Mystery
Author Interviews
MBTB manager
Dean James & employee McKenna Jordan interview Colin Cotterill,
debut author of The Coroner's Lunch (Soho; $24)
Dean/McK:
Where did the character of Dr. Siri come from?
CC: Siri’s an amalgam of several friends
in Laos. He’s also a symbol of the resilience and wisdom of
many of the older educated Lao people. His name belongs to my friend
who, with his wife Soun, has survived terrible tragedies in his
life but remains positive. His build, demeanor and philosophy are
those of a man I met in the south and didn’t forget. His politics
belong to my friend’s father. He also represents a generation
I consider to be sadly underrepresented in fiction. Some of the
most colorful characters I know have waved farewell to 70 and have
much more to offer than a lot of these young whippersnappers that
hog the limelight in novels these days.
Dean/McK: Why did you set the book in Laos in
the mid-1970s, as opposed to some other time frame?
CC: I’m a foreigner writing about a country
I don’t belong to, and, as such, I’m an imposter. Ideally,
a Lao writer should be telling you about his own country, but all
the writing I’ve seen by Lao people is written from the point
of view of this or that faction. I don’t believe we’re
far enough removed from the conflict for a Lao to see his or her
country from the fence. Laos has always been at war with invaders
and colonists and with itself. Yet it’s a place populated
with some of the calmest and most peaceful people I’ve met
anywhere. I wondered how such nice people always managed to find
themselves in a battlefield, and soon came to realize the majority
of the Lao didn’t really know what was going on. They were
eternal victims of bullies. All they asked was to work their fields
and raise their children. In the early seventies, the Royalists
and the Pathet Lao signed a cease-fire and for the first time anyone
could remember, the fighting stopped. People liked the idea of peace,
whatever the price. So, when the communist PL took over the country
in 75, most people agreed they couldn’t do much worse than
their corrupt predecessors. The new government, fresh from the caves
of the northeast with backing from the powerful Vietnamese, could
pretty much do what it liked. The intellectuals and administrators
of the old regime had escaped to Thailand so the reds found themselves
with a country to run and few ideas of how to go about it. They
were scared, and fear leads to paranoia. The Coroner’s Lunch
is set amid this period of political upheaval. It was a time when
even the most banal activities became difficult, when you couldn’t
sell a chicken without written permission. It added a new dimension
to a mystery story, like a boxer going into a ring with his feet
tied together. The books follow the chronology of Lao history through
these times and refer to real events that I found fascinating. I
hope you all do too.
Dean/McK: Dr. Siri has two rather unusual assistants,
Dtui and Mr. Geung, and readers love these characters. How did you
come to write about characters with such interesting challenges
to face in life?
CC: My work here has allowed me to travel to remote
places and meet interesting characters. I wanted to introduce these
people through my books; to give a personality to a nation. For
a lot of readers I imagine Laos has little more meaning than being
a side theatre to Vietnam. But it’s a rich culture with colorful
personalities who have been able to survive many years of hardship
and still maintain a sense of humor. I know people who have lived
through events I could never survive yet remain philosophical. It’s
this trait that endears me to the Lao and I want to give them the
honor they’re due. We’ll be seeing communists, royalists,
Tai Dum farmers and Hmong, not as sides in a conflict, but as people
with opinions and personalities. As the books progress, Dtui and
Geung grow and through them I hope we can struggle through a difficult
time in Lao history with the same smile on our faces.
Dean/McK: There is a fascinating mix of cultures
and belief systems in the book. Even Dr. Siri seems taken aback
by some of his experiences. How do you think Western audiences will
react to experiences often radically different from their traditions?
CC: I think I can only answer that as a reader
(and I confess I don’t read that much fiction). When I take
the time to read, I expect some sort of service from the writer.
I want to be a little bit wiser at the end of the book. I want to
grow in some way, to learn something I didn’t know, to have
experiences I can’t have in my own life, to see the world
through the eyes of someone else. Through Siri, a reluctant but
lifelong communist, we get a commentary on what works and doesn’t
work in the system. Through Siri the host of a shaman spirit, we
look at the animistic belief systems compared to institutionalized
Buddhism. Through Siri the jungle dweller, we see suburban Vientiane
and its society. None of these views are lectures as Siri isn’t
really sure what he thinks either. The reader’s left to draw
his or her own conclusion about the state of play, and that’s
the type of book I like to read. But, above all, I like to turn
over the last page, read the last line, and have a little smile
on my lips. I want to thank the writer for letting me accompany
him on a ride through something magical.
