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G'Day L.A.

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Can Ellie convince the police that her best friend’s death wasn’t suicide? Or accidental? Can she stay alive herself, now that the killer knows what Ellie knows? And can she find a career in a city that cares more for what’s on the outside than on the inside? Aussie Ellie Bourke moved to LA a year ago to advance her acting career. She had no idea she'd have to solve a murder before finding success.

282 pages, Kindle Edition

First published September 7, 2010

25 people want to read

About the author

Tony McFadden

28 books54 followers
I and my wife and kids have lived in many, many places, including cool places like the US Virgin Islands, Taiwan, Malaysia, Singapore and now, Australia.

Lots of interesting places to meet interesting people.

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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Brie.
43 reviews3 followers
October 13, 2011
Let me get this out of the way at the start: this is a real page turner.

"G'day L.A." is basically a modern crime thriller. The protagonist, one Ellie Bourke, is an Aussie trying to make it as an actor in Los Angeles, after a part in a C-grade horror flick filmed in Australia. And she's having just enough success that she doesn't quite need a real job. Her flatmate, Joel, is a stand-up comedian who is starting to make some headway in a similarly difficult career choice. Unfortunately, shortly after the story starts, he is found dead in the bathtub. In a locked house.

Though ruled suicide, Ellie doesn't believe it and can't convince anyone else. Then she discovers something that convinces her it wasn't suicide. But how to prove it?

It's been a long time since I read any crime fiction, particularly modern crime fiction; so long, in fact, that I can't remember what I last read in that genre or when. This may explain why I was a bit startled at first at the fruity language - but then I recalled it was quite realistic, really. People do talk like that, whether they're Hollywood figures or not. Once over that, the story moves apace. I was well into the story proper way before I realized it. I guess I'm used to longer books! But the pace accelerated nicely and there were several tense moments towards the end where everything could easily go pear-shaped. And almost does a few times.

McFadden has clearly made it a product of the times. There are two iPhones in the story. GPS navigation is mentioned. So is Dr Horrible. I doubt this will date it, of course, merely set it in it's time period.

McFadden has also done something with the narration I haven't really seen before: multiple points-of-view. Much of the story is told from Ellie's POV, and the narrative is in first-person, describing what she sees, says and feels. But there are other interludes from other characters, even the prime antagonist, and they are always in third person. This is in direct contrast to most advice to writers which is to pick one POV and stay with it. However, McFadden makes it work. Since the story is basically Ellie being a Nancy Drew, he still needs to leave out story that would give the game away. And does this deftly. In fact, there are several scenes where the narration overlaps, allowing a select interactions to be told from both points of view. Neat.

If I had a criticism, though, it would be that some of the characters were not defined well enough. There were three characters surrounding the antagonist, story-wise, making the B-story happen. But I had trouble keeping them straight. Fortunately, it barely mattered in the end.

All in all, a good book and a good story.
Profile Image for Gary Williams.
26 reviews
December 13, 2013
A fascinating thing about this book is how every alternate chapter is written in the first person and third person. So, every for every chapter written in third person, there's a chapter after that written by a male author - thinking and feeling as a female.

This means you get the first person 'feel' of the girl realising she might be able to set up the bad guy for a fall. Then, in the next chapter, we get the third person description of the bad guy that's excited at how he has actually set her up, and how she's taken the bait. And so on.

It is worth reading the whole book to get to the fight scene three quarters of the way through. We get a first person description of the fight as the model turned actress struggles with the bad guy - catches him out with a few kicks to sensitive areas! Again, we get both sides of the chase, capture, evasion, retaliation and it keeps you guessing as it turns each corner (a maze of corners would be better analogy).

I also enjoyed the characters... and I dare say anybody who has had anything to do with show business will recognise the 'realness' of these characters - the victims, the exploiters and the rare stable person that can actually make a career out of any type of show business.

As with Mr McFadden's other books, again quite unique, and cleverly executed. I've read a few of his books now and, as ever, will reserve my judgement until I've read all his books, but I am getting ready to make that statement that you only make about great authors: "with Tony McFadden books, you just can't go wrong".
Profile Image for Pete.
Author 8 books80 followers
July 14, 2012
Ellie Bourke is a rookie Australian actress trying to break into the Los Angeles TV and movie scene. When her roommate is found dead in the bath, the police treat the incident as a suicide, but Ellie doesn’t agree. The story revolves around her dogged attempts to prove that he was murdered.

I read much of G’Day L.A. with a grin on my face. The writing style is lean and conversational—easy on the eye. The pace is fast, and the dialogue is crisp and believable and often funny.

Ellie’s character pops off the page—she’s someone you’d want to know, you’d want to succeed. The movie-types that populate the story are larger than life and their back-biting and crazy view of the world is fun to watch—the situations and complexities that arise as the different story threads weave together reminded me more than once of Elmore Leonard’s Get Shorty. Not just because the tale is set in LaLa land, but because the characters actions are far from what you’d anticipate, and yet perfectly logical from within their frame of reference. Ellie isn’t a master sleuth who ‘solves’ the mystery, rather, through sheer determination, she finds herself in situations that create the conflict and chaos required to make the story work.

A really enjoyable read.

Disclaimer: This review was originally written for "Books and Pals" book blog. I may have received a free review copy.



Profile Image for Lisa Deckert.
Author 13 books17 followers
May 3, 2012
Ellie, an Australian actress, is meeting with some limited success in L.A. Her friend and roommate, Joel, is a struggling comedian and they share career ups and downs, supporting one another. Ellie is blindsided when Joel apparently commits suicide. It isn't long before she finds reason to believe that Joel was actually murdered, and proving it may be the end of Ellie's career and maybe her life.

Ellie and her friends are likeable and the bad guys are hateable, but they are all real and believable people reacting to the events in sometimes surprising but credible ways. Altogether an excellent story.
Profile Image for Misty Rayburn.
Author 1 book17 followers
June 25, 2011
I will edit this and post my official review later but for now, this book was awesome and I loved it!
Profile Image for Emily Read.
69 reviews3 followers
January 1, 2015
I thought this book was fine, it was a bit of a miss with me as it was all a little bit too far fetched which made it difficult to suspend disbelief.
Profile Image for Jack.
2,902 reviews26 followers
September 22, 2012
Highly entertaining crime thriller featuring an Australian actress in California.
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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