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Dark Desert Road

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A fugitive sister. A dangerous father. A terror cell hiding in plain sight.

Kit McCarthy hasn't seen her identical twin sister, Billie, in more than a decade.

The sisters don't see eye to eye, which is understandable, considering Kit's a police officer and Billie followed their violent father into a life of crime.

Kit is no angel. Burnt out by years working in child protection, she has been accused of using excessive force in the arrest of a violent drunk. Kit has just been ordered to take time off work when she gets a frantic message from Billie, telling her she has a young son and that somebody is trying to kill her.

And then Billie disappears.

Determined to find her estranged sister, Kit's only lead comes after visiting their father in prison. Malcolm McCarthy claims Billie married a former United States Marine and has been living with a group of sovereign citizens in the desert country of the New South Wales Riverina.

Kit's journey to find Billie takes her through shuttered towns destroyed by drought, where everybody owns guns, nobody talks to cops, and people get lost for a reason.

Out here a war is brewing between a ruthless bikie gang and a separatist community that is re-engaging with society in the most violent way.

Kit will risk everything to find her sister and the nephew she never knew she had.

400 pages, Paperback

First published January 6, 2026

57 people are currently reading
346 people want to read

About the author

Tim Ayliffe

6 books102 followers
Tim Ayliffe’s thriller novels have been informed by his 25-year career as a journalist in Australia and around the world. He writes about espionage, extremism, politics and the global power games at play in the 21st Century.
He is the author the standalone thriller - Dark Desert Road - and the ‘John Bailey’ series including The Greater Good, State of Fear, The Enemy Within, Killer Traitor Spy and The Wrong Man. Ayliffe's novels are also in development for TV.
When he's not writing or chasing news stories, Ayliffe watches rugby and surfs. He lives in Sydney.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 37 reviews
Profile Image for Rebecca.
542 reviews834 followers
January 26, 2026
“There wasn’t much to see on the Hume Motorway other than speeding trucks, brown fields and thirsty trees that looked like they were being strangled by the dry.”

Kit McCarthy hasn’t seen her identical twin Billie in over a decade, which honestly feels fair when one of you becomes a cop and the other follows your violent father into a life of crime. Family Christmas would have been… tense.

Kit is burnt out, emotionally frayed, and already one bad day away from snapping when Billie sends her a message that reads like the opening line of a true crime podcast: I have a son. Someone’s trying to kill me. Then Billie disappears. Obviously.

So Kit does what emotionally wrecked eldest daughters do best, she gets in her car and drives straight into the kind of outback towns where nobody trusts police, everyone owns guns, and silence feels like a warning rather than a vibe.

The Riverina isn’t just a setting. It’s a threat. It’s dust and drought and shuttered towns and people who look at you like they’re deciding whether you’re a problem. There are bikie gangs. There are sovereign citizen cult vibes. There are men who smile like they already know how this ends for you.

Billie is a human wildcard, magnetic, reckless, dangerous and heartbreakingly vulnerable. Kit is rigid, guarded, stubborn and deeply loyal in that way that makes you keep walking into fire for people who keep lighting the match.

This book is all about sisterhood, love that hurts, loyalty that costs too much and the terrifying question of whether saving someone is what they want or just what you need to do to survive yourself.

It’s tense, gritty, emotional and blisteringly Australian. I flew through this one with my heart doing parkour!

Congratulations Tim!

I Highly recommend!

Thank you Echo Publishing for my early readers copy.

Available Now!
Profile Image for Sandysbookaday (on indefinite hiatus).
2,662 reviews2,482 followers
January 11, 2026
EXCERPT: There was no way out.
Trapped inside a stranger's suitcase, curled into a ball, knees touching her chin, she could only listen as he tore through the hotel, room by room. Hunting.
The pain was almost unbearable. Steel bars digging into her side; her neck and shoulders aching as she tried to remain still, knowing any movement, any sound, might give her away.
She was a long way from home. This wasn't where she was supposed to be. Not in this town. And certainly not in this coffin-like space.


ABOUT 'DARK DESERT ROAD': A fugitive sister. A dangerous father. A terror cell hiding in plain sight.

Kit McCarthy hasn't seen her identical twin sister, Billie, in more than a decade.

The sisters don't see eye to eye, which is understandable, considering Kit's a police officer and Billie followed their violent father into a life of crime.

Kit is no angel. Burnt out by years working in child protection, she has been accused of using excessive force in the arrest of a violent drunk. Kit has just been ordered to take time off work when she gets a frantic message from Billie, telling her she has a young son and that somebody is trying to kill her.

