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Hirsch #5

Mischance Creek

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'Disher is the gold standard for rural noir' CHRIS HAMMER
'The equal of Joseph Wambaugh and James Lee Burke' THE TIMES
'A superb chronicler of cop culture' SUNDAY TIMES

It's the worst drought in a generation, and the people of Senior Constable Paul Hirschhausen's vast outback beat are suffering. Foreclosures. Failing businesses. Petty quarrels on the brink of escalation.

So when Annika Nordrum asks for help, Hirsch is relieved to feel useful. Her father's body was found at the bottom of a mineshaft six years ago, his death ruled an accident. But her mother hasn't been seen since. As Hirsch starts investigating, more questions arise: why was her father at a long-abandoned gold diggings? What happened to his missing possessions? And who found his dog wandering alone with a bloodstained collar? Tensions are high in Tiverton; can Hirsch find his answers before the town reaches breaking point?

From the multiple Ned Kelly Award-winning author and king of Australian crime comes the latest Paul Hirsch mystery, for readers of Jane Harper, Ian Rankin and Chris Hammer.

448 pages, Paperback

First published November 6, 2025

187 people are currently reading
372 people want to read

About the author

Garry Disher

92 books717 followers
Garry Disher was born in 1949 and grew up on his parents' farm in South Australia.

He gained post graduate degrees from Adelaide and Melbourne Universities. In 1978 he was awarded a creative writing fellowship to Stanford University, where he wrote his first short story collection. He travelled widely overseas, before returning to Australia, where he taught creative writing, finally becoming a full time writer in 1988. He has written more than 40 titles, including general and crime fiction, children's books, textbooks, and books about the craft of writing.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 78 reviews
Profile Image for Sandysbookaday (taking a step back for a while).
2,626 reviews2,472 followers
November 3, 2025
EXCERPT: Annika Nordrum had a satellite phone but how prepared was she otherwise? And why was she heading for Anna Gorge? No one ever went there. The roads were shocking. 'Have you got emergency gear? Plenty of food and water?'
Nordrum nodded. Her brown hair had mostly escaped her short ponytail and was pasted damply to her forehead and neck. She had a narrow, faintly lived-in face, as if she'd had her share of setbacks. 'Plenty of everything,' she said, 'including locator beacons.'
'More than most tourists travel with,' Hirsch said.
'I'm not a tourist,' she said simply. 'I'm looking for my mother's body.'


ABOUT 'MISCHANCE CREEK': Hirsch is checking firearms. The regular police all weapons secured, ammo stored separately, no unauthorised person with keys to the gun safe. He’s checking people, too. The drought is hitting hard in the mid-north, and Hirsch is responsible for the welfare of his scattered flock of battlers, bluebloods, loners and miscreants.

He isn’t usually called on for emergency roadside assistance. But with all the other services fully stretched, it’s Hirsch who has to grind his way out beyond the Mischance Creek ruins to where some clueless tourist has run into a ditch.

As it turns out, though, Annika Nordrum isn’t exactly a tourist. She’s searching for the body of her mother, who went missing seven years ago. And the only sense in which she’s clueless is the lack of information unearthed by the cops who phoned in the original investigation.

Hirsch owes it to Annika to help, doesn’t he? Not to mention that tackling a cold case beats the hell out of gun audits and admin…

MY THOUGHTS: I am always excited to see a new novel out by Garry Disher - even better when it's a continuation of the Hirsch series. I love Hirsch - he's very human and down-to-earth - and Disher writes him into very realistic situations.

Hirsch has been in Tiverton six years now, his policing a varied mix of law enforcement, social work, welfare checks and keeping his eyes and ears open.

As always, there are multiple threads running through this story - a missing man; a woman looking for her mother's body; harassment of local aboriginals; petty crime; corruption at a local level; political extremism; domestic violence, and an intriguing cold case . . . There's always something for Hirsch to follow up, especially since he is in a sole-charge station. He lives the job.

I dallied over this read, savoring each situation, enjoying the descriptions of the South Australian outback. I was in no hurry to close the cover on the final chapter of Mischance Creek but when I did, it was with an immense feeling of satisfaction, and just a little regret. Regret that it will be a year or so before I get to go visit Hirsch again. It's like waiting for my annual holiday!

