Book review, poetry monkey
The more fun you read, the more you read.
The monkey draped the poem.
8 Points or ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
There have been several serial murders, and the bodies are in a state of horror that varies from person to person. Near the bodies, a piece of paper was found writing some numbers on them when the sixth body was expected to be a "big bastard," causing a close friend, "Tri," to be tracked back to the South to find out the truth of this serial murder.
The plot / storyline is good, the work is detailed, the fun is gradually increasing, and there is some hope, there is a complexity that some points understand, but it is easy to read, about easy to understand, there is a reflection of authenticity, goodness, justice, and there is a group of people who in the book use the word "King." At first I didn't know who to talk about, but when I read it, I know who to talk about, it may not be, but it is similar. This is the first book in the set tri, but I read it as the last book. I like to see the origin of these two people.
The course of the story is not very fast and not too slow. With the serial murder case, there is also a lot of detel. The first part is not very interesting. Also, it feels slow to read because it is not used to the idiom. As you read it, it gets used to it. The story is more interesting. It keeps reading. Very enjoyable.
The content is very difficult, many events are unexpected, but it doesn't peak much. Some things are predictable because I read Volume 2, 3. The killer's guess is very difficult, but the answer isn't peak either, because I can guess the motive. What the killer did to the victim revealed in the first place, and this one is pretty wow.
The ending doesn't have much to do with the Raakkas, a little bit, but the special episode that talks about the raves and triads is great.
Overall, it's fun, easy to read, but there are some hard-to-understand points. The early days are not very interesting, but the better and better. The more fun it is to read, the more fun it is to reflect on some of the points mentioned before, especially the story of "Rajasthan" at the core of the story.
What the killer did to the victim in this book is very wow. The style of Khun Prasad to have a connection to something that belongs to Thailand. This book is a matter of anything. You must read it yourself. I can tell you that it is cruel. It's so scary. I read it like "Damn! It must be this much?" I heard it but I didn't think it would be like this.
Author: Prasad
Publisher: Shadow
Category: Thai literature
# Investigative fiction # Murder fiction # Thai fiction # Poetic monkey # Prasad





































