And then Billie disappears.

Determined to find her estranged sister, Kit's only lead comes after visiting their father in prison. Malcolm McCarthy claims Billie married a former United States Marine and has been living with a group of sovereign citizens in the desert country of the New South Wales Riverina.

Kit's journey to find Billie takes her through shuttered towns destroyed by drought, where everybody owns guns, nobody talks to cops, and people get lost for a reason.

Out here a war is brewing between a ruthless bikie gang and a separatist community that is re-engaging with society in the most violent way.

Kit will risk everything to find her sister and the nephew she never knew she had.

But does Billie really want to be saved?

MY THOUGHTS: Dark Desert Road is the first book I have read by Tim Ayliffe, and it won't be my last. What a thriller!

The Riverina is an agricultural region of south-western New South Wales (NSW), which extends from the foothills of the Snowy Mountains northwest through the Murrumbidgee River catchment area to the flat dry inland plains of Hay and Carrathool. It is in this area that a property named Fortitude is inhabited by a small group of seemingly innocuous people living off grid. The truth is they are anything but. Billie and husband Danny-Lee are religious and ideological extremists intent on saving the world from itself by committing unspeakable acts of violence.

But when Billie is backed into a corner, she reaches out to her estranged sister Kit, a police officer, for help. What follows is the most thrilling game of cat and mouse I think I have ever read. I literally did not put this down from start to finish. I retreated to my reading nook and shut myself off from the world until I finished.

Dark Desert Road is fast-paced, incredibly tense and unsettling. The plot is rooted in fact, which makes it all the more frightening. As we are all aware, people like Danny-Lee Burke DO exist and so do communities like Fortitude. This type of extremism/terrorism is becoming increasingly common - just look at the news reports on any given day. Kudos to Tim Ayliffe for raising awareness.

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

#DarkDesertRoad #NetGalley

MEET THE AUTHOR: TIM AYLIFFE’s thriller novels have been informed by his 25-year career as a journalist in Australia and around the world. He writes about espionage, extremism, politics and the global power games at play in the 21st Century.
When he's not writing or chasing news stories, Ayliffe watches rugby and surfs. He lives in Sydney.

DISCLOSURE: Thank you to Echo Publishing via NetGalley for providing an e-ARC of Dark Desert Road by Tim Ayliffe for review. All opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own personal opinions.
Profile Image for PattyMacDotComma.
1,788 reviews1,067 followers
January 17, 2026
3.5~4★
"She hadn't heard that kind of menace in his voice for a while. Not since they were packing their bags in South Dakota, preparing to run.

'Are they still calling it a gas explosion?' she asked.

'Last time I checked.'"


Sovereign citizens, that's who Billie got mixed up with. She's an Aussie girl from a rough family background with a drunk, drugged-out mother and a criminal father (whom she loves and used to help) Her identical twin sister, Kit, left home asap to become a cop, leaving Billie with the parents.

I've enjoyed Tim Ayliffe's series about investigative journalist John Bailey, which mixes current politics and news with his journalism background and his wartime experiences overseas. This is a very different kind of story.

It's told from the points of views of both sisters, now and in the past. Kit has been congratulated for having broken up a big paedophile ring and is anxious to keep working, but her boss says she'll burn out and should get some counselling.

When her partner, Karen (life, not police) complains Kit doesn't open up about herself, Kit blows up. She says her head is full of terrible images of children she saw when working undercover online, pretending to be a paedophile. As for family, well…

"'I've got a drug addict mother who somehow scored a disability pension to fund the painkillers she eats like smarties. My dad's in prison because he killed someone. And last I heard my sister was living on some f***ing doomsday commune in America!'

Kit was so fired up she was shaking. 'All caught up now? Happy?'"


What she didn’t mention is that her father was also a domineering, evangelical Christian whom sister Billie adored but whom Kit couldn't stand.

But yes, last she'd heard, Billie was in America, making herself a new home with Danny-Lee Burke. When Billie worries about what they do, he reassures her they will win their fight for freedom.

'We've gotta stay strong, baby. Change don't come easy.' Danny-Lee's Texas drawl made his last words sound like he was reciting a poem, or the chorus of a song, and she felt herself relenting."

Now they have a little boy, and she wants them to escape to Australia and start over where nobody's looking for them. She's not happy about the guns.

"It took her a while to understand that guns were like appendages to her American husband. Despite being a long way from their former home in South Dakota, his First Amendment right was as important to Danny-Lee as his belief in Jesus Christ."

