An intricate plan in a far-off city to snatch some priceless gems. What could possibly go wrong?
Doquang opens her twisty cat-and-mouse thriller with a “Day 7” cliffhanger featuring resourceful heroine Rune Sarasin tied to a chair somewhere in Upper Manhattan and facing imminent death. Then the story rolls back to Day 1, with Rune and worrywart boyfriend Kit ensconced in Bangkok’s elegant Mandarin Oriental Hotel as they prepare to steal the title jewels from American gemstone trafficker Charles Lemaire. Except for a brief car chase, the heist comes off without a hitch. But the duo’s planned getaway aboard a ferry is abruptly aborted with the news that Kit’s teenage sister, Madee, is missing. Abandoning their best-laid plan, Rune and Kit search the city with the murderous Lemaire in hot pursuit. Doquang’s familiarity with Bangkok’s “glorious views and the nascent hum of urban life” is on full display; her portrait of this unique city, from glitter to gutters, is her novel’s main appeal. Given the flash-forward prologue, it’s no spoiler to disclose that Rune gets back to New York for some tense interaction at Sotheby’s celebrated auction gallery before her capture. Doquang writes gracefully about sunrises and suites and crowded streets, but her tame and often elegant prose is not well suited to her propulsive plot, which offers a potentially nail-biting encounter or a violent twist in nearly every chapter. And it’s certainly questionable whether the reader will be drawn to the abrasive and self-involved Rune.
A crisp caper whose detailed setting is its biggest attraction.