Face in the Crowd from Death on the Wild Side

Tom Petty’s Face ‘in the Crowd was the inspiration for this sample chapter of Jack Corbett’s Death on the Wild Side.

Face in the Crowd inspired the final chapter of Death on the Wild SideDeath on the Wild Side
Jack not only wrote Death on the Wild Side, but he also created it from the typesetting, cover design, the photography. sizing of pages, and graphics arts design. For example, Jack chose Arianna a del as his model. And long after shooting hundreds of pictures of her he picked what he felt was the perfect picture of the alluring stripper whose personality and inner self is totally unknown to her audience. One sees her from the side on the book’s front cover with her body and face turned sideways to the camera. On the book’s back cover, Jack created a transparent image that can barely be seen. Arriana, even though there are two pictures of her on the book’s covers, is still a total enigma.

Then there was Lori. Slender and quick in her movements, she had a mind as agile as her body. She could read a man like a book. Always alert, she listened to everything he said, Yet her eyes would occasionally move about the room like a ferret. Making sure that one of her other customers didn’t walk in and leave without her saying hello or goodbye. She’d smoked cigars and drank a lot of booze with him. She had been serious, and she had been impish. He pushed a cassette into the tape player. It was Tom Petty, who is very appropriate, thought Frank. Lori was a master of her craft. She could make all her customers feel important, always the perfect companion.


Tom Petty’s voice filled the interior of the pickup. He was singing A Face in the Crowd.

It was Frank’s favorite selection on the tape. Definitely not a ballad, it had nevertheless always made him think of the Old West, and for some reason, that he couldn’t quite put his finger on, about Billy the Kid. He had first heard “Face in the Crowd” while visiting a friend in Oregon. The two of them had listened to the audio tape while driving to Mount Hood with their skis in ski racks on top of a Mazda.

The friend was a very good friend–a fearless skier, who had left a secure job in the Midwest, in order to live how he wanted to live in the West. This friend was the only person in the world Frank wrote to, the written word being the form of communication chosen by both men to bridge the 2000 miles separating them. The man had never had a secure job since moving to Oregon, but he had nevertheless carved out a life of his own choosing on his own terms. Larry had been born one hundred-fifty years too late. For that matter so had Frank. The souls of both men were alike in that they did not belong in a century of civilized constraints.


They had driven to the Oregon coast where they stayed several days along the ocean. Where they picked their way around boulders, littering the beach, and hiking through Oregon’s rain forests.

Larry and Frank had drunk lots of beer together in Oregon’s brew pubs where homemade ales were served. They had skied Mount Hood racing each other to see who was the fastest that year. The two men had ridden chair lifts while getting soaked as wet heavy snow fell on them from the skies. And through it all they discussed anything and everything: their marriages, their careers, politics, farming, history, life, death.


Frank couldn’t make out most of the lyrics in A Face in the Crowd. What was important was the impression he got from the music.

It was tied to the West–the Old West–even though no one but Frank would get the connection.

And it was tied to Lori.

The crowd was all those people out there going about their daily business, scurrying about between job and grocery store and all those mundane things and places that most people preoccupy themselves with.

An individual gets lost in the crowd–crying out for someone like him–but the crowd is too busy frantically trodding the treadmills of life to notice or to care. The soul sees a river of faceless people flowing around it and drifts away in lonely isolation. Then a face comes out of the crowd, a light. It takes shape and touches the soul. Perhaps for a fleeting moment, an instant of time only, the isolation is penetrated as one soul touches another. The two recognize one another, and both know that they are not alone.

Buy Death on the Wild Side and anyone of Jack Corbett’s five books at the Jack Corbett bookstore.

Best Soi Six Video on the Jack Corbett Video Channel

To do the best Soi Six Video here in Pattaya, that’s my goal, my dream. That’s what I do. The best.

Here's Mali and Koy in one of the Best Soi Six Video s
This is one of my best soi Six videos thanks to Koy and Mali and one helluva lot of tequila.

Koy and Mali are featured in this video which is one of my best soi Six video s. Why Koy or why Mali? Taking Koy, when I first started coming here I figured she was the most attractive lady here. But times have changed. Koy is one of my of my favorite drinking buddies here on Soi Six. And this has taken 2 years.

As for Mali? The clock runs and we forget the time. But I’ve known her for three years now. I thought she was Little Miss Shy. Despite what she does for a living. I never had more than one drink with her. And I never thought she could dance either.

I never knew. But here she is in the thick of everything. She’s got her hair dyed blonde, which I don’t like with Thail ladies. But it fits her like a tee. Never figured she could dance either. So I’ve been doing commentary with her on the Jack Corbett Video Channel. Where she speaks out openly about the real dancers such as Mew, Pon, and Gee.

Are these really the best Soi Six videos? Check them out for yourself. I don’t know, But I let nothing stop me from doing the best videos I can do.

Best Soi Six Video on the Jack Corbett Video Channel featuring Koy and Mali

If you want to see more of Mali check here out at

Jack has written and published six books. You can get them here.

Valentines Day on Soi Six with Mali and Jack

We go to Hots Shots, Illusions and Repent Bars to celebrate Valentines Day on Soi Six with Koy and Silent Bob

Mali and Silent Bob at Hot Shots Valentines Day on Soi Six

We start out with Long Island Teas and Japanese food at the Centara Grand Mirage Resort. For now, we are high so’s, but we will soon be spending Valentines Day on Soi Six. Mali thinks I’m joking about the hi so bit which is what we call Thais who have a lot of money. So, she tells me, we are hi so now, but when we get to Soi Six we are low so’s.

I’m not joking though, and I am going to tell you why. First off, very few people from my condo hit what I call the good restaurants. No matter how much money they have. I’m going to lay the blame on narrowness of thinking. They are either stuck in a rut going to the same Joe Average places. Or they think Centara being a five-star resort is just too expensive or high class for them. agree with them in part. The rooms are very expensive. And i’m not going to pay so much unless I have to. But their physical fitness center is not that expensive when you consider that Centara’s probably got a quarter million dollars of equipment there.

As for Mali, she likes Japanese food and for that matter she’s up for just about anything.

Those who don’t want to eat this or want to eat only that. And I’m talking especially about Thais who only like Thai food. Those people have limited brain capacities. And they are very boring people because they have no appreciation for wanting to try new things.

The girl speaks much better English than the average Thai woman. She’s cute and slim whereas most women are not wherever they come from. While she’s willing to watch just about anything I want to watch on Netflix. Which makes her a lot less boring than most of the others.

Living it up in Pattaya Thailand World's Most Exciting City