So Danny-Lee's a tough guy who loves Jesus – just like her dad (who's in jail). When Billie and Danny-Lee come back and start up another compound with friends, we see the two sides of today's "system" at work, with a sister on each side.

This is certainly topical, with the kind of home-grown terrorism threats that are cropping up, and it's definitely a frightening concept. While I miss the intrigue and spy aspect of the John Bailey stories, I'm sure this is going to please a lot of thriller readers.

Thanks to #NetGalley and Echo Publishing for a copy of #DarkDesertRoad for review.
Profile Image for Mandy White (mandylovestoread).
2,809 reviews869 followers
January 13, 2026
I heard Tim Ayliffe talk about this book at a book festival earlier in the year and have been eagerly awaiting it ever since. Let me tell you, it didn’t disappoint. One of the best books that I have read this year, and I have read a lot of books. I did not want to put this book down, and stay up late into the night to finish it on a school night. It is just so good!

Set in Sydney and the Riverina part of NSW, Dark Desert Road is a story that you will forget to breathe while you are reading it. It is suspenseful, it is dark and gritty but at the core there is a heart A story of a family torn apart. It is brutal, violent and graphic and I loved every minute of it.

Estranged twin sisters Kit and Billie could not be more different. Kit is a hard working but broken NSW cop, who has seen things nobody should ever have to see. She hasn’t seen her sister Billie for years, but when she learns that she is in serious danger, she drops everything to find her. She is one tough cookie and it will take more than bikkie gangs to stop her saving her sister.

With characters ripped from the headlines, this is scarily close to what we see happening in the world today, radicalised people who are determined to get their message across, no matter the cost to innocent people. It feels so real , with complicated characters out to change the world to suit their beliefs.

A must read, published on January 6th, a great way to start the new year. Thank you Echo Publishing for my early copy to read.
Profile Image for Craig and Phil.
2,280 reviews139 followers
December 2, 2025
Big thanks to Echo Publishing for sending us a copy to read and review.
A sizzling summer, religious fanatics and a set of identical twins all combine to tease and whet the appetite for readers who will lap up this stand alone crime thriller.
A gritty, fresh and detailed narrative offers an intensity and intrigue as justice fights warped ideology.
Twin sisters Kit and Billie have not spoken in ten years.
Living polar opposite lifestyles that have been shaped by a rough and violent childhood.
Billie is in deep immediate trouble and is involved in criminal plans that will cause death and devastation.
Kit is a cop torn between helping her sister and delivering justice.
A small child is at the centre as drama and destruction erupts.
A sisterly bond may not be strong enough to heal past wounds and secure a future.
Buckle up as you will need a seatbelt in this fast paced and exciting plot. Explosive social issues at the core and a cast of memorable characters that deliver.
A crime thriller writer that consistently entertains and keeps you on the edge of your seat.
1 review1 follower
November 5, 2025
So satisfying and fast paced. I read it over a weekend and honestly couldn’t put it down. It feels frighteningly close to what’s happening in the world right now, pulling you straight into a story full of tension, misinformation and the rise of violent extremism. The characters are real and complicated, as are the situations they find themselves in, it’s a story about loyalty and the cost of doing what’s right when the lines between good and evil are blurring.
Hard to put down, action packed, but with heart - highly recommend when it comes out in January!
Profile Image for Anabela.
285 reviews28 followers
January 20, 2026
4.5 stars

This was a blistering, high-octane thriller that wasted no time pulling you into its danger-soaked world. Set against a harsh landscape, the story follows Kit, a police officer who after years of no contact with her twin sister Billie, receives information that she’s in danger. Afraid that Billie has followed in the footsteps of their dangerous father, Kit is forced into survival mode to rescue her sister and the nephew she didn’t know she had.

Short chapters, dual timelines and alternating POVs work so well to build up the tension in this unputdownable story.

This book is intense in a good way. Think bikie gangs, sovereign citizens, extremists, survivalists, and brutal shoot-outs that keep the tension dialled all the way up. But at its heart is a fiercely strong female main character who will do anything to protect her own.

Gritty, relentless, and impossible to put down, Dark Desert Road is a sharp, timely thriller with a plot line reminiscent of current affairs.

This was my first read by this author and he’s gained a new fan in me. I hope to read more of his books.