Although Mischance Creek is the 5th book in the Hirsch series, it is easily read as a stand-alone.

⭐⭐⭐⭐.5

#MischanceCreek @WaitomoDistrictLibrary

MEET THE AUTHOR: GARRY DISHER (born 15 August 1949, in the Corporate Town of Burra, South Australia) is an Australian author of crime fiction and children's literature. He became a full-time writer in 1988.

https://sandysbookaday.wordpress.com/...
Profile Image for Brenda.
5,076 reviews3,014 followers
December 11, 2025
Senior Constable Paul Hirschhausen was driving his vast rural beat in South Australia, doing his annual fire-arms check - so far so good - when he came across Annika Nordrum. When she told him what she was about to do, he was more than happy to help out. Six years prior, Annika's parents had gone missing. They'd headed off, as they did now and then, to do some gem fossicking, and she hadn't heard from them. Her father was discovered at the bottom of an old mine shaft in an area they hadn't planned to be, and her mother was still missing. Her dad's death was called misadventure, but Annika wasn't so sure.

Meanwhile, tempers were frayed throughout the community and in Hirsch's small town of Tiverton. The drought was relentless, people were having to shoot their sheep because of no feed. Hundreds of animals that only the year before had been worth a good amount of money, now worth nothing. But Hirsch was concerned about one of the locals who was making a nuisance of himself, and when his station was attacked - with him inside on his own - Hirsch contacted his boss. His suspicions were aroused when a caravan was stolen - what was going on? Was it all much deeper than anyone realised?

Mischance Creek is the 5th in the Hirsch series by Aussie author Garry Disher and I thoroughly enjoyed it. A gentle, slow burner to start with as it gradually built up into a crescendo of action packed suspense, when I couldn't put it down. Another great episode in this addictive series, I'm already looking forward to #6. Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Suzanne.
701 reviews153 followers
October 20, 2025
This is the 5th book in the Hirsch series. It's my first and I quite easily read it as a standalone. I will be rectifying this and reading his backlist. I loved this book and here are the reasons why.

* Aboriginal representation

* Cold case

* Hirsch's character - I'm so used to reading about hardheaded police investigators. I found him to be empathetic, down-to-earth character.

Highly recommend. Another author to add to my ever-growing tbr pile.
Profile Image for Marianne.
4,407 reviews340 followers
September 30, 2025
Mischance Creek is the fifth book in the Hirsch series by popular Australian author, Garry Disher. After nearly six years at Tiverton, Senior Constable Paul Hirchhausen has settled into a fairly comfortable routine. When not dealing with admin paperwork and emails at Tiverton’s tiny Police Station, or attending a weekly briefing with his Sergeant and her personnel at Redruth, he’s on patrol, a mix of law enforcement, news exchange, welfare checks and social work.

In mid-November, though, his duty entails a firearms audit, of which he manages a few each day. Most he checks are compliant with the rules; a few need reminders or warnings; one old fellow’s bruises distract him from the .22 shells that don’t match his declared weapons. Later welfare checks come up empty: the old bloke has disappeared.

His sergeant has been tasked with finding the source of hate-mail being sent from the area to politicians, while she’s also trying to rehabilitate a small-town outlaw. There’s harassment of indigenous Australians and ethnic minorities, pressure on the local Ngadjuri people to allow removal of a sacred tree in the path of a proposed road widening, and complaints about a fraudulent car dealer, all of which require following up.

Hirsch encounters several sovereign citizens who maintain that the Government, and thus, the SA Police Service, has no authority over them. Among them, rabble rousers trying to get drought-stricken farmers disgruntled with authority to join right-wing extremist organisations like the Lone Pine Patriots League or My Place. He hears rumours of corruption in the district council and tries to track down a local artist’s caravan, boldly stolen from outside a gallery, while rubbish covertly dumped on Tiverton’s town paddock attracts the ire of the mayor.

Hirsch is called out to help a motorist stuck in a ditch. Annika Nordstrum turns out not to be a tourist, but a well-equipped young woman searching for her mother’s body. Before Hirsch came to Tiverton, gem fossickers Ben and Heather Nordrum were heading for what Ben described to Annika as a promising site at Anna Gorge near Mischance Creek.

Yet, his body was found down a mineshaft at Breadbox Plain. His death was ruled misadventure after a very perfunctory investigation, and Heather’s body was never found. Hirsch decides to see what information the file might reveal, if he can locate it.

