The Coroner's Lunch (Dr. Siri Paiboun, #1)

Paperback, 257 pages

English language

Published Nov. 2, 2015 by Soho Crime, Cotterill, Colin.

ISBN:
978-1-56947-418-1
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3 stars (6 reviews)

The Coroner's Lunch is a crime novel by British author Colin Cotterill first published in 2004. It is the first instalment in the Dr. Siri Paiboun series, set in the Lao People's Democratic Republic during the 1970s.

5 editions

Review of "The Coroner's Lunch (Dr. Siri Paiboun, #1)" on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

The premise is pretty darn cool: A 70-something doctor in Laos is forcibly made into the national coroner when it is revealed that the communist revolution doesn't believe in retirement. The undertone: he's old and probably infirm and the party will be able to control him. The reality: he's spunky and thoughtful and decides that if he's going to be thrust into a three-quarter-life crisis, he may as well embrace it. He's read a few mystery novels himself, and he decides: what the heck, I'm going to solve mysteries!

And solve mysteries he does, aided by Geung, his assistant with Down syndrome and a near-eidetic memory (one of the best literary depiction of trisomy 21 I've ever seen, by the way) and Dtui, his nurse, who bribes him into letting her be the assistant coroner. And a fairly large cast of eccentric, but not over-the-top wacky characters who really help …

Review of "The coroner's lunch" on 'Goodreads'

No rating

I adore the good Dr. Siri and his assistants in the morgue. He's over 70, and he's gone through revolution, war and loss, and he really, really, really doesn't sweat the small stuff any more. That fearlessness is beautiful. I did feel that the author went over the top with the mystical bit with the visit to the Hmong village -- that was my least favorite part of the book. This is the first in the series, and I shall look for the next one.

Review of "The Coroner's Lunch (Dr. Siri Paiboun, #1)" on 'LibraryThing'

No rating

An amazing book, set in Laos in 1976 with an elderly doctor-turned-coroner as its protagonist. It has a gentle, goofy humor and a vivid sense of place, as the doctor looks into two mysteries: one involving the wife of a party functionary and the other a diplomatic incident involving three dead Vietnamese. Oh, and there's a third mystery - how can the scientifically-minded doctor learn to live with his new-found identity as a 1,000-year-old Hmong shaman? Highly unusual book without a cliche in sight.

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5 stars