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An Ill Wind

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High on a hill above the small Victorian town of Carrabeen, 300 wind turbines constantly spin.

Except one is now deadly still - a body hanging from its huge white blade.

Detective Sergeants Belinda Burney and Will Lovell are shocked to discover the dead man is Geordie Pritchard, a rich local philanthropist and owner of the wind energy farm.

Suicide at first seems the likely explanation, until Geordie's widow Lucinda insists her husband was murdered - and she has the death threats to prove it.

Certainly the wind farm has ripped the rural town in two. Some welcome the jobs and prosperity it brings, others are enraged by the loss of farming land.

In short, Pritchard was both saint and sinner. But who in the small community hated him enough to want him dead?

'Hickey is a rising talent in the Australian bush noir genre, and her latest offering is a ripper . . . a fabulous novel. FIVE STARS.' Good Reading magazine

'This is a terrific novel with a great plot that reflects a lot of current issues.' Readings

'A solid slice of bush noir.' Canberra Weekly

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Published July 1, 2025

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About the author

Margaret Hickey

14 books315 followers
Margaret Hickey is an award-winning author and playwright from North East Victoria. She has a PhD in Creative Writing and is deeply interested in rural lives and communities. She is the author of Cutters End and Stone Town.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 115 reviews
Profile Image for Mandy White (mandylovestoread).
2,800 reviews863 followers
July 11, 2025
Big Margaret Hickey fan here… huge!! This is one amazing writer and an Ill Wind is another absolute cracker of a book. How can you go past a book that starts with a body hanging from a wind turbine?! I mean come on.. you need to know more about that. I know ai did, and it was disturbing 😳

I love a small town murder mystery, rural crime is one of my favourite genres to read, especially when it is set in Australia. Set in the town of Carrabeen Victoria, a place where the wind turbines have divided a community. The farmers are struggling, people can’t afford a home and yet people are making millions from these eyesores. Not everyone is happy about them, but who is angry enough to kill?

Enter Sergeant Belinda Burney, a former resident of the town, and her city slicker husband Will. They have their work cut out for them with all the secrets in town. On top of that Belinda is dealing with being heavily pregnant and an ailing father.

I was so caught up in the drama!! As always with this authors work, you get a real sense of the environment around the characters. It plays a huge part of this story and you can picture it as you are reading. Get ready to be shocked until the very end.

Thanks so much to Penguin Books Australia for sending me a copy of this book to read. Another fantastic Australian crime fiction book.
Profile Image for Helen.
2,919 reviews65 followers
September 21, 2025
When a body is found hanging from one of the three hundred wind turbines in the small country town of Carrabeen in Victoria it seems that suicide is what has happened here, did Geordie Pritchard owner of the wind farm, local wealthy philanthropist kill himself?

Detective Sergeants Belinda Burney and Will Lovell are married and Belinda is very pregnant they moved to Carrabeen nearly one year ago to the town Belinda grew up in so as she can be close to her father who is ill, they are only here for a year before they move back to Melbourne, now they must find out what happened to Geordie and it seems that what they uncover points to murder not suicide, was it the turbine haters.

What they are uncovering is taking them in many directions and there is more happening when another local falls into a silo and says he was pushed and then one of the teachers at the school is found murdered there are more questions than answers, will they find out what really happened is it one culprit or more than one?

This story started a little slow for me but then wow it moved in so many different directions there are twists and turns throughout the story that had me turning the pages and coming up with no answers, I thoroughly enjoyed this one, fabulous characters they are strong and determined but real people, I would highly recommend this one to any reader of a good crime, mystery, thriller story.

My thanks to Penguin AU for my copy to read and review.
Profile Image for Lisa.
117 reviews
August 10, 2025
An amazing Aussie author? ✅
A body hanging from the top of a wind turbine? ✅
A small town mystery with a difference? ✅

I loved this read. Who can resist a Margaret Hickey book. Certainly not me. This one had it all: great characters, plot twists, a beautiful setting. I could rave all day about how awesome Margaret Hickey’s writing is. 5 stars all day for this one!
Profile Image for EmG ReadsDaily.
1,614 reviews145 followers
November 1, 2025
Fabulous small town Aussie crime fiction.

I enjoyed as the details unfolded about the death of philanthropist Geordie Pritchard, the owner of the wind energy farm. I would like to read more from Detective Sergeants Belinda Burney and Will Lovell.

