Opal is the third in Wolf’s Lucas Walker series. I have read one, two and four, and so this was a step back. Walker is a federal police officer whose main interest is a bikie drug dealing gang led by an elusive Stephan Marcovich. This story is outside of this theme, although there are whispers of this line in the continuing story of Lucas Walker.
Walker’s sister (actually it is his half-sister, but I hate that term as much as I hate step-mother), Grace is visiting from Boston and Walker wants to show her the highlights of Caloodie, Walker’s hometown. Grace conveniently plays the role of ‘damsel in distress’. But firstly, they must drive to a small opal mining town of Kanpara to bring home Walker’s cousin from his mining work. A murder and floods get in the way. So, as in her first book, Outback, Walker is caught up in an investigation which comes about because he was in the wrong place at the right time.
I very recently finished Jane Harper’s recent book, Last One Out. Normally I dive into crime fiction after a few more demanding texts. The attraction of crime fiction is its endless and universal theme of good conquering evil. The two books make for an interesting comparison.
Wolf runs a tight ship; her stories are focused on the solving of the crime. She does paint a picture of the setting, and the characters are not cut-outs, but to the reader she is able to create real people that we all know. As the menacing tension builds, there are several crises, flashpoints, full of action. Meanwhile Harper has drifted off into writing family dramas and social commentary on the Australian bush, with a murder hovering in the background.
I appreciate Wolf’s writing as she doesn’t resort to purple prose and overuse of adjectives in her descriptions, she names animals and plants in her writing. She is liberal in her use of the Australian vernacular, ‘he had a beef with the other guy’, no they weren’t having a BBQ together! She isn’t hesitant in dropping the great Australian adjective, adverb, noun and verb F _ _ K! Plus, other assorted expletives normally deleted. Like Wolf I live outside of Australia and I think that distance gives you the chance to see your own country with greater clarity. Her account of the Australian outback is true and accurate, although I think she might have upset some hydrologists in some of her accounts in the rise and fall of the flood.
The plot is similar to Harper’s plot in Last One Out. In both books there has been murders and everyone in the town is a possible suspect. Walker’s cousin, Blair, becomes the prime suspect, but not in Walker’s eyes.
There is a distinct hint just over half way through the book that in my eyes was a clear indicator as to who was the murderer, but I don’t think this took anything away from the story and like Wolf’s other books she spends considerable time sweeping the story threads into a neat pile so all the plot lines and threads are tidied up for the reader, oh and as expected Stephan Marcovich is still on the run and Walker will undoubtedly be in pursuit, but that’s Wolf’s next book.
After finishing Opal I immediately started on Chris Hammer’s Legacy, which is set down the road from Opal and it too has a flood! What a surprise. The Australian outback crime genre has certain constants in many stories.