Thank you to the wonderful team at @echopublishing for the #gifted copy.
Profile Image for Robert Goodman.
566 reviews17 followers
January 6, 2026
After a series of espionage novels, Tim Ayliffe delivers a high octane, stand alone thriller in Dark Desert Road. Given recent events in Australia it is a book that might benefit from trigger warnings. Although far from the first person to write about the dangers of religious extremism or the “sovereign citizen” movement, its content and timing makes Ayliffe look particularly prescient. But it is also worth remembering that while Dark Desert Road has some issues to work through, it is also a piece of entertainment with two well-drawn, conflicted characters at its heart.
Dark Desert Road opens with a number of strong hooks. A woman hides in a suitcase from someone who is searching for her; a motorcyclist just called “The Courier” successfully delivers a bomb to the home a of a prosecutor and judge and their two children in Sydney; and a policewoman named Kit is still trying to process her involvement in a child trafficking case when she gets involved in a scuffle in at her local pub. Readers soon learn that Kit’s identical twin sister Billie is living off the grid in a place called Fortitude in outback New South Wales and that Billie’s Christian-fundamentalist husband Danny-Lee is linked to the bombing. Billie ends up on the run from a gang of bikies that Danny-Lee has become involved with but manages to get a message out to Kit who, despite their long estrangement, heads out to help.
Dark Desert Road starts out as a pure outback thriller set in vast open spaces and small country towns where bikies seem have the populace either co-opted or scared. There is a woman on the run, an implacable and violent pursuer and a potential saviour coming to the rescue. But Ayliffe delivers something more complex than that, particularly by digging into Kit and Billie’s upbringing with their Afghanistan-veteran father who gets pulled into a fundamentalist church. Ayliffe is interested in interrogating and exposing these ideologies that grew in America but have found their way to Australia (quite literally in this case) and the danger that they pose. It is a tough (but important) subject to consider in the shadow of the recent events including the shooting of police by a man claiming to be a “sovereign citizen” and the more recent atrocity carried out under the banner of a different fundamentalist dogma.
Often with thrillers of this kind – full of violence and gun play – it is easy to switch off, accept that it is a piece of escapism and just enjoy the action. Ayliffe definitely wants readers to do this but he also wants to leave them with something to think about when the pages have stopped turning and their heart rate has returned to normal.
Profile Image for DustyBookSniffers -  Nicole .
367 reviews61 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
December 26, 2025
Dark Desert Road by Tim Ayliffe
Published 6 January 2026 by Echo Publishing

Wow. Honestly, that was my reaction when I finished Dark Desert Road. This was my first time reading Tim Ayliffe, and it definitely won’t be my last.

From the opening pages, this story pulls you in and doesn’t let go. The pacing is sharp, the tension constant, and the sense of unease builds steadily as the story moves deeper into the harsh, isolated landscape of the Riverina. It’s one of those books where you tell yourself you’ll read “just one more chapter” and suddenly realise hours have passed.

At the heart of the novel are identical twins Kit and Billie McCarthy, whose lives couldn’t be more different. Kit is a burnt-out police officer, from years in child protection. Billie, on the other hand, followed their violent father into a criminal world. Their fractured relationship feels raw and believable, shaped by childhood trauma, fear, and choices neither of them fully escaped.

When Billie reaches out after more than a decade of silence, claiming someone is trying to kill her, the story shifts into high gear. Her disappearance sets Kit on a desperate search that takes her far from the safety of her badge and into communities where cops aren’t welcome, and danger hides in plain sight. The desert setting is bleak and unforgiving, and Ayliffe uses it brilliantly. It’s not just a backdrop. It feels like a character in its own right.

What really stood out to me was how real this book felt. This whole novel could have been pulled straight from recent headlines. The violence is confronting without being gratuitous, and the themes of family loyalty, domestic trauma, and moral compromise are handled with care. The author’s note on the real-world issues explored in the story added another layer of depth and was genuinely appreciated.

I loved the balance between action and character work. Kit is flawed, stubborn, and driven by guilt as much as love, which makes her compelling. Billie’s storyline is heartbreaking and tense, especially as a mother trying to protect her child in an impossible situation. Every choice has weight, and the consequences feel real.

I devoured this book in one sitting and didn’t want it to end. If you enjoy crime thrillers that are gritty, fast-paced, and emotionally grounded, Dark Desert Road absolutely delivers.

Thank you to Echo Publishing for providing me with an early copy of this book in exchange for my honest review. I highly recommend Dark Desert Road to fans of crime fiction and Australian thrillers. This one did not disappoint.
1 review1 follower
November 29, 2025
A new stand-alone crime thriller (set to be released in January 2026) from one of Australia’s finest crime authors does not disappoint.