Dean/McK: Has your work in southeast Asia (for
UNESCO, working with abused children, the prevention of child prostitution)
influenced the writing in any way?
CC: If it weren’t for the UNESCO position
I wouldn’t have made it to Laos and fallen in love with the
place. But it wasn’t until the work with kids that I got fired
up enough to start writing seriously. I’d done a lot of funny
stuff, cartoons and humorous columns, but seeing and learning about
the horrors children face, got me angry enough to start writing
for effect. I wanted people to know what I knew and I figured the
best way to do that was through fiction. I wrote two novels with
a theme of child protection and I think it was quite a therapeutic
activity. I think these were angry books. I was a bit calmer when
I wrote a third and decided to make it a comedy (but still with
a child trafficking theme). But these books were published locally
in Thailand where the English language readership is about eleven.
I didn’t ever get my message across to ‘a public’.
I guess I imagined Oliver Stone coming for a holiday and picking
one of them up to read on the beach. I’m still waiting for
the call asking me to do the screenplay. But, the reaction to the
books was good and I decided to take some time off to write fulltime.
Dean/McK: What kind of research did you have to
do for this book? (For example, pathology?)
CC: The research for these books takes longer
than the writing, not because I need to use all the information
I get, but because it’s so much fun. It falls into three categories,
the history, the pathology and the supernatural. In Laos there is
little recorded modern history. Most of the writing about the country
is to be found outside it. But for personal accounts and family
histories there’s nothing better than sitting down with Lao
friends and listening to their stories of what life was like at
the social level. Then, by cross referencing through text books
you can explain why this or that was happening. The toughest job
was the pathology. If Siri had cable he could solve most of his
cases through modern techniques, but he didn’t have up to
date textbooks, just old French texts from the sixties. I had to
know only what Siri knew and eliminate any methodology involving
science or equipment that weren’t available to him. Fortunately
I live in Chiangmai where a lot of library books are out of date.
I was also fortunate to meet a local coroner who rescued some very
old forensic pathology texts from his hospital. I can imagine hardened
Patricia Cornwell readers going, “Gee anyone knows you just
have to do the xxx test and you can answer that question”.
But Siri doesn’t have any of this information. If any old
coroners are reading this, I really would appreciate donations of
pre 1970 textbooks. The last area for research is the most fun.
A lot of research has been done locally into spiritual beliefs and
rituals. All the supernatural descriptions in the books are based
on documented events and ethnic folk lore (and one or two séances
I saw myself).
Dean/McK: Can we expect to see Dr. Siri again?
Can you tell us a little bit about the next book?
CC: Yes, I’m afraid you’re stuck with
Siri and the team for a few years yet. The second book is due out
around August and I’ve just signed a contract with Soho for
two more. The next book is called Thirty-Three Teeth.
Siri finds himself in the north in the old royal capital of Luang
Prabang. There, he becomes entangled in the government plot to remove
the royal family and banish all the royal spirits from the city.
Meanwhile, Dtui sets out to prove the innocence of the old brown
bear, recently escaped from the Lan Xang Hotel zoo. But her discoveries
lead to her mysterious disappearance and the unleashing of a terrible
evil. (I’m such a tease). You can get updates and other information
on my new website colincotterill.com. Thanks to everyone for liking
the book and for your very kind words. I hope I don’t let
you down in the future. Best wishes. Col.
Colin Cotterill is the author of The
Coroner’s Lunch (Soho; $24),
one of our store’s favorite debuts of 2004. Here’s what
Dean said in his review of the book in the last issue of TDB: “This
wonderfully quirky first novel is set in a location sure to sound
exotic to American readers: Laos in the mid-1970s after the Pathet
Lao have taken over… The Coroner’s Lunch is perhaps
not to everyone’s taste, because of its unusual mix of mysticism,
violent death, and gently satiric humor, but I found this book utterly
charming. Dr. Siri Paiboun is one of the most delightful characters
I’ve encountered in mystery fiction in recent years, along
with Maisie Dobbs and Precious Ramotswe. If you enjoy the truly
original, don’t miss this one!”
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