Martin Limón’s series set in 1970s South Korea, an era of heightened Korean sociopolitical tension, pits Army CID agents Sueño and Bascom against a mysterious woman who may be the
The twelfth installment of Martin Limón’s Sueño and Bascom Mystery series set in South Korea does not dissapoint.Three American GIs have gone missing in different South Korean
South Korea, 1974. US Army CID Sergeants George Sueño and Ernie Bascom are assigned an underwhelming case of petty theft: Major Frederick M. Schulz has accused Miss Jo Kyong-ja, an Itaewon bar girl, o
How much can murder, and silence, buy on the black market of 1974 South Korea? South Korea, 1970s: A young Korean woman dressed in a traditional chima-jeogori is found strangled to death on the frozen
"The latest in the series, G.I. Bones, is brilliant?imbued with affecting characters, a morally knotty storyline, and a last chapter that just plain stuns."?Maureen Corrigan, NPR.org, Best Crime Ficti
A Korean fortune teller is being "bothered" by a long dead American soldier who wants his bones found and buried. An underage officer's daughter and a Latino soldier she was secretly dating are missi
After Jill Matthewson, the only female MP assigned to the DMZ goes missing, George Sueno and Ernie Bascom are dispatched to the 2nd Infantry Division to investigate, and they soon discover her disappe
The only female MP assigned to a base in the DMZ is missing. Has she been abducted, killed, or, possibly gone AWOL? Eighth Army cops George Sueno and Ernie Bascom, sent to find her, discover a murder
“Limon’s crisp, clear storytelling opens a door to another world and leaves one hoping the next installment won’t be so long in arriving.”—The Baltimore Sun? “As good as Limon’s series debut, Jade Lad
The incorrigible pair of G.I. cops - first introduced in Jade Lady Burning - is back with a vengeance. Their beat is Seoul and the sin cities surrounding the Korean capital in the 1970s. While Vietnam
Almost twenty years after the end of the Korean War, the U.S. Military is still present throughout South Korea, and tensions run high. Koreans look for any opportunity to hate the soldiers who drink a