Christopher G. Moore is a Canadian writer living in Thailand, best known for his Land of Smiles Trilogy and his Vincent Calvino Private Eye series. Moore is the author of more than thirty novels, six works of non-fiction, four radio dramas, and editor of three anthologies.
Moore moved to Thailand in 1988, settling in Bangkok. He has lived there for nearly four decades, and is well-known amongst its English-speaking expatriate community. His books have been translated into over a dozen languages, and are particularly popular in Thailand and Germany.
Christopher G. Moore is from Vancouver, British Columbia, and spent his early years living in Vancouver and Toronto. He studied law at Oxford University, following which he joined the University of British Columbia (UBC) as a professor. His earliest writing consisted of radio plays, such as View from the Cambie Bridge, on the subject of internment of Japanese Canadians during the Second World War. He travelled to Japan in 1983, and continuing at the invitation of a friend, arrived in Thailand for the first time. From 1985 until 1988, Moore lived in New York City, where his debut novel His Lordship's Arsenal was published. He returned to Thailand in 1988, settling in Bangkok. He is fluent in the Thai language.
Described as "Thailand's finest expatriate crime-fiction novelist", Moore has lived in Bangkok for nearly four decades. The Vincent Calvino Private Eye series, which began with Spirit House in 1992, is among his most popular works. The Vincent Calvino novels are bestsellers in Germany, and the series was optioned for television. His Land of Smiles Trilogy, comprising A Killing Smile (1991), A Bewitching Smile (1992), and A Haunting Smile (1993), are considered cult classics.
Despite his international acclaim, Moore's novels were not published in Canada until the early 2000s, starting with a 2003 reprint of His Lordship's Arsenal and a 2004 reprint of Waiting for the Lady by Subway Books. George Fetherling, the owner of Subway Books, discovered Moore's novels through his website and began a correspondence with him, eventually offering to bring his books to Canada. This followed Moore turning down several offers from New York-based publishers, which he said "weren't the right ones". Moore gave his first public reading in Vancouver in 2003 at the Vancouver International Writers Festival.
Also a prolific non-fiction writer, Moore has produced a substantial volume of essays on cultural and political topics such as privacy and social justice; at one point, he wrote an essay every week for over five years. His first collection of essays, The Cultural Detective, was published in 2011. The book was soon followed by Faking It in Bangkok (2012), Fear and Loathing in Bangkok (2014), and The Age of Dis-Consent: Essays (2015).
Moore's work has been translated into over a dozen languages including Japanese, German, Thai, Chinese, Hebrew, Turkish, and Russian. His fiction and essays have appeared in the Evergreen Review, The Brooklyn Rail, the Mekong Review, the Bangkok Post, and The Phnom Penh Post, among others. His novels are especially popular in Thailand, where he is well-known among the English-speaking expatriate community.
Vincent Calvino is a fictional Bangkok-based private eye created by Moore in the Vincent Calvino Private Eye series. Vincent Calvino first appeared in 1992 in Spirit House, the first novel in the series. Spirit House was included on The top 100 Kindle books of all time. District #3, the 18th novel, was published in November 2024. Moore's protagonist, Vincent Calvino, half-Jewish and half-Italian, is an ex-lawyer from New York, who, under ambiguous circumstances, gave up law practice and became a private eye in Bangkok. "Hewn from the hard-boiled Dashiell Hammett/Raymond Chandler model, Calvino is a tough, somewhat tarnished hero with a heart of gold."âÂÂMark Schreiber, The Japan Times
Chad A. Evans, a Canadian literary critic living in Australia, published a study of Moore's work in 2015 entitled Vincent Calvino's World, A Noir Guide to Southeast Asia. The book explores the historical, social, and cultural context of the 15 Calvino novels written over 25 years.
Moore's writing is characterized by a hard-boiled noir style reminiscent of Raymond Chandler and Ross Macdonald, and he is praised for his "rich, passionate and original take on the private eye game". His novels are written in third-person, and he employs allegory and symbolism to layer his narratives. He has been described as "Dashiell Hammett in Bangkok", "Hemingway in Bangkok", and "W. Somerset Maugham with a bit of Elmore Leonard and Mickey Spillane thrown in for good measure." His works blend genre conventions of crime fiction with literary depth, alternating between entertaining thrillers and more introspective narratives, drawing comparisons to Graham Greene.
According to the Canadian literary critic Douglas Fetherling, "it shows at once that Moore is a genuine novelist who just happens to employ the conventions of the thriller genre, that his real interests are believable human behaviour and way cultures cross-pollinate and sometimes clash." Reviewers have highlighted Moore's knowledge of Southeast Asian history and focus on East-West encounters, portraying them as studies in cultural insight laced with humour and realism. His work addresses the complexities of expatriate perspectives in Southeast Asia, exploring social contradictions, local customs, and the undercurrents of power and corruption in Thai society.
Moore is the founder of the Christopher G. Moore Foundation, a charitable organization based in London, England. The foundation was established in 2015 to recognize the values of human rights and literary excellence in non-fiction. It confers the Moore Prize, an annual literary award recognizing books that advance awareness of human rights.
He is also the founder of Changing Climate, Changing Lives (CCCL) Film Festival, established in November 2019. The annual film festival features short films by young Thai film makers showcasing ways of using local wisdom and experience to adapt to climate change in Thailand.