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Limon has written a series of six mysteries that center on a pair of Army criminal investigators, George Sueño and Ernie Bascom, who are stationed in Korea in the 1970s. (Limon himself spent 10 years with the Army in Korea during that period.)
As such, they are constantly moving between the world of the G.I.'s and the Koreans who work in the "villes" of bars and brothels that border on the bases.
Sueño is unusual in that he has learned to speak Korean, so he moves easily between the two cultures. He credits the military with saving him from a childhood and youth in foster homes, but he is too smart to be taken in by the bullshit that flows freely on both the U.S. and Korean sides, and he doesn't hesitate to bend the rules or let justice prevail over the letter of the law. Bascom is a hot-headed Vietnam veteran whose combat experience comes in handy more than once.
There's plenty of tough guy action for those who like that, but there's also a vivid portrait of a society that is both struggling to rise out of poverty and wartime devastation and dealing with the massive presence of foreign troops inside its borders and a hostile neighbor to the north. Sueño and Bascom spend a lot of time dealing with prostitutes, bar owners, and organized crime figures, but they also encounter interesting characters from other areas of Korean society.
The first book in the series is Jade Lady Burning, and the most recent (and one of the best) is G.I. Bones. The impoverished Korea that Limon portrays doesn't exist anymore, but he gives you a real sense of that time and place.
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