This represented a little palate cleanser after three hefty fantasy novels. It’s a straightforward Australian-set police procedural, the fourth in a series featuring detective Dana Russo. Needless to say, I had not read any of the previous books. Such is life on the cutting edge of 99p specials.
I’ve often wondered why you get later-in-the-series books on the Kindle Deals page. I suppose they think you’re going to be a completist and buy the others so you can read them in order. Not me.
Detective Russo is an extreme introvert who normally works with a different partner, who doesn’t feature in this book. But it’s not a first-person narrative, and the viewpoint shifts around a little bit, taking in a couple of other characters too.
What would you expect from the title? I’d be looking for a sense of place, an atmosphere, something like The Dry, and so it seems, to begin with. A police constable arrives at a country hotel to secure a crime scene, and we get a lot of descriptions of the heat and the surrounding countryside. We’re in a small town/suburb about four hours from “the City”, which might be Sydney, I don’t know. There’s a bit of a heatwave on, so it really does feel like The Dry.
But after those initial scenes at the crime scene, we’re back to the police headquarters. Most of the action takes place in meeting and interview rooms. There are occasional forays to the City, where another cop interviews a couple of other people and visits places, but really this police procedural is mostly procedure.
The shout line on the cover was “A REMOTE HOTEL. FIVE GUESTS. ONE MURDER.” But really the content of the book doesn’t live up to that. We leave the remote hotel behind quite quickly, and the investigation involves looking at the content of hard drives, accessing message history on phones, and eventually interviewing the suspects. But the suspects don’t get to interact or anything, and the sense that these people have fraught relationship issues is arrived at by proxy.
This wasn’t bad; I found it quite readable, but it’s a bit on the dry side, like a single episode of a long-running cop series. Nothing too ambitious. Competent, and probably quite realistic, but not particularly exciting.
Well, it worked as a palate cleanser. Next on my list: The Big Book of Cyberpunk.