The Dead Can’t Make a Living

Jing-nan, the owner of the most popular food stand in Taipei’s world-famous Shilin night market, is hauling trash after a successful evening of hawking Taiwanese delicacies to tourists when he finds a corpse propped up against the dumpsters. The dead man turns out to be Juan Ramos, a Philippine national who came to Taiwan for a job at a massive ZHD food processing plant.

Jing-nan is haunted by Ramos’s story, and by the heartbreak of his family, who arrive in Taipei looking for answers. ZHD has a history of safety violations, and activists have a hunch Ramos’s death might be part of a cover-up. Meanwhile, Jingnan’s gangster uncle, Big Eye, has his own mysterious, probably illegal, reasons for being concerned about what’s going on in ZHD. He pressures Jing-nan into a daring and risky mission: going undercover as a migrant laborer to get a job at the food processing plant and reporting back about the conditions inside. Jing-nan hopes to find out the truth for the Ramos family, and to save other immigrant lives—but first he has to survive the spy operation.

This rollicking crime novel is a scorching, timely examination of our global dependence on undocumented immigrants.



A unique blend of tension, charm, tragedy, and optimism, with characters you’ll love and a setting so real you’ll think you’ve been there. Highly recommended.

— LEE CHILD, Jack Reacher series


No one can stop Ed Lin from making a fun work of art!

Puzzling and plotting drive this mystery about labor and injustice—the kind of entertainment we need in our troubling, but also activist, times. Grab it now!

— Gina Apostol, author of Insurrecto

A heartfelt crime novel that reaches deep into the lives of a rich collection of characters . . .

Jing-nan brings along plenty of humor while still following the lives of undocumented immigrants and their living conditions.

— First Clue Reviews

A refreshing multinationalism continues to run through the series, which folds Taiwanese, Vietnamese, Australian, Chinese, and Filipino characters into the action. Cheeky humor and a team of investigators you’ll want to hang with.

Kirkus Reviews

Lin seamlessly weaves complex details about Taiwanese history and political tensions into the action, paying special attention to social and financial abuses perpetrated against undocumented workers . . . This entertains.A heartfelt crime novel that reaches deep into the lives of a rich collection of characters . . .

Publishers Weekly

Good guy Jing-nan delivers a clear-eyed, compassionate portrayal of overseas worker abuse in this gritty offering to the rising swell of cozy-adjacent crime fiction.

This fifth adventure is another series bar-raiser, delivering well-crafted underworld adventures with humor and sensual immersion in everyday Taipei.

Booklist

This series is lots of fun, with an ebullient protagonist and a cast of entertaining recurring characters . . .

Ed Lin addresses serious topics with a light touch. Like many societies, Taiwan relies on cheap foreign labor yet looks down on those who fill those jobs. American readers are likely to see parallels with our own country, though the author doesn’t hammer home a message.

— Crime Fiction Review

PRAISE

A master of Taipei noir. [Ed Lin] proves every good crime novel is a social novel.

Los Angeles Times

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Death Doesn’t Forget