Before matters are resolved, there is a body count of six that includes three innocents, a mini-siege at Tiverton Police Station from which Hirsch emerges sore and bruised, a lucky escape (for some) from a nasty man-trap, and a sniper fight. Hirsch uncovers an illegal dumping operation and a meth lab.

As always, Disher’s descriptive prose easily evokes his setting. He gives the reader characters that ring true and a wholly credible plot that keeps the reader guessing and the pages turning.

Hirsch is fast becoming a favourite protagonist: comfortable in his own skin; not perfect but certainly principled; not battling drugs or alcohol, not tempted by illegal or immoral activity; an essentially tireless cop, exuding integrity, dedicated to enforcement and protection tempered with the judgement calls essential in rural policing.

In this instalment he’s dealing with his own grief and concern for his grieving mum in the wake of his father’s recent death. Each additional dose of Hirsch makes him more likeable: another instalment will be very welcome.
This unbiased review is from an uncorrected proof copy provided by Text Publishing.
Profile Image for Marianne.
4,407 reviews340 followers
November 12, 2025
Mischance Creek is the fifth book in the Hirsch series by popular Australian author, Garry Disher. The audio version is narrated by Steve Shanahan. After nearly six years at Tiverton, Senior Constable Paul Hirchhausen has settled into a fairly comfortable routine. When not dealing with admin paperwork and emails at Tiverton’s tiny Police Station, or attending a weekly briefing with his Sergeant and her personnel at Redruth, he’s on patrol, a mix of law enforcement, news exchange, welfare checks and social work.

In mid-November, though, his duty entails a firearms audit, of which he manages a few each day. Most he checks are compliant with the rules; a few need reminders or warnings; one old fellow’s bruises distract him from the .22 shells that don’t match his declared weapons. Later welfare checks come up empty: the old bloke has disappeared.

His sergeant has been tasked with finding the source of hate-mail being sent from the area to politicians, while she’s also trying to rehabilitate a small-town outlaw. There’s harassment of indigenous Australians and ethnic minorities, pressure on the local Ngadjuri people to allow removal of a sacred tree in the path of a proposed road widening, and complaints about a fraudulent car dealer, all of which require following up.

Hirsch encounters several sovereign citizens who maintain that the Government, and thus, the SA Police Service, has no authority over them. Among them, rabble rousers trying to get drought-stricken farmers disgruntled with authority to join right-wing extremist organisations like the Lone Pine Patriots League or My Place. He hears rumours of corruption in the district council and tries to track down a local artist’s caravan, boldly stolen from outside a gallery, while rubbish covertly dumped on Tiverton’s town paddock attracts the ire of the mayor.

Hirsch is called out to help a motorist stuck in a ditch. Annika Nordstrum turns out not to be a tourist, but a well-equipped young woman searching for her mother’s body. Before Hirsch came to Tiverton, gem fossickers Ben and Heather Nordrum were heading for what Ben described to Annika as a promising site at Anna Gorge near Mischance Creek.

Yet, his body was found down a mineshaft at Breadbox Plain. His death was ruled misadventure after a very perfunctory investigation, and Heather’s body was never found. Hirsch decides to see what information the file might reveal, if he can locate it.

Before matters are resolved, there is a body count of six that includes three innocents, a mini-siege at Tiverton Police Station from which Hirsch emerges sore and bruised, a lucky escape (for some) from a nasty man-trap, and a sniper fight. Hirsch uncovers an illegal dumping operation and a meth lab.

As always, Disher’s descriptive prose easily evokes his setting. He gives the reader characters that ring true and a wholly credible plot that keeps the reader guessing and the pages turning.

Hirsch is fast becoming a favourite protagonist: comfortable in his own skin; not perfect but certainly principled; not battling drugs or alcohol, not tempted by illegal or immoral activity; an essentially tireless cop, exuding integrity, dedicated to enforcement and protection tempered with the judgement calls essential in rural policing.

