Around the World of Crime and Mystery
Australia - 2007
I skipped the first book in this series (didn't like the title) and almost skipped this one: the cover tells you all you need to know about the subject matter of this book. Distasteful.
CAST - 4 stars: Inspector Hal Challis returns to his roots to spend time with his dying father; his sister has stayed home in Mawson's Bluff, handling family burdens. That's an all too familiar situation, all too universal: the sons go out into the world (as expected) and the daughters stay home. Things are changing, true, but here there is very little about the brother/sister dynamic. Sergeant Ellen Destry has sold her house and moved in with Challis but now has his house to herself. She COULD open drawers, learn about the man, etc., but she doesn't. That's some restraint! And restraint to be admired: Challis should be free to reveal himself on his own terms, so I really like this about Ellen. A young Katie Blasko has been abducted and we know by who during the first few pages, so that's not the mystery: will she return, will she be okay are the questions to be answered. Katie's mom, Donna Blasko is portrayed as a rather careless mom, and her new live-in boyfriend's name is Justin Pedder. Pedder/Peado ring? Red herring or not? A joke by the author? Pam Murphy, desperate to get away from her cop 'buddy', John Tankard, is studying to be a detective. But why hasn't she already demanded she be paired with someone NOT sexually harassing her? We're four novels into the series and I'm glad Pam is moving on, or trying to, but I'd have quit a job and walked away, or at least tried to get a different cop buddy. Unless Pam likes the tension. John isn't very bright and spends 30K on a car he can't afford, and he can't get it registered in Australia. You'd think a cop would know better. Does Pam enjoy her intellectual supremacy? Dr. Everard is a Children's Services psychologist, heart seems frozen, Destry can only respond with an "Oh, God". And then there is Neville Clode, 60ish, who keeps a 'spa/bath'for his step-daughters visit. Not to worry: he is brutally raped with a bottle, or so he says...but I think he liked it. Who rapes a 60 y/o man? If he's a peadophile and a father has found out, I'd think Clode would have been beaten to death with said bottle. Readers will think they know the bad folks before the cops figure out what is staring at them all along. I found the cast, this time around, on the unbelievable side in some respects. But Disher can throw curves. Oddly, when cop Van Alphen hangs out at night on a nude beach- there are street kids, hookers, rent boys, etc., (you know, the kind of party we all say we'd never attend...), the author writes, without quotes:
>>>Fifty bucks for a blowjob.
>>>Van Alphen said he could be interested.
>>>Five hundred for the whole night. Or a threesome could be arranged.
My first thought was "okay, who is going to blow who"? Is the questioner a guy or gal or Alphen? Is it Van Alphen asking for a threesome? At the end of this scene, Alphen meets Billy DaCosta, a rent boy. They get along just fine. There is so much the author isn't telling us that I found this scene, and a few others, fascinating. Disher refuses to put a label on anyone. Beware, readers! 4 stars to the author for walking away from stereotypes, just when you think you've identified someone's good/bad behavior. But of course, there are some characters irredeemably horrific.
ATMOSPHERE - 2 stars: In the third book of this series, the cops are looking for a stolen car and toward the end of that book, they notice a massive junkyard outside of town and investigate. Here, the author writes, "The cars from the first five carjackings had never been found." One can only suppose the junkyard is gone...forgotten about...only visible in book 3. Yes, this area, the Peninsula, has rich people on hills overlooking the rest...the rest of us, that is. The missing junkyard just irritated me.
CRIME - 3: Absolutely disgusting, especially the kids who sell themselves for a bit of cash and parents seem oblivious. And are cops involved in some way? Not my cup of tea for a crime novel, but the author does raise some questions.
INVESTIGATION - 3: A child psychologist seems to dislike her job as much as John Tankard hates his. Hal is out of the picture. Ellen has an entire clan, a bad family, to deal with. There is a big picture the cops don't seem to see....because maybe they don't want to. Sort of a police procedural in which some cops don't want to proceed. For certain reasons. Interesting take. Besides, the cops are forced to use a sloppy, outside lab to save money. DNA samples are ruined, cases fall apart. Gotta save some bucks!
RESOLUTION - 3: Satisfying. I know now that Disher isn't going to resolve everything, but he resolves enough to keep me reading another in this series.
SUMMARY - 3.0. Good police procedural. But when is Disher going to bat one out of the park?