We follow the protagonist, Kit McCarthy, a highly experienced NSW police officer as she embarks on a mission to try to find and save her estranged identical twin Billie and Billie’s son.

Billie vanishes after leaving a frantic voicemail
to her Mother stating that she’s in trouble and someone is trying to kill her.

Kit soon uncovers more than she bargained for as she discovers that Billie has become a sovereign citizen and is living a secluded life in an isolated bush setting with a group of people all with the same mentality.

The group have become radicalised by Billie’s aggressive, controlling and violent American husband, Danny-Lee, who feels he’s above the law and in his mind is doing “God’s” work.

Throw into the mix a menacing bikie gang hellbent on revenge and you’re well on the way to devouring the book in one sitting.

Although quite brutal at times, it is gripping, alarming, and kept me wanting more.

I liked this book for its realism as many aspects of the storyline are startlingly honest.

It’s true to life reference to sovereign citizens and the very dangerous precedence they set as they consider themselves answerable to no one is spot on.

Also the concept of extremism and conspiracy theories, how situations can escalate and spiral out of control, where life becomes disposable and you trust no one is disconcerting and frightening.

Unfortunately, we have recently witnessed first hand the consequences of this cult mentality here in Australia so I think the Author does exceptionally well in addressing them.

The tug of familial love and how far you would go to save someone you care for is also explored.

I am a huge fan of this Author, having read all of his books in the brilliant John Bailey series.

I can see Kit possibly having her own series, as there seems to be so much more to explore with this feisty and dedicated character.

I will eagerly wait and see.
Profile Image for Brent Towns.
Author 126 books108 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 5, 2026
Kit McCarthy hasn't seen her identical twin sister, Billie, in more than a decade.
The sisters don't see eye to eye, which is understandable, considering Kit's a police officer and Billie followed their violent father into a life of crime.
Kit is no angel. Burnt out by years working in child protection, she has been accused of using excessive force in the arrest of a violent drunk. Kit has just been ordered to take time off work when she gets a frantic message from Billie, telling her she has a young son and that somebody is trying to kill her.
And then Billie disappears.
Determined to find her estranged sister, Kit's only lead comes after visiting their father in prison. Malcolm McCarthy claims Billie married a former United States Marine and has been living with a group of sovereign citizens in the desert country of the New South Wales Riverina.
Kit's journey to find Billie takes her through shuttered towns destroyed by drought, where everybody owns guns, nobody talks to cops, and people get lost for a reason.
Out here a war is brewing between a ruthless bikie gang and a separatist community that is re-engaging with society in the most violent way.
Kit will risk everything to find her sister and the nephew she never knew she had.
But does Billie really want to be saved?

This was my first Tim Ayliffe novel, and it definitely won’t be my last. It delivers all the excitement and tension you’d expect from a sharp, fast‑paced crime thriller.
The story dives into the dangerous world of sovereign citizens and bikie gangs—an explosive mix plotting violent action to broadcast their message. At the heart of it all are twin sisters: one a police officer, the other drawn into a life of crime. When a desperate call for help forces their paths to cross, the collision is intense.
The writing is strong, the pacing tight, and the narrative kept me fully engaged right to the final page.
Thank you to Echo Publishing and NetGalley for providing an ARC.
293 reviews3 followers
February 2, 2026
3.5

It's not a work of art, but it's still page-turning stuff.
Centering on a most dysfunctional family, the people they associate with and the different paths they follow in life.

Kit and Billie are twin sisters who have become estranged over the years. Kit is now a cop, but Billie, more under the influence of their no-good dad, has married an ex-soldier from the US, who is against society as most know it, and is a sovereign citizen filled with hate and rage against the world. This rage involves planting bombs, murdering, links with dangerous bikie gangs, and the drug scene.

Billie, and her husband have set up a commune in the Riverina district of New South Wales, Australia. When Billie is in danger of being raped, she makes a call for help that is received by their now divorced, invalid mother. When this call is brought to the attention of Kit, she undertakes the task of travelling out to this remote rural commune and is determined to rescue her sister who has suddenly gone missing. After all blood is thicker than water, she'll do anything for her sister, even if they haven't spoken to each other for years.

