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Dragon's Fin Soup: Eight Modern Siamese Fables

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The eight short stories in this collection are: "Dragon's Fin Soup", "Lottery Night", "The Steel American", "Chui Chai", "The Bird Catcher", "Diamonds Aren't Forever", "Fiddling for Water Buffaloes", and "The Last Time I Died in Venice".

276 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1998

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About the author

S.P. Somtow

342 books162 followers
Called by the Bangkok Post "the Thai person known by name to most people in the world," S.P. Somtow is an author, composer, filmmaker, and international media personality whose dazzling talents and acerbic wit have entertained and enlightened fans the world over.

He was Somtow Papinian Sucharitkul in Bangkok. His grandfather's sister was a Queen of Siam, his father is a well known international lawyer and vice-president of the International Academy of Human Rights. Somtow was educated at Eton and Cambridge, and his first career was in music. In the 1970s (while he was still in college) his works were being performed on four continents and he was named representative of Thailand to the Asian Composer's League and to the International Music Commission of UNESCO. His avant-garde compositions caused controversy and scandal in his native country, and a severe case of musical burnout in the late 1970s precipitated his entry into a second career - that of author.

He began writing science fiction, but soon started to invade other fields of writing, with some 40 books out now, including the clasic horror novel Vampire Junction, which defined the "rock and roll vampire" concept for the 80s, the Riverrun Trilogy ("the finest new series of the 90's" - Locus) and the semi-autobiographical memoir Jasmine Nights. He has won or been nominated for dozens of major awards including the Bram Stoker Award, the John W. Campbell Award, the Hugo Award, and the World Fantasy Award.

Somtow has also made some incursions into filmmaking, directing the cult classic The Laughing Dead and the award winning art film Ill Met by Moonlight.

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5 stars
7 (16%)
4 stars
20 (46%)
3 stars
6 (13%)
2 stars
8 (18%)
1 star
2 (4%)
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Rick.
3,257 reviews
January 22, 2023
These stories are like little side trips into a twilight zone. Somtow is a poet who effortlessly spins a pattern in his tales which make the unbelieveable commonplace and the unimaginable believeable. To read Somtow's stories is to take a journey into a world that doesn't and could never exist in the United States. Only in a reality like never-never land where you step outside your world and greet old friends that you've never met before, can you begin to sense the subtle beauty of Somtow's literature. The texture of his style is unforgetable and it will resonate within you, like a memorable symphony, long after you've finished.
Profile Image for Victoria McIvor.
1 review1 follower
February 10, 2026
Loved the raw and often poetic depictions of Thailand, but would love even more to unsee the misogyny and obsessions of these characters.
Profile Image for DearReader.
2 reviews
Read
May 27, 2026
A heady collection of shorts and novelettes. Apart from "Chui Chai" (which is easily categorizable as body horror), most of these stories are in a magical-realist vein; that said, Somtow's work is definitely not for the squeamish. He is unafraid to deal explicitly with the gross and disturbing aspects of life (nearly every bodily function gets a mention at some point), including violence and sexuality - which sometimes borders on gratuitousness.

Biggest disappointment: "Anna and the Ripper of Siam" (a readable but lurid - and predictable - alternate history), replaced in some later editions with "The Bird Catcher"

Best discovery: "Diamonds Aren't Forever"
19 reviews
July 10, 2021
Two good stories and six disappointing ones

I was curious about this author after having come across two of the stories in different science fiction and fantasy collections. Unfortunately, those two stories (Fiddling for Water Buffaloes and Lottery Night) were the only ones that were worth reading. The rest were unsatisfying, they just didn't hang together as stories and they lacked that wicked humour that attracted me about this author. The Steel American had some promise but the rest were just dross.
Profile Image for Blair (Patchwork Culture).
141 reviews9 followers
May 6, 2026
Inevitably, there’s a reading challenge book that’s a struggle, and this must be 2026’s candidate. Setting aside the formatting issues, the constant turn to vulgarity annoyed and disappointed me. Sex can be a good theme to explore, and it’s even a cool experience when authors revisit the same themes multiple times within a collection. However, the approach didn’t feel meaningful to me. It felt like a dark obsession and an attempt to be edgy. Even the whimsical effect seemed to be tottering off the tracks.

There were a lot of ideas that would have appealed to me without the weird focus on risky/dangerous sex and the fear of contracting HIV/AIDS (which again could have been really good subjects, even commentary on stigma and self-love). In theory, the opening story’s topic about the pressure of family legends and the consequences of eating dragon parts are concepts I should have liked. Unfortunately, it didn’t work for me, and I became wary of the rest of the collection. Every time I thought I was enjoying a story, it turned to sex, but in a boring and gratuitous way.

The book revealed the author’s complex feelings about his birth country. His stories were littered with insults and fondness. Perhaps his long sojourn abroad affected how much the foreign was present in his fictional Thailand, full of Western influence as it was. I appreciated the critique about the looting of Thai artifacts and what it meant for outsiders to embed themselves in Thai life. The fact that some characters seemed to dislike their heritage or didn’t mind if foreigners consumed their culture added more to chew on. The really juicy elements like faith, superstition, spirits, financial precarity, rank, and cultural antiquities were dragged down by stilted and overly formal dialogue, cartoonish personas, and sexual, racist, or off-color language. It was just a bizarre reading experience.

Loved: N/A

Liked: The Steel American

Meh: Dragon’s Fin Soup, Lottery Night, Chui Chai, Diamonds Aren’t Forever, Fiddling for Water Buffaloes, The Last Time I Died in Venice

Need to Reread: The Bird Catcher
Profile Image for Mark Ludmon.
523 reviews4 followers
March 9, 2024
An entertaining collection of short stories where spirits, horror and the fantastical exist just under the surface of everyday life. All set in the author’s native Thailand, they draw heavily on Thai culture and religion, offering fascinating insights into the country’s society and values. They particularly focuse on Bangkok where modernity sits alongside the spiritual and the ancestral past. Typical of a short story collection, some are stronger than others — the title story, "Lottery Night" and "The Steel American" were my favourites but, reading them after a visit to Bangkok, I found them all intriguing, told with playfulness and skill.
Profile Image for Philip Tidman.
196 reviews3 followers
December 14, 2025
Another unequal collection of short stories. I have read one novel by this author, the excellent semi-autobiographical Jasmine Nights, about an upper class boy growing up in an excentric household in Bangkok. This collection is also mostly set in Bangkok and the Stories give a rare insight into the lives of Thais, including the often outrageous superstitions that govern their lives. Anybody who is a fan of magic realism will certainly appreciate the title story and ‘Fiddling for Water Buffaloes’. And the quite gruesome ‘The Bird Catcher’ will also appeal to some. Sadly, the others are of lesser interest.
Profile Image for John.
159 reviews4 followers
March 3, 2009
i couldn't really get into the story-telling or the protagonists. the narrators were mostly too self-aware for my taste - not a miranda july level of self-awareness, but noticeably self-aware - and the mysticism was too complete for my murakami-leaning preference. felt kind of predictable.
Profile Image for Starry.
781 reviews
August 12, 2016
Read this just before traveling to Thailand, and found these short stories an excellent prep to understanding a little more of the culture / mindset before arriving. Edgy, quirky stories, a quick read.
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews