Thai Ways
First published in Bangkok in 1979 and reprinted many times since, including the widely circulated edition referenced here, 'Thai Ways' by British long-time Bangkok resident Denis Segaller is a collection of short, accessible essays explaining everyday Thai customs, beliefs, and social etiquette to English-speaking foreign readers. Segaller, who worked for decades in Thailand including as a broadcaster, wrote the essays originally as newspaper columns, covering topics such as Buddhist merit-making, spirit houses, Thai naming conventions, wai greetings, food customs, and popular folk beliefs that a newcomer to the country would otherwise have no easy way to understand. Alongside its sequel, 'More Thai Ways,' the book became a long-running staple of English-language expatriate and tourist bookshops in Thailand, valued less as formal scholarship than as a warm, first-hand practical guide to Thai social life written by someone who had genuinely lived within the culture for decades rather than visited briefly.
Why it matters to Thailand: The long-running expatriate classic for explaining everyday Thai customs and etiquette to outsiders โ still sold in Bangkok bookshops decades after its first printing.
More Non-fiction from Thailand
Thailand: A Short History
First published in 1984 by Yale University Press and later revised and expanded in 2003, 'Thailand: A Short History' by David K. Wyatt is widely regarded as the standard single-volume English-language survey of Thai history from the earliest Tai-speaking peoples through the late twentieth century. Wyatt, a longtime professor of Southeast Asian history at Cornell University, traces the formation of the Sukhothai and Ayutthaya kingdoms, the founding of the Chakri dynasty and Bangkok in 1782, the country's unique success in avoiding direct European colonization during the nineteenth century, the transition from absolute to constitutional monarchy in 1932, and the political upheavals of the Cold War and post-Cold War decades. Because Wyatt worked from Thai-language chronicles and archival sources rather than relying solely on colonial-era European accounts, the book is credited with grounding Thai history in indigenous perspectives, and it remains a standard assigned text in university Southeast Asian studies courses decades after its first release.
A History of Thailand
First published in 2005 by Cambridge University Press and issued in this expanded second edition in 2009 (a third edition followed in 2014), 'A History of Thailand' by economic historian Chris Baker and economist Pasuk Phongpaichit is one of the most widely cited modern academic histories of Thailand available in English. Unlike older dynastic narratives centered on kings and courts, the authors โ a husband-and-wife team based at Chulalongkorn University โ foreground social and economic history, tracing how ordinary Thai society, trade networks, and political structures evolved from the early Bangkok era through the 1997 Asian financial crisis and the rise and fall of Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra. The book is especially valued for situating twentieth-century Thai politics, including recurring military coups and democratic movements, within longer-running economic and social patterns rather than treating them as isolated events, making it a standard reference in Southeast Asian studies programs.
A History of Ayutthaya: Siam in the Early Modern World
Published in 2017 by Cambridge University Press, 'A History of Ayutthaya: Siam in the Early Modern World' by Chris Baker and Pasuk Phongpaichit is a major scholarly reassessment of the Ayutthaya Kingdom, the Siamese polity that dominated the Chao Phraya river basin from its founding in 1351 until it was destroyed by Burmese forces in 1767. Drawing on Thai, Dutch, Portuguese, Chinese, and other contemporary sources, the authors reconstruct Ayutthaya not as an isolated inward-looking kingdom but as a cosmopolitan trading power deeply connected to early modern global commerce, diplomacy, and cultural exchange across Asia and with Europe. The book covers Ayutthaya's political institutions, its relationship with tributary and rival states, its role in regional trade in rice, ceramics, and forest products, and the internal court politics that preceded its fall. As the first major English-language synthesis of Ayutthaya scholarship in decades, it has become a key reference for understanding pre-modern Thai statecraft.
The King Never Smiles: A Biography of Thailand's Bhumibol Adulyadej
Published by Yale University Press in 2006, 'The King Never Smiles: A Biography of Thailand's Bhumibol Adulyadej' by American journalist Paul M. Handley is an unauthorized political biography of King Bhumibol Adulyadej (Rama IX), who reigned from 1946 until his death in 2016 and was, at the time of the book's release, the world's longest-reigning monarch. Drawing on decades of journalism and archival research, Handley traces the king's role in Thai politics well beyond the purely ceremonial image ordinary Thais were shown, arguing that the palace actively shaped modern Thai political history, including its relationship with the military, the suppression of democratic movements, and the cultivation of the monarchy's public image as a unifying, near-sacred institution. The book was formally banned in Thailand under the country's lese-majeste laws, and its author was barred from re-entering the country, which itself became a widely discussed episode in the history of press freedom and monarchy in Southeast Asia.
The Revolutionary King: The True-Life Sequel to The King and I
Published in 1999, 'The Revolutionary King: The True-Life Sequel to The King and I' by Canadian journalist and author William Stevenson is a biographical account of King Bhumibol Adulyadej written with the stated cooperation of the Thai royal palace, positioning itself as a corrective to the fictionalized and, in Thailand, officially banned depictions of the monarchy found in the musical and film 'The King and I' and its predecessor 'Anna and the King of Siam.' The book covers Bhumibol's unusual childhood partly spent in Switzerland, his unexpected ascension to the throne after the sudden death of his brother King Ananda Mahidol in 1946, and his decades-long role navigating Thailand's twentieth-century military coups, Cold War alliances, and rural development initiatives. Because it was written with palace access and a broadly sympathetic tone, it is frequently read alongside more critical biographies, such as Paul Handley's 'The King Never Smiles,' as a counterpoint reflecting how the Thai monarchy sought to present its own modern history.
Thailand: The Politics of Despotic Paternalism
First published in 1979 by Cornell University's Southeast Asia Program and reissued in this revised edition, 'Thailand: The Politics of Despotic Paternalism' by Thai political scientist Thak Chaloemtiarana is a foundational academic study of Thailand's mid-twentieth-century authoritarian military governments, particularly the rule of Field Marshal Sarit Thanarat between 1958 and 1963. The book analyzes how Sarit's government combined military dictatorship with a deliberately cultivated ideology of paternalistic, quasi-traditional authority โ presenting the state as a benevolent father figure to the Thai people โ while also elevating the symbolic role of the monarchy as a source of political legitimacy, a pattern the author argues shaped Thai governance long after Sarit's death. Widely cited in subsequent scholarship on Thai politics and military rule, the book remains one of the standard academic references for understanding the ideological underpinnings of authoritarianism in modern Thailand and its lasting influence on the relationship between the military, the monarchy, and civilian politics.