Lots of action follows as Kit risks her life on more than one occasion. The baddies in this book are a very bad lot. The story is in some ways topical, featuring some of the fringe groups in our society that make the news from time to time.
The setting was interesting for this reader, knowing the Riverina and having lived in the region for a number of years, albeit a long time ago. Life in the town I lived in was quiet and uneventful, which is, looking back, a good thing. I never saw the sovereign citizens, bikies, and the many shootouts and bloodshed that are in this book! There are some cliches in the book, and the end is (mostly) as I thought it would be. Overall, an entertaining summer read.
Profile Image for Brenda.
5,125 reviews3,026 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 3, 2026
Police officer Kit McCarthy of Sydney, had just helped close a case involving a pedophile ring which were located everywhere from Australia and overseas. She was burnt out; the case had gone on for quite some time and her boss was taking her from child protection to a different area of policing. Kit's past wasn't one she wanted to dwell on - her twin sister Billie and she were estranged, not having spoken for over a decade; their father was in prison for murder; their mother was an addict. But when Daisy, her mother, frantically contacted Kit, saying Billie had rung, and she was being chased by a killer, plus she had a three year old son, Kit was shocked. Taking leave and after seeing her father to get information, Kit headed to the bush, determined to find Billie and her nephew.

Sovereign citizens; terrorists; cults - what had Billie become mixed up in? There were also bikies involved; deadly, ruthless with no scruples, Razor was the one to watch, the one to fear. Would Kit manage to find the group, find Billie, in an area where no one thought anything about guns, and using them, and would have nothing to do with cops?

Dark Desert Road is a dark thriller, set in Australia's Riverina in NSW, by Aussie author Tim Ayliffe which I thoroughly enjoyed. Fast paced, brutal, extremely topical, Kit was a strong character who only wavered in her convictions when she thought of her past, which wasn't often. An excellent read which I recommend.

With thanks to NetGalley & Echo Publishing for my digital ARC to read and review.
Profile Image for Shelleyrae at Book'd Out.
2,628 reviews561 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 7, 2026
Dark Desert Road is the first stand alone crime novel from bestselling Australian author Tim Ayliffe following the conclusion of his five book series featuring journalist John Bailey.

This tense thriller unfolds from the perspectives of 29 year old Senior Constable Kit McCarthy, and her estranged identical twin sister, Billie. It begins when a frantic voicemail left for Kit with their mother makes it clear Billie and her toddler son are in deep trouble.

Having just wrapped a big case, Kit’s boss is happy for her to take some time off and she sets out to find her sister with little to go on than a vague location. Kit’s search eventually leads her into the realm of a radical ‘sovereign citizen’ group led by Billie’s American husband, Danny-Lee, an ex-military, self styled fundamentalist leader who preaches white supremacist and anti-government rhetoric, financed by an arrangement with a drug dealing bikie gang. It’s a world Kit rejected even before her father, also a disgraced military vet with anti-government views, was jailed for murder, but which Billie embraced. The contrasting views of the sisters is fascinating, and allows Ayliffe to explore the impact of trauma, as well as themes of family, faith, and loyalty.

Moving at a breathtaking pace, there’s plenty of tense, confronting action in Dark Desert Road. Billie is on the run because she rebuffed a sexual attack by one of the bikies staying at the compound while her husband was elsewhere. ‘Razor’ knows Danny-Lee will seek retribution so he spins a story about Billie being abducted, determined that Billie won’t live long enough to tell the truth, leaving a trail of frenzied violence in the wake of his hunt for the frightened woman. Meanwhile, though Danny-Lee wants his wife found safely, he is not prepared to be distracted from the ‘war’ he has already begun by delivering lethal bombs to the homes of members of government. Inevitably there is an explosive confrontation between the members of ‘Fortitude’, the bikie gang, and the police, with Kit and Billie caught in the middle.

With a storyline frighteningly not too removed from the headlines, and high stakes for everyone involved, Dark Desert Road is a gripping thriller I couldn’t put down. I’m excited to what Tim Ayliffe brings us next.
Profile Image for Deborah (debbishdotcom).
1,471 reviews145 followers
January 10, 2026
I enjoyed Dark Desert Road by Tim Ayliffe much more than I expected. I'd worried a little it would be centred around 'preppers', 'cookers' or conspiracy theorists and get bogged down in their beliefs and actions, and though it is a little, it's not the focus of the book. Rather it's more a game of cat and mouse as a young woman tries to avoid a death sentence after seeing something she shouldn't. What I very much liked about this (in addition to proverbial heart-pumping action) is that Ayliffe paints his characters in shades of grey. Police officer Kit is struggling with simmering anger and PTSD following a long stint dealing with child pornography rings and Billie is a mother devoted to her toddler, but at the same time been swept away by hard-core beliefs in god and antigovernment propaganda. She is accepting of the murder of innocents though balks at the murder of children. Ayliffe gives us insight into her indoctrination which helps understand how she came to be the woman we meet here, but at the same time we feel entitled to judge her (and her companions at 'Fortitude') somewhat harshly.

