Garry Disher
Born
in Burra, Australia
August 15, 1949
Website
Genre
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Hell to Pay (Hirsch, #1)
33 editions
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published
2013
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Peace (Hirsch, #2)
19 editions
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published
2019
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Consolation (Hirsch, #3)
18 editions
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published
2020
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Day's End (Hirsch, #4)
13 editions
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published
2022
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The Way It Is Now
16 editions
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published
2021
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The Dragon Man (Peninsular Crimes, #1)
39 editions
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published
1999
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Sanctuary
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Under the Cold Bright Lights
4 editions
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published
2017
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Kittyhawk Down (Peninsular Crimes, #2)
21 editions
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published
2003
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Signal Loss (Peninsular Crimes, #7)
15 editions
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published
2016
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“With his pinned-back ears and face suffused with strong, hard-to-read feelings, Bowie looked sleek and dangerous briefly, belying the neatness, the pampered hands.”
― Signal Loss
― Signal Loss
“The only good thing to come out of it was a kind of wisdom in Hirsch. He’d grown to understand that police officers can drift over time, and it isn’t always or entirely conscious but a loss of perspective. Real and imagined grievances develop, a feeling that the job deserved greater and better public recognition. Rewards, for example, in the form of more money, more or better sex, a promotion, a junket to an interstate conference, greater respect in general. Some of these rewards were graspable, others the thwarted dreams that drove their grievances. Cynism set it. The bad guys always got away with it, and the media seized on the police officer who took a bribe rather than the one who helped orphans. So why not take shortcuts and bend the rules??”
― Hell to Pay
― Hell to Pay
“The interior was dim like a cave. The ceiling, pressed tin, was stalactited with hooks from the days when the shopkeeper would hang it with buckets, watering cans, coils of rope and paired boots. Refrigerator cases lined a side wall, shallow crates of withered fruit and vegetables the back, and in the vast middle ground were aisles of rickety shelving, stacked with anything from tinned peaches to tampons. The sole cash register was adjacent to the entrance, next to ranks of daily newspapers and weekly and monthly magazines and a little bookcase thumbtacked with a sign, Library. If you were a farmer in need of an axe or some some sheep dip you headed for the far back corner. If you wanted to buy a stamp, you headed a couple of paces past the library.”
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Polls
Voting for July 2018 group read - Thriller
Topics Mentioning This Author
topics | posts | views | last activity | |
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Mystery/Thriller ...: may 2010 - sandi | 11 | 103 | Jun 01, 2010 06:27PM | |
Readers and Reading:
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29 | 53 | Jun 11, 2010 02:30PM | |
Mystery/Thriller ...: feb 2011 - sandi | 4 | 30 | Mar 05, 2011 11:54PM | |
Readers and Reading:
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25 | 23 | Mar 09, 2011 09:57PM | |
The Mystery, Crim...: New | 29 | 42 | Dec 17, 2011 05:50PM | |
The Mystery, Crim...: Australian mysteries | 5 | 103 | Mar 23, 2012 12:31PM | |
The Mystery, Crim...: I'm new here ^^ | 17 | 152 | Aug 29, 2012 09:27AM | |
Aussie Readers: The place for ALL your Aussie Authors for 2012 | 221 | 189 | Dec 29, 2012 05:35PM | |
Mystery/Thriller ...: dec 2012 -sandi | 3 | 18 | Jan 01, 2013 11:03PM | |
The Mystery, Crim...: Hello, I'm Jude...and a newbie | 8 | 20 | Jun 13, 2013 01:35PM |
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