Margaret Hickey remains an auto-read author for me.

Another great read for #AussieAugust2025

4.5 stars (rounded up)
Profile Image for Michele (michelethebookdragon).
402 reviews18 followers
August 5, 2025
Margaret certainly knows how to write a fantastic small town murder mystery. This one had all the right ingredients - a dead body or two, secrets and lies, warring factions, old enemies, revenge and some great policing.

Wind farms aren't everyone's favourite thing in the rural town of Carrabeen, but nobody expected to see a body hanging from one of the massive blades one Monday morning. When the body is discovered to be local businessman and wind farm owner Geordie Pritchard, the list of suspects grows day by day.

We are introduced to husband and wife policing team, Senior Sergeants Belinda Burney and Will Lovett, who have a great working relationship and really bounce off each other well.

There are a lot of different personalities in this town and that made this a interesting read. There was the RM Williams wearing old money pastoralists, the hardworking shopkeepers, blow ins from the city and those on either end of the clean energy argument. The interwoven stories while easy to keep track of, had me guessing how it was all going to join up.

Margaret's sharp writing, the short chapters and the great characters made this a great story to read.

This is my fifth book by Margaret and if you haven't read any, you are seriously missing out on some great stories.
Profile Image for Tundra.
912 reviews48 followers
June 16, 2025
3.5 stars. I particularly liked the setting amongst wind turbines in rural Victoria. The husband and wife police duo was also an interesting addition to the Australian crime catalogue. This is well paced and neatly tied up.
Profile Image for Marles Henry.
950 reviews59 followers
July 21, 2025
You needn’t look further than a Margaret Hickey novel to get a taste of Australian outback crime thriller noir at its best. Especially when it begins with a man hanging from a wind turbine blade – an ominous and overwhelming sight even without a body in situ, in a local wind-farm on the Victorian plains.  Entrepreneur Geordie Pritchard is dead, and there is more than one suspect, let along story line interconnected to his death. This story’s tributaries were far reaching: there were connections back to the local school where thefts and a potential squatter were playing havoc, their principal and sports teacher, both with reputations to hide, the local campers and their wild bush parties, and the community stalwarts including Reg, who all seem to be connected in some way or another to the death of Geordie.

This small rural community and its connections stem way back to the old shearing days and the local schools where many of the children were linked through study, sport or the depth of their families’ pockets. The argument for and against the wind farms are balanced, as are the outcomes (perceived or otherwise) arising from them, from displaced farming land, and physical symptoms. The small town of Carrabeen seems to be happy to embrace the future of renewable energy, but at what cost? The underlying secrets are buried but nor far enough for Senior Sergeant’s Belinda Burney and Will Lovell to expose where they are based temporarily in the town as part of their rural policing service.  Thee town has connections to Belinda’s past – where Reg, her father, still lives -  and Will’s past – where his family had old money connections. This is also the last case for Belinda, days out from starting maternity leave. The way that Belinda and Will have been created is a testament to Hickey’s writing style. They are realistic in their roles as rural police officers, staffing an under resourced small town station and reporting to and working with ‘city’ police who pull rank. They are also realistic in their relationship: the way they lean on each other, are respectful yet also get frustrated with each other was both cute and refreshing. Belinda’s frustration with her father was also convincing, down to her not delivering a homemade orange cake to him and using it as a peace offering to speak to the wife of Geordie Pritchard.

An intriguing tale where the past and the present are in battle in rural Australia – what better place to experience crime thriller noir!

Thank you #penguinaustralia for the #gifted copy!
Profile Image for Alicia.
243 reviews12 followers
July 18, 2025
This is my fifth Hickey. Her writing provides a comfortable ride through a story: she knows rural people and she knows the land they live on. On top of that, she writes compelling plots with multiple threads of possibility and interest to keep you guessing.

In addition to knowing the land and people, Hickey understands the politics and tensions between different interest groups, and with her tackling clean energy and wind farms, she is tapping into some ready-made tension. This is a growing trend in crime writing, as seen recently in Matthew Spencer's Broke Road where wine makers are pitted against coal miners.

In terms of protagonists, I'm not sure if I'm a big fan of the husband and wife detective team in this story... But then I'm still grieving that Hickey hasn't done another Mark Ariti. I'd enjoy finding out more about him!

