed within hours of first meeting James, and a good deal of what happens to her from that point on seems to occur without her active participation or consent:

Several times a day Claire raised her skirt, dropped her pants. Her fingers, too, learned to unzip, to unbutton with the swiftness and skill of a lacemaker. It was not how Claire had imagined it, but there was hardly time for anything else.
Though she tries hard to be a "good guest" in Thailand, attempting to learn the language and history of her new home, she is never truly at ease among the people. Claire's fixation on the fate of a man she met only once grows in direct proportion to her feelings of loneliness and alienation. Meanwhile, America's escalating role in the Vietnam War parallels her increasing suspicion of everyone around her, even her husband--and soon the conditions are ripe for tragedy. Tuck weaves this intricate web of fact and fiction, reality and delusion, with an assured hand and prose that seems simpler than it actually is. She captures to perfection the disorientation of strangers in a strange land, the insularity of expatriate communities, and the gulf that yawns between privileged foreigners and the people they live among. Siam, then, is both a compelling drama and a profound meditation on the political and the personal. --Sheila Bright --Ce texte provient de la Hardcover édition.

From Publishers Weekly

Probing the futility of good intentions and the pitfalls of cultural miscommunication, this assured and absorbing third novel by Tuck (The Woman Who Walked on Water) opens on March 9, 1967, the day the U.S. starts bombing North Vietnam from bases in Thailand. Claire, a 25-year-old Boston bride, arrives in Bangkok with her husband, James, an American engineer who builds runways in Nakhon Phanom, in northeast Thailand, for the American bombers. James's weekly trips to supervise construction leave his young, conspicuously blonde wife to fend for herself, and Claire discovers almost immediately that the luxurious lifestyle James described has an unpleasant underside. The heat is unrelenting; their pool is covered with green slime; the servants wash in a sewage-filled canal; hot peppers make most food indigestible to her. Unlike the few other American wives she meets, Claire is driven to question her surroundings, but the information she garners in hours of research at the local British library, through her daily language classes and on shopping excursions around the city is even more disturbing. Snubbed by Thai acquaintances when she tries to discuss the political situation, she turns to her husband, but insensitive James treats her as little more than a sexual object. Meanwhile, Claire becomes obsessed with legendary American entrepreneur Jim Thompson, who has disappeared while on a trip to the Highlands. Though she has met him only once, Thompson typifies to Claire all the mysterious events that seem to be going on just outside her circle of understanding. As the political and cultural climate in Bangkok grows increasingly oppressive, Claire begins to lose touch with reality, and her feverish imaginings precipitate tragedy. Tuck uses words with economy, evoking the lush locale and mysterious culture of Thailand with precise details and sensory images, and effectively contrasting the crisp, arrogant attitude of the American colony with the polite if evasive conduct of the Thai population. Her vivid, unromanticized picture of Bangkok in the late '60s is a fitting backdrop for a haunting story about the end of innocence. (Nov.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --Ce texte provient de la Hardcover édition.

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L'avis des consommateurs

15 évaluations
5 étoiles:
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4 étoiles:
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3 étoiles:
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2 étoiles:
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1 étoiles:
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Évaluation du client type
3.3étoiles sur 5 (15 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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4.0étoiles sur 5 You won't put it down until you're done, Aoû 17 2002
Par Peter N. Woodke (San Francisco, California USA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
Having just returned from a trip to Thailand, I found this book mesmerizing and was disappointed only that it wasn't longer! I think this book is especially enjoyable for someone who has visited the places featured in the book. The Jim Thompson House is still there, and it is just as described in the book. The book does not have a tidy and neat plot, but I think that gives it some originality. Like another reviewer, I wish I could be part of a book club to discuss many of the "mysteries" contained within the book.
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4.0étoiles sur 5 Allusive, disturbing and incredible, Nov. 29 2001
Par Janice M. Hansen (California United States) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
This is a novel that obviously promoted strong pro and con sentiments. I found that many of the reasons that the readers were disturbed by the novel was what I liked best about it. This is certainly not a book for those that must have all their questions answered. This novel is a suggestion of Thai history, allusive, mysterious and provocative.