In this instalment he’s dealing with his own grief and concern for his grieving mum in the wake of his father’s recent death. Each additional dose of Hirsch makes him more likeable: another instalment will be very welcome.
Profile Image for Robert Goodman.
549 reviews16 followers
October 10, 2025
Constable Paul Hirschhausen, aka Hirsch, is back for a firth time, patrolling the dry country or regional South Australia in Mischance Creek. Disher, was presented with a Ned Kelly Lifetime Achievement Award in 2018 at which point there was only one Hirsch novel (Bitter Wash Road). He returned to the character in 2019’s Peace and has since gone on to deliver some of the best books of his career. The third book in this series, Consolation, won the Ned Kelly Award for Crime Fiction in 2021, and an unconnected novel, Sanctuary was shortlisted for both the Ned Kelly Award and the British Crime Writers Association’s Silver Dagger. So readers should expect to be in good hands and Mischance Creek does not disappoint.

When Mischance Creek opens Hirsch is undertaking his annual firearms audit. This involves visiting everyone with a licenced firearm and ensuring that the weapons are securely stored and accounted for. His first visit finds a drought-impacted farmer having to shoot some of his flock, then he moves on to a recluse, Alastair Stanyer who’s brother is a successful landholder and sister-in-law is the mayor. Stanyer does a runner after the visit for reasons that Hirsch cannot quite fathom but which he will continue to probe at as other mysteries and issues come his way. One of those is dealing with the local sovereign citizens, people who believe that the laws don’t apply to them. And another is helping a woman called Annika Nordrum who has come to the area to re-investigate the disappearance of her mother and death of her father seven years before while on a fossicking expedition, an unsolved mystery that grabs his attention.

There is plenty more going on in Mischance Creek and plenty of opportunity to explore current issues. This includes local government corruption, fly tipping, protection of Aboriginal sacred sites and even the impact of closing and merging regional schools. All of these issues are handled with the nuance and understanding that they deserve. While there are clearly flawed and dangerous people in Hirsch’s world, and this is a crime story goes to some dark places, this is far from a black and white depiction of this community (although Disher’s view of some of these issues is fairly clear). It will not be hard for regular crime readers to join some of the dots before Hirsch, but the pleasure here is in the way Disher weaves and pulls the threads together, building to more than one climax.

As always, the firm centre of this novel and this series is Paul Hirschhausen. Not only a dogged investigator but a man who feels the responsibility of caring for his community. Unlike many of the damaged characters who inhabit much of crime fiction, Hirsch is just an ordinary policeman who wants to be with his partner and her daughter, who wants to spend more time with his ageing mother but also finds excuses to limit that time and is respected as part of the local regional team.

In Mischance Creek, Disher shows once again why he is one of the masters of Australian rural crime fiction. The Hirsch series is Australian rural crime but much like Disher’s Peninsula series, has its own particular flavour, taking a more communal and ground level view. And once again Disher delivers a mix of seemingly banal but incisive country policing and hot button social issues.
Profile Image for Lyn Elliott.
834 reviews243 followers
October 23, 2025
I leapt at the chance to borrow Garry Disher’s latest in the Hirsch series of rural Australian crime novels when I saw it on the new book shelf at the library. Couldn’t quite believe my luck!

It’s set in the dry lands north of Burra in the so-called Mid North of South Australia, whose southern edges are relatively well watered and have reasonable soil, but by the time you get up to Burra , which he here calls Redruth, it’s dry, the hills for miles are bare because their timbers were logged to support the copper mines that flourished in the nineteenth century, and beyond that you’re not quite in the desert, but it’s not far away.

Disher grew up in this pet of the country try and he conveys the misery of a drought year in the communities where Hirsch is the sole policeman most of the time, the relentless heat, farmers’ and businesses’ fear of impending fearing loss, the anguish of having to destroy stock because there’s no feed, what it means to be short of water.

Because this is a crime novel, many of his characters are bad, and bad things happen. But Disher also knows the inner workings of a small community where most people are decent, there’s a Christmas pageant, school fund raisers and endless cups of tea shared when someone drops in. At the end of a day of visits to remote properties, Hirsch is awash with tea and stale biscuits, kept for when a visitor might call by.

He’s in a loving relationship, and is an all round good bloke - no depressed, violent alcoholic detective here. What a relief.

Anyway, Disher has Blut this story with several strands which he’s experienced and skilful enough to keep on track at all times, pacing incidents, discoveries and normal life to keep all the stories moving along very nicely, thank you.

Disher is one of Australia’s most highly warded crime writers, and here he’s at the top of his game.