The confession of the guilty party at the end of this story also felt a little too convenient and unforced though, I have to say, even though dramatically it worked very well. I found myself thinking why are you admitting to everything you fool? Although there's always that assumption that whoever is guilty must be just a bit unbalanced and egotistical...

All up, smooth interesting writing; good tension and suspense with a knotty problem at its heart. Light and entertaining. It will suck you in.
Profile Image for Gloria (Ms. G's Bookshelf).
918 reviews198 followers
August 15, 2025
⭐️4.5 Stars⭐️
Margaret Hickey has delivered yet another entertaining and gripping book! An Ill Wind is set in a small Victorian rural town and it centres around the wind turbine farms and a murder…….a body found hanging from one of the blades!

There are multiple suspects and our husband and heavily pregnant wife policing team Belinda Burney and Will Lovell have their work cut out for them. They’re great personalties and I enjoyed their relatable characters and the way they worked together as a team.

I love reading stories of rural crime in an Australian setting and this was a creative and fantastic read! I’ve learned some things I didn’t know about the wind turbines and the story overall has a great environmental theme.

Great pacing and loved the suspense! Highly recommend.

Publication Date 01 July 2025
Publisher Imprint Penguin

Thank you so much to the lovely team at Penguin Books Australia for a copy of the book.
Profile Image for Anne Fenn.
960 reviews21 followers
December 8, 2025
Margaret Hickey is a fabulous writer. Her books are all set in Australian country areas. This one is set in the golden plains shire, Ballarat being the nearest big town. Her main characters Belinda and Will, are both police figures faced with solving a shocking death on a wind farm . The author is familiar with the disputes such machines bring with them to rural communities. Depicting town life involves a creating a range of different characters, all authentic in this case. It’s a mystery that seems harder to solve as more deaths occur.
Very entertaining writing, I really enjoyed it.
Profile Image for Shona.
104 reviews1 follower
September 5, 2025
A solid 4 ⭐️ I think, certainly not as menacing as her previous book. But boy lots of things happen in those small country towns. Makes me happy to live in the suburbs. 🙂
24 reviews
July 31, 2025
I love Margaret's book but this one just missed slightly. still a good read just didn't grab like past books have.
Profile Image for Natalie Pomeroy.
146 reviews1 follower
October 26, 2025
It took a bit to get started. I did like Belinda & Will. I wonder if they'll feature again.
Profile Image for Emilie (emiliesbookshelf).
257 reviews28 followers
August 26, 2025
Margaret Hickey has done it again! An Ill Wind is a fabulous small town murder mystery. So well researched, you will quickly feel completely immersed in this small rural community and all the drama. The lead characters Belinda and Will are interesting and very relatable and the murder mystery twists keep you turning the pages trying to piece together the clues along the way

I loved the country Victorian setting with many local references, such as the Melbourne Vixens
🦊

With a solid pace and interesting characters and story line, I was gripped from the get go

Highly recommend this fantastic book!

Thank you so much Penguinbooksaus for my gifted review copy 🫶

Profile Image for Karen.
790 reviews
January 2, 2026
2.5 rounded up
Set in Victoria and centred around a small town where the population is divided by the arrival of wind turbines and their role, or not, in a series of murders.
I have read a number of this authors Australian noir/police procedurals and while I always enjoy them for their settings and the ease of read I am always left a little disappointed, somehow wanting a bit more grit but not really able to put my finger on why or what.
211 reviews9 followers
November 7, 2025
4.5 .. very good read; Belinda and Will are a husband and wife team of detectives temporarily based in Ballarat/Bendigo hinterland investigating a murder in a farmland area of wind turbines. Satisfactorily weaves the pro and con arguments around turbines and their placement; but more than that the story echoes the rural community, rural conditions and relationships and money; a good read.
Profile Image for Shannon.
1,324 reviews46 followers
October 12, 2025
A really great read. I loved the mystery and the reasons behind the murder(s). I wish the author had addressed the myths that some of her characters believed about wind turbines in an afterword or similar, but otherwise an enjoyable book.
766 reviews1 follower
November 15, 2025
The wind turbines that have been built around the small Victorian town of Carrageen have divided the community. Some farmers are struggling while others are making a fortune from the turbines that are considered an eyesore and a danger to health. When the body of Geordie Pritchard, the owner of the wind farm is found hanging from one of the turbines, suicide is suspected. But would this wealthy philanthropic man really have killed himself?