This is brilliantly paced, a slightly slower build-up and then once the action kicks off it picks up and becomes very literally a race against time with the sisters reminded of the bond they once shared. I loved where Ayliffe takes this and the way in which threads converge in an excellent climax.

4.5 stars
Read my review here: https://www.debbish.com/books-literat...
Profile Image for Blue.
1,758 reviews137 followers
January 18, 2026
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Thank you Echo Publishing for this book in exchange for an honest review

Dark Desert Road is a gritty, pulse-pounding thriller that grabbed me by the throat and refused to let go. Kit McCarthy hasn’t seen her identical twin Billie in over a decade, which feels fair when one becomes a cop and the other follows their violent father into a life of crime. Kit is already burnt out and one bad day away from snapping when Billie sends a chilling message: she has a son, someone is trying to kill them… and then she vanishes.
What follows is a relentless descent into the harsh outback of the NSW Riverina, where drought has hollowed out towns and trust is a luxury no one can afford. This isn’t just a setting, it’s a threat. Guns are everywhere, cops aren’t welcome, bikie gangs are circling, and extremist sovereign-citizen communities lurk in the dust. Every step Kit takes feels dangerous, and the tension never lets up.
The heart of this story is its messy, painful sisterhood. Billie is a volatile wildcard, magnetic, reckless, and terrifying and on the other page we have Kit who is rigid, stubborn, and devastatingly loyal. Their bond is fraught with history, trauma, and love that hurts, raising the haunting question: what if the person you’re trying to save doesn’t want saving?
Fast-paced, unsettling, and grounded in frighteningly real extremism, Dark Desert Road is a blisteringly Australian thriller that feels ripped from tomorrow’s headlines. This was my first Tim Ayliffe and absolutely not my last.
Profile Image for Kylie H.
1,215 reviews
January 9, 2026
This is hopefully the beginning of a new series from this author. The books centres on Kit McCarthy a Sydney police officer that has just finished working with her team on cracking a large, international paedophile ring. Her boss wants her to take a break and get some help dealing with the distressing material and offences that she has been exposed to. Kit is keen to bury herself in a new case and blow off her personal relationship.
Then Kit hears that her identical twin Billie, from who she is estranged, is back in regional Australia with a son and in serious trouble. Kit races to save her sister, but there is a lot of ill feeling between them, with her sister having left for America to join an extremist Christian group, in line with their father's beliefs.
Kit finds herself dealing with fanatics, a violent bikie gang and a group of good hearted but bewildered locals. So much to unpack with this story. Once you start it is very hard to put down.
Thank you Netgalley and Echo Publishing for the opportunity to read this digital ARC.
Profile Image for Carolyn.
2,770 reviews757 followers
December 22, 2025
Dark, gritty and sometimes violent, this is the tale of twin sisters, Billie and Kit McCarthy. After a rough upbringing, and with their father now in jail for murder, they went their separate ways and have not seen each for ten years. Kit became a cop, currently working in child protection while Billie travelled to America where she married into a group of conspiracy theorists in a survivalist cult.

Kit receives a message from her mother that she’s had a frantic cry for help from Billie, who is back in Australia, living in rural New South Wales and in fear of her life. Kit also learns that Billie has a young son, so she is compelled to find out whether he and Billie are in danger.

Tim Ayliffe takes us into the heart of a radicalised group of ‘sovereign citizens’, currently working with a bikie gang, who plan to use violence to get their message out to the world. The scenarios he creates chillingly mirror some recent incidents in Australia of sovereign citizens living on rural properties, shooting and killing police who dare to interfere with their actions. Fast paced with complex characters this is a terrific read, often shocking but totally gripping. 4.5★

With thanks to Echo Publishing for a copy to read via Netgalley
Profile Image for Bec.
795 reviews17 followers
December 18, 2025
Dark Desert Road is a fast-paced crime thriller that builds in tension and excitement with every chapter. The story is told from the perspectives of identical twins, Kit and Billie, whose lives have taken dramatically different paths. Shaped by a difficult upbringing, Kit has channelled her past into protecting others as a police officer, while Billie has drifted into her father’s world of crime, fuelled further by her religious and law-defying husband.

When Billie leaves a desperate voicemail for their mother, Kit launches a determined search for her sister and nephew, uncovering danger and deception along the way.