Profile Image for Craig.
65 reviews
October 14, 2025
The Hirsch series keeps getting better and better. Finished this in less than 24 hours. You won’t find better crime writing.
Profile Image for Gloria (Ms. G's Bookshelf).
910 reviews197 followers
October 5, 2025
⭐️4 Stars⭐️
Mischance Creek by Garry Disher is pure gold Aussie rural crime. This is the fifth book in the Hirsch series and it can easily be read as a standalone. The story is atmospheric and a great insight into rural policing in remote and lonely areas of outback Australia.

We follow the daily life of Senior Constable Paul Hirschhausen as he’s checking firearms during his regular annual police audit. As he journeys to each stop we meet multiple characters, there’s currently a drought in the mid-north and the farmers are doing it tough.

When Hirsch is called in to assist in a roadside emergency he meets a young woman named Annika who lost her mother seven years ago and is on a mission to find her body. The missing woman is a cold case and Hirsch just might see what he can dig up to assist Annika.

Publication Date 30 September 2025
Publisher Text Publishing

Thank you so much Text Publishing for an early copy of the book.
Profile Image for Jeannie.
Author 3 books7 followers
November 1, 2025
I'm a long-time Garry Disher fan, and Mischance Creek didn't disappoint; it was brilliant. I thoroughly enjoy the slow interweaving of events in the small Australian outback community through the day-to-day trivia a local cop faces; knowing the people, aware of the subtle changes, and putting it together- Disher captures it all in a great tale.
286 reviews2 followers
October 26, 2025
A good read, but not as strong as Hirsch #1-4. Disher is a fine Australian writer and rural crime noir is his specialty. Hirsch has been a good series thus far - probably not one for the younger reader, it largely centres around a Police Senior Constable in a small country town. The storylines are generally strong, stronger than you'd expect given the settings. Not one to read whilst tired, there is generally quite a bit going on across parallel events and characters.
Mischance Creek was a strong ending but it was somewhat dull for the first 2/3rds. 3 stars for me.
Profile Image for Emilie (emiliesbookshelf).
250 reviews25 followers
December 10, 2025

Senior Constable Paul Hirschhausen is on the job on a fire arms audit. While he is checking the firearms and ammo are stored safely he is also checking on their owners, as it’s a tough life out in the rural outback and many of the farmers are doing it tough thanks to the drought that won’t end

When he is called out to an emergency roadside assistance, he welcomes the change of scenery and pace. But instead finds Annika Nodrum stuck while trying to search for her mother who has been missing for seven years. Annika’s father was found dead but her mother’s body has never been recovered.

Hirsch decides to help Annika find out what happened to her mother and search for the police file, if he can find it? Why is there a shroud of secrecy around this case?

This is the fifth book in Disher’s Hirsch series and my first by the author and I believe it can easily be read as a stand alone

It is a slow burn but a very well written outback noir crime story that wonderfully builds suspense through out

Thank you Text Publishing for my gifted review copy
100 reviews
October 7, 2025
Great read. 5 star drama.
Aitch or Brevet Sergeant Paul Hirschhausen apart from dealing with sovereign citizens, lawbreakers, racism, road side assistance , stolen caravans a cold case and being assaulted is making time for his mother with them both grieving the loss his father. The setting of time aside to include family grief, slowed the pace of the book and for me gave a good story another dimension in quality.
Gary Disher and his Hirsch books are good and this book #5 has given # 6 an aspiration to be met.
I mean the book has lots of stuff like the loss of a colleague , council corruption, illegal dumping of hazardous ☢️ waste , dealing with teenage attitudes and Aitch’s love life. I cannot elaborate further or I would have to mark the spoilers button.
New readers and existing readers of Garry Disher enjoy.


This book is a fine piece of writing covering plots , subplots, and the human condition.
Probably a bit light on in the inefficiencies in government
29 reviews7 followers
October 17, 2025
6 stars! Love this series and this was one of the best. Great characters and plot, hope there will be more in the series, in the not too distant future 🤞🤞
Profile Image for Bethan Hazell.
202 reviews
November 12, 2025
A solid read, though probably the weakest in the Hirsch series (but still better than many other Aussie noir books). One of the threads - notably the sovereign citizen one - dead-ended (excuse the pun). A shame, because it’s a theme worth exploring.
Profile Image for Ash.
358 reviews20 followers
September 20, 2025
4/5 ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Vibes: Rural Noir, Slow Burn Tension, Small Town Secrets

- - -
Thanks to the kind team at Text Publishing, I was lucky enough to get an early read of Garry Disher’s latest book before its October release.