Well done Margaret Hickey on another great australian rural crime novel.
Profile Image for Grace.
212 reviews
August 22, 2025
3.5 ⭐️ interesting but just didn’t grab me the way “the creeper did”. Perhaps I didn’t feel a connection with the main characters
Profile Image for Lisa.
405 reviews8 followers
June 18, 2025
Read as a read and review ARC thanks to Better Reading Preview. Here's my review of this great addition to the Australian rural noir crime thriller genre :)

Margaret Hickey’s modern rural ‘outback noir’ crime thriller starts with a gripping discovery of a shockingly chilling death scene at a wind turbine.
An Ill Wind, without pushing an agenda or overpowering the crime thriller storyline, delves into the current political and environmental arguments around wind farms and their impacts, both positive and negative, in rural farming communities. The novel reflects the interconnectedness of rural communities, where there are so many links between people and events, where local history is long remembered, and connections can extend well beyond the local town. There is beauty and foreboding in both the local scenery and the local relationships. The wind farms are a presence that tower over all.
Our lead characters are policing couple Senior Sergeant’s Belinda Burney and Will Lovell, they’re doing rural service together in expectant Belinda’s former home town, while she also cares for her aging father. Belinda is a force to be reckoned with despite being heavily pregnant and underestimated by other policing investigators. Will makes a wonderful counterpoint to her character as well as adding a layer of discussion around class and connections through his ‘old boys’ school network and more privileged upbringing. A great read!!
Profile Image for Robert Goodman.
559 reviews16 followers
July 11, 2025
Margaret Hickey is fast establishing herself as one of the best Australian rural crime authors. She has build on her understanding of these communities to deliver a string of engaging and atmospheric procedurals. Her latest book, An Ill Wind, takes on a rural hot button issue – wind farms. In it she tries to explore all sides of the debate and the way it has divided communities.
An Ill Wind has a great hook for an opening – early one morning Geordie Pritchard is found hanging from the blade of one of his company’s wind turbines in the little Victorian town of Carrabeen. Pritchard comes from a wealth family that made its money in environmental destruction but he has tried to turn this around with investment in windfarms. Quickly on the scene are local police Will Lovell and his heavily pregnant wife Belinda Burney. Will and Belinda met as recruits and work in Melbourne but have now taken a job in the town so that Belinda can be closer to her ageing father. The pair start to assist the local investigative team and soon find a range of long held resentments and suspects. At the same time, Belinda is asked to investigate a series of mysterious thefts from the local high school.
After a trilogy featuring South Australian detective Mark Ariti, this is the second book where Hickey is feeling out new investigators. She uses the pair of Will and Belinda to explore and epitomise the wealth divide in these small towns. Will comes from money, much like the victim Geordie, while Belinda’s family came from the wrong side of the tracks, although her father Reg commanded some respect in the town for his shearing prowess. This divide and the long simmering resentments that it creates, are important in the dynamics of the town. To this end, Hickey is keen to flash her credentials as a chronicler of the whole of the rural experience, not just the farming side.
There are plenty of issues raised by this scenario. Foremost, the plot also allows Hickey to explore the tensions around windfarm development. From the economic and environmental benefit, to their impact on the landscape, to the conspiracy theories around their ability to cause cancer. But Hickey also takes readers into the culture of exclusive private schools and university colleges. This is the world that Geordie comes from but also one that is familiar to Will who turned his back on it to join the police.
Overall, An Ill Wind is another solid rural procedural. It suffers only in the surfeit of these narratives – set in a small town where everyone knows everyone, and everyone knows everyone’s business, going back multiple generations. The windfarm angle makes An Ill Wind interesting but not enough to necessarily allow it to rise above the pack. Those looking for a Australian rural crime fix, though, are in good hands.
Profile Image for Ron Brown.
435 reviews28 followers
December 25, 2025
This is my fifth Margaret Hickey book. She is a prodigious author, having written six books over the last six years. I have found that they varied in appeal to me. I think at times she complicates her novels with too many characters. Her previous police investigators were Mark Mariti and Sally White, this time we have husband and wife duo Detective Sergeants Belinda Burney and Will Lovell. I often wonder why authors decide to discontinue a police character, especially if that character creates a following. I quite liked Mariti and I thought White made for an interesting female police officer.

Another Australian bush/outback crime fiction set in a small country town, where everyone knows everyone and there are disputes and troubles going back generations. What sets this story apart is the theme of renewable energy and the place of wind generators in the Australian countryside. I do congratulate Ms Hickey for this concept. Climate change and subsequently renewable energy will probably become a theme crossing over to numerous fiction genres.

