Sydney, 1980 Belle Fitzgerald, young, rich and spirited, lives in Kings Cross, the city's bohemian heart. When she learns of plans to demolish her street and evict its residents, she commits to fighting the development, even though this brings her up against the Cross's crime lords and their servants, the notoriously corrupt local cops. Recklessly, dangerously, against her better judgment, she embarks on a passionate affair with one of those cops, Sergeant Stanton Rose.
Then Belle goes missing. Her disappearance becomes one of the nation's great mysteries.
Sydney, Stanton Rose, retired, is an Australian icon, celebrated for his undercover work in the Cross. Jackie Rose, his daughter, has followed in his footsteps. She's a homicide detective, uncompromising and ambitious.
When Belle Fitzgerald's bones are discovered, Jackie is given the very cold and very public case. This will be her moment to shine. But what she uncovers threatens to turn her life - and the lives of those closest to her - upside down.
As her investigation deepens, Jackie has to decide how far she will go to navigate the fine line between love and betrayal, loyalty and corruption.
PRAISE FOR FINDING THE BONES: 'A compelling crime novel about corruption, compromise and the persistence of the past' Garry Disher
Big thanks to Echo Publishing for sending us a copy to read and review. The Kings Cross district is synonymous with the underbelly of society, it has crime, drugs and dare I say, character. Television shows and books have illustrated this and allow us to observe a world we won’t experience from the comfort of our chairs. A cold case from the 80s sparks new interest as a body is found. Jackie Rose is the daughter of an esteemed Detective and is now in a similar role. The body of Belle Fitzgerald is found after many decades. Her father was heavily involved in the case in the day. The further Jackie digs, she finds murky clues that will test loyalty and reveal an ugly truth. In addition she manages the fragility of family life and dynamics with her dad, son and her estranged mother. A snapshot of life in the Cross in the 1980’s is portrayed in Belle’s story and the repercussions of decisions she makes. I loved the father and daughter dynamic and was able to vividly see his old school ways and manner. A man that would be greeted by all types as he walked around the Cross. I appreciated the vulnerable and caring side of Jackie as she manages parenthood to a young adult.
Natalie Conyer introduced Sydney detective Jackie Rose in her Ned Kelly Award short-listed second novel Shadow City. In that book, Jackie shared the limelight with South African cop Schalk Laurens, the protagonist of Conyer’s first book Present Tense (which won the Ned Kelly Award for best debut in 2020). In Conyer’s third novel, Finding the Bones, Jackie is front and centre and in all sorts of ethical trouble as she investigates a cold case that is quickly heating up and which comes very close to home.
Finding the Bones opens with, well, the finding of the bones. The bones in question turn out to be the remains of Belle Fitzgerald, an anti-development campaigner who lived in Sydney’s Kings Cross and disappeared in 1988. Kings Cross was Sydney’s red-light district and at that time was the centre of a web of organised crime and corruption that included the police and politicians. Belle is the daughter of a wealthy family who has found a life for herself in Kings Cross and does not want it destroyed by rapacious development. She starts to organize the locals to fight the change, but that effort puts her in the crosshairs of the local organised crime.
Due to the continued high profile of the Fitzgerald case, Jackie Rose and her team are assigned but aware that there is interest from the top in getting a result. But there is another reason that Jackie is tapped – Jackie’s father is celebrity cop Stanton Rose, who made his name by going undercover in the Cross in the late 1908s to bring down a cadre of corrupt police. Due to his notoriety, the powers that be are keen to have Stanton consult on the case. But very quickly Jackie finds that Stanton might be more connected with Belle than either of them would like.
The character of Jackie Rose and the way she navigates the ethical minefield that she finds herself in drives this book. Jackie is a great investigator but struggles in the Police Force under the shadow of her famous father while also idolising him to some extent. Jackie is still scarred by the disappearance of her mother when she was seven and having to navigate her own relationship with her 19 year-old son Luke. And at the same time, Jackie is trying to understand her own, slightly self-destructive approach to relationships.
Central to this book is the city of Sydney itself. It is refreshing that we are starting to see more Australian crime novels come out of the bush and back into the cities. Conyer draws a colourful portrait of Kings Cross and its surrounds from a time in which it was both a bohemian enclave and the centre of a web of crime and corruption. As Conyer discusses in her Author’s Note, this element of the novel was inspired by the disappearance of Juanita Nielsen in the mid-1970s and the exploits of other colourful figures from the time. Although as Conyer says, these are sparks that allowed her to create her alternative version of 1980s Kings Cross. But she also sends Jackie and her team around the city, exploring its diversity (and dropping the names of a number of actual pubs and eateries along the way).
Finding the Bones is another compulsive crime novel with the lot. At its heart is the juxtaposition of the lives of two very singular headstrong women. Their stories are delivered in the context of a fascinating dive into an alternative version of Sydney history, a compelling contemporary cold case investigation driven by media and political pressure and a cast of engaging characters with plenty of emotional and ethical challenges to navigate.
A fantastic read. I loved everything about this book. It was a real page turner. I loved the two timelines. I loved the Sydney locations of Glebe and Darlinghurst and I really loved the book being inspired by the events surrounding Juanita Nielsen’s disappearance in 1975. A top read, highly recommended.