I’ve read some of Garry’s previous novels but this was my first time meeting Senior Constable Paul Hirschhausen, even though this is the fifth book in the series. Luckily it works perfectly as a standalone. I never felt lost having missed the earlier books, just instantly absorbed into Hirsch’s world.

Unlike a lot of my Aussie crime reads that kick off with a dead body or crime committed, Mischance Creek takes its time. It follows the daily grind of a rural cop, slowly but perfectly introducing the characters, town politics and building tensions until they spiral into the drama at the heart of the story.

The topical theme of sovereign citizenship was in particular fascinating to read about, especially with its prominence in the news lately.

Garry’s writing is unmatched when it comes to capturing the scenes of rural atmospheric Australia. I especially loved his play at making light of the idea of ‘outback noir’ given this is his bread and butter.

While the body count was lighter than my usual crime reads, the suspense and character depth kept me hooked. Mischance Creek is proof that sometimes the quiet crime dramas can be just as compelling.
Profile Image for Naomi (aplace_inthesun).
1,166 reviews35 followers
September 10, 2025
As can often be the case SC Paul Hirschhausen is doing a spot of routine country policing when things start happening. In the midst of it, things rapidly turn to shit and he’s in the hot seat, in the middle of South Australia’s nowhere, and not knowing who he can trust.

Like all good crime novels there’s multiple converging storylines - here there’s small town power and influence at play, a woman stranded but it turns out she’s not a tourist, and a group of sovereign citizens bringing attention to themselves for being stereotypical sovereign citizen assholes (NB - very topical here in Australia at the moment).

Whilst this is a series, and I agree reading the prior Hirsch books will give context, it’s not strictly necessary to pick up the main threads. We do learn more about Hirsch and his relationships, with some shifting perceptions from him of what policing means to him.

Rich in the desolate-ness of the drought stricken countryside, and the resultant effects upon the towns’ inhabitants, you can’t help but wonder about similar situations playing out throughout country Australia.

Mischance Creek is a book you can churn through but it definitely gives you something to think about behind the final pages.

Thanks Text Publishing for my advanced reading copy. It’s out this October (2025).
Profile Image for Garry.
342 reviews3 followers
November 15, 2025
Yet another fine tale from Garry Disher. His depiction of the place and its people is so true and done without exaggeration or fuss.
191 reviews1 follower
November 5, 2025
Another page turner from Garry Disher. No gratuitous violence - just an excellent story with a decent, kind and wry cop working towards the resolution of a crime.
Profile Image for Bobby’s pal.
61 reviews2 followers
December 11, 2025
Having recently travelled through Burra and SA’s mid north the landscape descriptions took on additional meaning. Burra (Disher’s Redruth) lies on the cusp of hard country in most directions.
2 reviews1 follower
October 24, 2025
another great book

I only read my first Gary Disher book a few years ago and could not believe he is not as well known as he should be. His books are great. His characters authentically Australian. My favourite is Hirsch and this did not disappoint.
18 reviews2 followers
November 21, 2025
Hate to say it but this just didn’t grip me! I love Garry Disher and the Hirsch series in particular and I usually can’t put his books down but this one felt like it took too long to get to the point. Still love the scene setting and social commentary of rural life.
1 review1 follower
October 21, 2025
Bloody awesome series

I can’t say enough about Hirsch series. Love the characters and story. The best! Can’t wait for the next one.
Profile Image for Text Publishing.
713 reviews289 followers
Read
November 18, 2025
The following book reviews have been shared by Text Publishing, publisher of Mischance Creek.

