The Big Weird plunges Bangkok's most iconic farang detective deep into the neon-slashed heart of Nana Plaza, where the truth is never what it seems and every shadow hides a watcher. After decades navigating the alleys, bars, and backroom deals of Southeast Asia, Vincent Calvino has learned to trust two things: his instincts—and the strange, unsettling gut-feeling he calls the big weird, a shift in the air that signals chaos ahead.
When a dancer at a Nana Plaza bar vanishes without explanation, the case feels like routine missing-persons work. But Calvino quickly discovers she isn't the only one gone. Other disappearances—expats, hustlers, bar workers—ripple beneath Bangkok's glittering surface, dismissed by police as "transient noise." Yet the evidence points to something far darker threading through the compound's balconies and corridors.
Drawn into the labyrinth of Nana Plaza's nightly theater—its hustlers, owner proxies, shadow financiers, and digital voyeurs—Calvino follows a trail that leads from the crowded red-light bars to the high-rise safe rooms of men who believe they own the city. Each clue unravels another layer of deception. Each witness tells a story that contradicts the last. And each survivor warns him to walk away before he becomes part of the machinery swallowing people whole.
But Calvino has never walked away from a case that smelled wrong.
As Bangkok's rainy season floods the streets and tensions boil between the police, military, and crime syndicates, Calvino uncovers a covert operation hiding in plain sight. To expose it, he must navigate a city where everyone plays multiple roles, and where loyalty—like identity—is just another commodity.
Told with Christopher G. Moore's signature psychological depth, street-level authenticity, and sharp noir lyricism, The Big Weird unspools a mystery that is as much about the shifting fault lines of modern Southeast Asia as it is about the human heart. Moore's Bangkok is alive on the page: seductive, unforgiving, and electric with danger.
A master of the genre, Moore brings a Dickensian eye to the lives that drift through the edges of the metropolis, illuminating the invisible, the exploited, and the unforgettable. Fans of Chandler, Hammett, Ellroy, and the classic noir tradition will recognize the lineage—but Moore's voice is wholly his own, honed across three decades of groundbreaking Asia noir.
The Big Weird is a haunting, propulsive thriller that reveals the psychological cost of living in a city where every truth is contested and every secret has a price.
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