Jasmine Nights

by S. P. Somtow

Hardcover, 1995

Call number

813/.54 20

Publication

New York: A Wyatt Book for St. Martin's Press, 1995.

Pages

xv; 379

Description

Justin, who is Thai, must overcome the keen angst of growing up by sorting out his feelings and emotions, the strangeness of his body and of the world, and the meaning of friendship and love.

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

xv, 379 p.; 8.6 inches

ISBN

0312118341 / 9780312118341

User reviews

LibraryThing member BrianO
Somtow is a good horror/science fiction writer, but this autobiographical story is one of his best. I don't think this is the edition I own, which is paperback and came my way via a friend in Thailand.
LibraryThing member ranting_cracker
Fabulous story; I couldn't put this down. It was a facsinating portrate of an upper class Thai childhood. Fact or fiction, this is the stuff compelling stories are made of.

I picked this up during a trip to Bangkok. It made the long flight home pass unnoticed.
LibraryThing member skystyler
Touching story of a privleged young boy growing up in Bangkok. Discovered Somtow through "The Shattered Horse" but this is something completely different, and very worthwhile.
LibraryThing member wareagle78
I experienced this book on two levels. First, as a reader open to learning about Bangkok of the early 1960's and the characters of this book. In that guise I loved the beauty of the book -- its well-crafted setting, the unique characters, the moving of this twelve-year-old boy -- a reluctant Thai
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grasping to his foreign background -- into early manhood. On this level the book was very rewarding.

But where did it fall down for me? Well, it's personal. It was just difficult to read the coming of age of a 12-yo boy when I have an 11-1/2 yo son that I cannot begin to see in those terms! Argh! (Or as the book would say -eeugh.)
-- Review written 2003
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LibraryThing member emanate28
This is the first book I've ever read by Somtow, whom I've known and worked with as a musician. It's been a while since I've read it so this may not be an entirely fair review, but it was an interesting and sometimes fantastic and disturbing (particularly as I know Somtow!) book about a boy growing
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up in a Siam of a different era. It's incredible that only a few decades separate the Bangkok of the novel and that of today. I hope to go back and re-read it again.
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LibraryThing member dbsovereign
First-person narrative told by a young man growing up in Bangkok, Thailand. The author occasionally slips into something that resembles magical realism, but Bangkok can be a bit like that at times...Gives one a good feel for what it's like to live there.
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