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WAR & CRIME FICTION

Posts in Australian fiction
The Dry

JANE HARPER

FROM THE PREFACE: ” It wasn’t as though the farm hadn’t seen death before, and the blowflies didn’t discriminate. To them there was little difference between a carcass and a corpse.

The drought had left the flies spoiled for choice that summer. They sought out unblinking eyes and sticky wounds as the farmers of Kiewarra levelled their rifles at skinny livestock. No rain meant no feed. And no feed made for difficult decisions, as the tiny town shimmered under day after day of burning blue sky…”

Sydney. Pan Macmillan. 2016. 347p.

The Luminaries

By Eleanor Catton

New York Little Brown. 2013. 834p.

The novel begins with the arrival of Walter Moody, a young Scottish lawyer, in Hokitika, where he stumbles upon a meeting of 12 local men. Each of these men has a different story to tell about a recent series of events involving theft, deception, and possible murder. As the novel progresses, their stories become increasingly entangled, and Moody finds himself drawn into the intricate web of secrets and lies that surround them.

Catton uses a range of narrative techniques, including astrology and multiple points of view, to create a complex and layered narrative. The novel also explores a range of themes, including class, race, gender, and the pursuit of wealth and power in a frontier society.

Death of An Old Goat

By Robert Barnard

“The perfect gem, one you wouldn’t change
a word of
Los Angeles Times

Professor Belville-Smith had bored university au­diences in England with the same lecture for fifty years. Now he was crossing the Australian continent, doing precisely the same. Never before had the reaction been so extreme, however; for shortly after an undistin­guished appearance at Drummondale University, the doddering old professor is found brutally murdered. As Police Inspector Royle (who had never actually had to solve a crime before) probes the possible motives of the motley crew of academics who drink their way through the dreary days at Drummondale and as he investigates the bizarre behavior of some worthy lo­cals, a hilarious, highly satirical portrait of life down under emerges!’ —St. Louis PbstHDispatch.

London Collins. 1977. 190p.