The two police protagonists are a married couple, Sergeants Belinda Burney and Will Lovell. Burney is very pregnant and about to go on maternity leave. They are investigating a murder. The deceased is Geordie Pritchard, a rich local philanthropist and owner of the wind energy farm. He was found hanging from one of his wind generators. Ms Hickey takes us is into the turmoil the wind generators are causing in the local community, those for and those against.

As the story develops, we have odd things being stolen from the school, another death occurs, Will does his hero bit, saving a guy from drowning in a wheat silo, he may have been pushed. We meet an array of characters: Reg, Belinda’s cantankerous father, (who is nearly garrotted, sadly only ‘nearly’) the mother-in-law from hell, a school principal with a drinking problem, (don’t they all), a slightly weird home ec teacher. (Yep, most of them are that way!) Ms Hickey uses her own experiences as a teacher to enhance the school setting and the teachers.

In the background, and foreground of the novel are the wind turbines. The community is divided over the installation of these renewable energy machines. Hickey does not present it as a polemic, both side’s views are presented. Unsurprisingly it is an issue dividing communities in the real world.

With murder mysteries I never bother involving myself in the quest to guess who committed the crime. The author reveals all in the final pages and the resolution is reasonably believable.

It took me some while to become interested in the town of Carabeen and the many characters who are part of the story, but I did end up finding the book most satisfying.
Profile Image for Susan C.
328 reviews
August 10, 2025
Having previously read "The Creeper" I was quite excited to discover she had a new book, this one, coming out this year and had put it on hold as soon as I could.

Like The Creeper, this is a small country town mystery that features two deaths and a couple of close calls. Two of our protagonists are married police, one born and raised in this town in what could be described as 'impoverished' circumstances, while the other born into a quite wealthy Melbourne based family. In a sense the book features a lot of this or that - the haves and have nots, and those who favour wind turbines against those who don't. With the traditional industries being farming and wheat, and the introduction of wind farms, this is a community facing change. Hickey is careful not to let her own biases on wind generation come to the fore (I do not know if she is for or against) but instead focuses on the genre of the book - a murder in a small town, who did it! Interestingly the backgrounds of both lead characters have an important role in the plot.

The story seemed to be a little slow to start but it wasn't long before I felt invested in solving the crime along side our heroes. In correct murder mystery principles you have the feeling that nothing has been hidden from you, that you are receiving all the information known to the detectives at the same time they are uncovering it. This allows you to form your own suspect list as you look for clues. The plot line seems believable and the ending is satisfactory. Once again, the author has included an epilogue which actually covers the day before the story starts which will give the reader the necessary information on why 'they' did it.

I look forward to Margaret Hickey's next book.
Profile Image for Great Escape Books.
302 reviews9 followers
July 18, 2025
Our Review...

If anyone knows how to craft a gripping Aussie crime novel it’s Margaret Hickey, and after setting the bar high with titles including Broken Bay, and The Creeper, Hickey continues to deliver. 

In the golden plains of rural Victoria, a small country town lies in the shadow of 300 wind turbines. A topic that divides the local community; with multi-generational farming families, wary of change and technology, standing at odds with those who support renewable energy and job opportunities. Tensions reach a breaking point when the body of wind farm owner and local philanthropist Geordie Pritchard is found hanging from one of the huge turbine blades. 

Senior Sergeant Belinda Burney—heavily pregnant and on secondment from Melbourne—is returning to her hometown, joined by her colleague and husband Will Lovell. For Belinda, it's a return to her hometown for Will, a new challenge in unfamiliar territory.

Hickey has a remarkable talent for bringing characters to life with depth and authenticity even within a stand alone novel. She masterfully captures the personalities, atmosphere, and tensions of rural Australian towns to create a crime novel that’s both compelling and rich in its descriptions of the landscape. I highly recommend this novel! 

Review by Jess R @ Great Escape Books
Profile Image for Emily.
250 reviews18 followers
July 11, 2025
Suicide at first seems the likely explanation, until death threats come to light…who in the small community hated him enough to want him dead?

An Ill Wind is the latest rural crime novel from Margaret Hickey and it’s definitely my favourite read by this author to date!