Set across NSW—from Sydney to remote rural towns—the novel explores themes of family, extremism, bikie gangs, social issues, and community. I loved the intensity and momentum of the plot, and the way it kept me turning pages.
Profile Image for Tracie.
334 reviews31 followers
January 8, 2026
Wow. What a cracker of a book to start 2026 with. This book will definitely keep you on your toes and you'll find yourself holding your breath for Billy.

Kit McCarthy is a copper and gets a phone call from her estranged Mum. She has received a voicemail from Billie and she is in trouble. The trouble Kit can help her with. The voicemail says someone is trying to kill her and gunshots are heard. With that information Kit leaves the city in hopes to find Billie in rural NSW. First stop.. her father who is in prison. Will Kit find her twin sister before it's too late?

This feels so close to home with what has been happening with the world lately. It's action packed and tense. The short chapters made it very hard to put down. This was my first book from the author and I can safely say it won't be my last.

Thank you Echo Publishing for gifting me a copy for my honest book review.
Profile Image for Cat.
56 reviews
January 18, 2026
An absolute page turner! Police officer Kit is on a rescue mission, answering a call for help from the twin sister she hasn’t spoken to for years. Forced to visit her estranged father, an army veteran of questionable conduct, now imprisoned for violent robbery, dark childhood memories are revealed, family breakdown, a mother barely coping.

Kit’s journey introduces us to the desert in Riverina, New South Wales, a community suffering from the effects of drought and unemployment, a growing drug culture with a strong bikie presence and dodgy cops. Tension escalates between the bikie gang and community of sovereign citizens, uncomfortable situations leading to extreme violence, the story is extremely compelling.

Thank you Netgalley and Echo Publishing for the ARC.
29 reviews1 follower
November 2, 2025
This book was good. But it doesn’t stick out to me. I enjoyed reading it there was nothing wrong with it. It kept me interested and I read most of it in one day. I just feel like it was an okay book. I didn’t connect with the characters very much it is a high stakes book but I just did not find myself caring about what happened to the characters which is very unfortunate because the writing was good.
Profile Image for Tianne Shaw.
331 reviews16 followers
December 28, 2025
Now this has been a great read with the right mix and balance of mystery, crime, family and rural NSW. This holds interest from the twins Kit and Billie and this bond that is so crucial to the story. It is really going to take you along with it and this will be worth the journey. It is real current and like you are in there with them. So many places covered and clearly detailed to bring them to life.
Thank you to Echo Publishing for this copy to read and review
Profile Image for Jay Dwight.
1,103 reviews42 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
January 4, 2026
I love Tim Ayliffe's works and we have a new character introduced. Police officer Kit McCarthy is struggling after helping nab a paedophile ring. Her twin sister, who she hasn't heard from in 10 years, contacts their mother leaving a frantic message advising her life is in danger.

The troubled family relationships provide a compelling background to an addictive tale involving religious fanaticism, cults and domestic terrorism.

Excellent read.
Profile Image for John Cooke.
59 reviews
January 18, 2026
Right on the money in this age of cookers, including sovereign citizens, anti-vaxxers, white supremacists, neo-nazis and peddlers of conspiracy. Wrap this in a bundle with an explosive plot line - literally - and issues around sexuality and domestic violence, and you have a compelling and highly contemporary read.
Profile Image for Angela Berney.
41 reviews2 followers
February 6, 2026
I love Tim Ayliffe’s books because they never shy away from the dark underbelly of life, and his latest book is no exception. Gritty and unsettling, this book drags you into an alternate world where people think it's ok to disregard the law, where violence and moral compromise sit just beneath the surface—
338 reviews2 followers
February 9, 2026
Okay, maybe 2.5/5. It has been a while since I read a Tim Ayliffe novel and so I had forgottten that he wrote fantasy, dressed up as crime. Too many improbable situations here, too many impossible circumstances. In its favour, the action raced along, with the good guys finally winning out. And in these days of sovereign citizens believing any crackpot theories, this had some small truths.
Profile Image for Kate M.
83 reviews1 follower
January 14, 2026
I chose my first read for 2026 well because this was truly impressive. I loved every bit of it. Tim Ayliffe is a talented writer. His writing was highly descriptive and immersive, creating strong images in my mind and taking me on a hell of a ride.
2 reviews
December 26, 2025
I loved this. So much action. Really captured the feel of country Australia. The plot was as believable as it was scary.
1 review
January 10, 2026
Great Australian setting and very current topics in this gripping read. I couldn’t put it down.
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