This is a story of a rather naive young American woman, Claire, who marries impulsively to a military contractor working out of Thailand during the Vietnam war. She must cope with a new culture, servants she distrusts and a husband that she becomes suspicious of. Yet, there is a tone of mystery, a friend they met at a dinner party disappears. Based on a real event, Jim Thompson, an American silk buisnessman disappears during a vacation. Claire becomes obsessed with his absence, along with other issues of her life that begin to unravel.

At first, her arrival prompted her to take Thai language lessons, research Thai history and culture in the local library and join a military wives weekly tour group. The plunge into Thai culture begins to take it's toll on Claire. She mistrusts the servants, and later finds items missing that she treasures. Worst, she doubts her debonair husband and fears he is having affairs with friend's wives. She takes to examining his dirty laundry for evidence of infidelity. She can't sleep and begins to drink more. She misses her home and her family. She finds the Thai food disgusting and the outside town filthy. There is a palpable tension that the author alludes to, a crisis in the making and a constant referral to the violence of the Thai past intersecting with this woman's life.

I guarantee all your questions will not be answered. The ending is allusive and disturbing. While accepting the novel as it is would be my advice, I would relish the opportunity to review this book in a book club setting. I am sure the interpretations would be various and vast. Don't let the originality put you off to an incredible unique novel.

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3.0étoiles sur 5 Read it by the pool in Thailand, Oct. 31 2001
Par Amon Emanuel "ebolabone" (Geneva Switzerland) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
This is a book to read by a pool in Bangkok, before going to visit Jim Thompson's house or the Royal Palace and heading to a nice restaurant. By no means deep, it catches well the flavor of Thailand, and Claire, the main character, is definitely not the most interesting heroine in litterature. Nonetheless, there is some suspense and we get an idea of the Thai monarchy, its recent history, some of the complexities of this beautiful country, and what it means to be an expat in Bangkok. Things haven't changed much since the late sixties. I liked it, though.
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Commentaires client les plus récents

2.0étoiles sur 5 Educational, but not creative
I read this book and and found it to be a tedious endeavor. The main character(she was so empty headed and dull, I can't even remember her name), well, she wanted to know what... Read more
Publié le Sep 12 2001 par Orlando Webber

1.0étoiles sur 5 Simple
Everything about this book is simple. There are times when prose reads as simple and that's because it is. The story is simple as it virtually is nonexistent. Read more
Publié le Aoû 20 2001 par taking a rest

1.0étoiles sur 5 Repetitive and lacking a plot
While reading this book, I felt that the story was going nowhere. A lot of the descriptions, conversations, etc. Read more
Publié le Fév 22 2001

4.0étoiles sur 5 Recommended novel & for those interested in Thailand
A friend gave me Siam and I really liked it. I have never been to Thailand but I felt like I was visiting while reading this book (through the eyes of Claire). Read more
Publié le Janv. 7 2001

5.0étoiles sur 5 Graham Greene from the woman's point of view
A caucasian woman inserted into a Far East society who is left by her husband to figure out her own purpose and identity. Well written and a fast read. Read more
Publié le Juil 31 2000

2.0étoiles sur 5 Thai-resome
I think the author deserves credit for some originality, but the book is a bore, even with the Bangkok setting. Read more
Publié le Mars 26 2000

5.0étoiles sur 5 I liked it!
Although somewhat hard to find, this book is well worth the effort- It's an engaging piece about life in the Sixties that doesn't revolve around the American "Free... Read more
Publié le Mars 16 2000 par Maggie Rogers

5.0étoiles sur 5 Enjoy this sensational novel!
"Siam" captures Bangkok, history, and an excellent personal narrative within a sharply written novel, offering more than most written these days. Read more
Publié le Mars 8 2000

5.0étoiles sur 5 Haunting and evocative
Lily Tuck's third novel is a gem. There is no need to compare her writing to that of anyone else as her style stands on its own, evocative and elegant. Read more
Publié le Mars 5 2000

1.0étoiles sur 5 Siam: The Woman Who Shot a Man
Upon reading this book, I was totally amazed that it received such glowing editorial reviews. It was one of the most ridiculous novels I have ever read. Read more
Publié le Fév 29 2000 par Betsy R Whalen

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