The story centres around the small Victorian town of Carrabeen, where high on a hill 300 wind turbines constantly spin. Except one turbine is now deadly still. Geordie Pritchard, a rich local philanthropist and owner of the wind farm is found hanging from its huge white blade.

The storyline of this one was fabulous! I had no idea who was guilty the whole way through! The wind farm has clearly ripped the rural community in two, there are strong opinions for and against everywhere. These side characters definitely added a lot of depth to the storyline with their perspectives, personalities and secrets!

I really enjoyed the husband and wife duo, Detective Sergeants Belinda Burney and Will Lovell. Belinda, even though heavily pregnant, had a brilliant mind and perseverance. Having grown up in the small town she knows its residents well.

If you love Aussie noir and crime reads then I definitely recommend An Ill Wind.
Profile Image for Gretchen Bernet-Ward.
568 reviews21 followers
December 28, 2025
This is how a rural crime novel should be written. Plenty of outstanding characters, good descriptions and high emotion plus tricky side moments and dialogue that is believable from people who are believable; flawed, different, kind, busy, smart and still believable. Even when they have an about-to-give-birth pregnancy and continue working. Belinda had more stamina than I did at that uncomfortable trimester. Plus this unique scenario, I mean death by wind turbine wouldn’t come along too often and it’s a real puzzler. The book title is perfect because of the old saying “It’s an ill wind that blows no good” well suited to the events that transpire. The reader gets flashbacks and insights into country town tempers, bad deals, sad memories and suspect behaviour. Can the dynamic cop duo, Belinda and Will, solve what has happened? There is doubt whether the death is a killing or a suicide but either way it’s bizarre.

Along the way I enjoyed the investigation and different scenarios, some heart-thumping, some emotional but I had an issue with two character names, quite bland but Belinda and Lucinda – oh dear. Over all, this is a clever crime story and although spoilt for choice I will let you figure out who committed the crime. Note that in real life there are several tragic wind turbine deaths and they make upsetting reading. I followed the team as their investigations unfold, there’s more than murder/suicide going on here. Carrabeen is a small town with old rivalries and unforgotten hurts. A classic quote “Will nodded. They were known for having a wide-reaching portfolio." Also I have been in meetings like chapter 18 in the town library, the Aussie heckling is classic! Wind turbines, who wants them in their backyard? If you haven’t already set this one aside, do it now for some solid holiday reading.
864 reviews2 followers
December 29, 2025
Typical "outback noir" crime fiction, set in a small Australian rural town where all characters know each other - and that can lead to several suspects as the police investigate. I like the pairing of police officers Belinda and Will.


High on a hill above the small Victorian town of Carrabeen, 300 wind turbines constantly spin. Except one is now deadly still – a body hanging from its huge white blade. Detective Sergeants Belinda Burney and Will Lovell are shocked to discover the dead man is Geordie Pritchard, a rich local philanthropist and owner of the wind energy farm. Suicide at first seems the likely explanation, until Geordie’s widow Lucinda insists her husband was murdered – and she has the death threats to prove it. Certainly the wind farm has ripped the rural town in two. Some welcome the jobs and prosperity it brings, others are enraged by the loss of farming land. In short, Pritchard was both saint and sinner. But who in the small community hated him enough to want him dead?' Hickey is a rising talent in the Australian bush noir genre, and her latest offering is a ripper . . . a fabulous novel. FIVE STARS.' Good Reading magazine' This is a terrific novel with a great plot that reflects a lot of current issues.' Readings'A solid slice of bush noir.' Canberra Weekly
Profile Image for Kirsten.
316 reviews25 followers
June 12, 2025
Margaret Hickey’s latest Aussie rural crime read is her best yet. Sat in the small town of Carrabeen which was the perfect setting to explore the main themes of wealth and the impact and controversies of wind turbines on rural communities. I also liked how interconnected and how far back all the characters were.

I really enjoyed the police procedural side of this novel and husband and wife detective team Will and Belinda who moved back to Belinda’s home town to help look after her Dad for a year. It is coming closer to them moving back to Melbourne and it was interesting to see their different thoughts on that and how they adjusted to being in a small town.

The main investigation was the death of well known local community leader. Intertwined with this investigation was a number of thefts that happened at the local school, a number of accidents and a second murder. I had fun guessing how and if all these events were and enjoyed seeing how it all played out. I certainly didn’t expect the ending. Another gripping read from Hickey, I hope to see more of Will and Belinda in the future.
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