‘The characters are stark, the emotions of the big dry – quiet despair, hope and endurance – jump off the pages. Authentic Aussie crime writing at its best.’ [5 stars]
SA Weekend

‘Mischance Creek confirms Disher’s place as one of Australia’s great crime writers.’
Cheryl Akle, Australian

‘Garry Disher is the doyen of the outback crime novel and his latest about South Australian police constable Paul ‘Hirsch’ Hirschhausen, Mischance Creek, once more sets the standard for the genre.’
Canberra Weekly

‘This is a terrific read. It works as a standalone, but really – why stop there? The ‘Hirsch’ series is that good.’ [4.5 stars]
Good Reading Magazine

‘Another gripping read…’
BookPeople
Profile Image for MelD.
90 reviews
November 9, 2025
I really enjoy this series, Hirsch being one of my favourite crime coppers. No alcohol abuse, no ego, no relationship dramas, just an intelligent, mighty good bloke.
Profile Image for Diane Tait.
353 reviews1 follower
November 7, 2025
Didn’t enjoy this one as much as previous Hirsch novels. Too much padding - too many croissants and lattes! Once again the area the book was set in was the main draw card.
Profile Image for Marles Henry.
944 reviews58 followers
September 29, 2025
Senior Constable Paul Hirschhausen (Hirsch) seems to never stop in this next instalment of the Hirsch series, Mischance Creek. Hirsch is always on the job, either at home or in the one office police station (which is actually where he resides), separated by a door, thin enough to allow a permeation of his life info that of the local town, an vice versa. Hirsch is an outsider because he is a police officer, and isa part of the town because he lives and breathes everything as a resident, and this dichotomy his held up to him every day, no matter what decision he makes. Yet he always has time for the smaller policing matters, the menial complaints. And then there are the curveballs that get thrown in for good measure, which Hirsch takes in his stride.

Outback Adelaide is dry and experiencing the worst drought in a generation. Hirsch knows it’s the drought that will make or break people, and many of the townsfolk are sitting on that slippery slope co catastrophe. And it is things lie the fights in the school pick up line or at the council meeting that will be the start of things more sinister. Yet Hirsch wasn’t ready for how the connection to this small-town suffering would be connected to Annika Nordrum’s search for answers about the death of her parents, where her father was found dead down a mineshaft, and her mother was never seen again. Why was their camp never set up? Why was Annika’s father’s car found fully packed? Why was their dog left wandering, and who found it wandering the dusty roads?

This series, and indeed all of Garry Disher’s books are superbly crafted outback noir. They are set in the dusty dry landscapes of outback Australia, where people are living kilometres between each other, and the nearest town are not populated more than 200 people. The harshness of the scenery is so captivating – its sparseness, the menacing voids in between. The people are no different; they are just as temperamental, aggressive and foreboding as they come, especially when they are riled up. Many of them impacted by the ruggedness of the land, making it harder to live with secrets and lies, their influence and power. We see through this a softness to Hirsch with his relationship with Wendy, his respectful connections with the local Aboriginal elders and in the honesty of his policing.

A pleasure to sink my teeth into this book. Garry Disher has a knack of bring you into the outback with him (and Hirsch) for the ride. Thank you #textpublishing for this #gifted copy.
Profile Image for Jennifer (JC-S).
3,534 reviews286 followers
December 25, 2025
‘A Thursday morning in mid-November, and Senior Constable Paul Hirschhausen was getting through a firearms audit.’

Senior Constable Paul Hirschhausen (Hirsch) has been at Tiverton, South Australia, for close to six years. He deals with the routine administrative paperwork and emails at Tiverton, attends a weekly briefing at Redruth, and spends the rest of his work time on patrol. In this remote rural area, Hirsch’s work involves a mixture of law enforcement, social work and welfare checks. Because of the distance involved, he fits the firearms audit around his other responsibilities. He is busy.

And, because others are also busy, Hirsch is called on to help a tourist who has run into a ditch beyond Mischance Creek. But Annika Nordrum is no tourist. She is searching for the body of her mother who went missing seven years ago. After hearing Annika’s story, Hirsch decides to help if he can.

In the meantime, hate-mail is being sent to politicians in the area, there are complaints about a dodgy car dealer, a local has decided that because he is a ‘sovereign citizen’ the laws do not apply to him, and there are rumours of corruption on the local council.

Once I started reading, I found it almost impossible to stop. By the end of the story, Hirsch has survived a mini siege at the police station, uncovered a meth lab as well as uncovered evidence of an illegal dumping operation. Hirsch is a very likeable character, human, principled and not fighting any of the demons so often accompanying fictional heroes. Somehow, I missed the first two books in this series, and I want to read them to complete the picture.

Highly recommended!

Jennifer Cameron-Smith

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