This is my first taste of this incredible award winning Aussie crime series by Emma Viskic featuring troubled and deaf PI Caleb Zelic, set in Melbourne. I was plunged into the series where significant events had taken place previously, but Viskic gives sufficient information that I didn't feel like that I was flailing around too much. The story opens with Caleb at a children's farm to meet a new client, a meeting organised through the exchange of emails, only to find him dead, shot through the back of his head, and being questioned by Aussie Federal cops. Life continues its downward spiral for him when he is tasered by a woman he has met previously, claiming to be a federal police officer, wanting him to find Frankie, his business partner who had betrayed him. She has information that could destroy Caleb's life, giving him two days to locate Frankie.
Frankie is 58 year old former Sergeant Francesca Reynolds, with whom Caleb has a complicated relationship, her addictions had her working with criminals, endangering his wife, Kat, but she had also risked her life to save them both too. After a lifetime of bad decisions, Caleb's marriage to Kat had been heading towards divorce, but they are slowly working their way back to each other, Kat is pregnant. After a devastating history of miscarriages, this is a fraught and worrying time for Caleb, he has had to change and be more open and communicative with Kat, take only safe business assignments, and make sure Kat faces no danger from his cases. However, life has other plans for him when he comes across Maggie, Frankie's sister, deeply involved with the criminal underworld, so badly injured that she has to be hospitalised. When Maggie's adorable bright young daughter, 9 year old Tilda, is abducted, Caleb and Frankie once again work together to find and save her. As the bodies pile up, Caleb additionally has to find who is sabotaging his friend Alberto's catering business and vandalising his deaf community cafe.
Viskic writes a gripping and atmospheric crime mystery of double crosses and betrayals, with an unusual protagonist in the deaf Caleb, giving the reader insights into the world of the deaf and Aussie sign language. We are given the perspectives of a deaf person, their everyday life and challenges, the way they are treated, often as invisible, stupid, dismissed, and even facing an over-solicitousness on occasion. With Caleb's friendship with Alberto and others, we additionally get a fascinating and rare picture of deaf culture and community in Melbourne. Viskic has a winning protagonist in Caleb, a flawed man, seeing a therapist, trying to do his best in a world that brings unavoidable trouble to his door step. One of the highlights for me was seeing his relationship develop with the enchanting Tilda. This is a terrifically memorable addition to what is clearly a superb series that I think will appeal to most crime and mystery readers. Highly recommended! Many thanks to Bonnier Books for an ARC.