A Few Right Thinking Men (Rowland Sinclair, #1) by Sulari Gentill
Synopsis /
Meet Rowland Sinclair, gentleman and artist living in 1931 Sydney. Friend of the Left, son of the Right, he paints in a superbly tailored, three-piece suit and houses friends who include a poet, a painter, and a feminist sculptress whom he has painted nude and hung it in the drawing room. Is he perhaps in love with Edna? If so, she isn't having any.
Sinclair's fortune and his indifference to politics shelter him from the mounting tensions of the Great Depression roiling Australia and taking it near the brink of revolution.
One day in December 1931 comes terrible news: Uncle Rowly has been murdered in his home by unknown assailants. The murder prompts Roland to infiltrate the echelons of the old and new guard. Among them are a few "right thinking men," a cadre of conservatives who became convinced of a Communist takeover and have formed a movement to combat it. In time, Rowland's investigation exposes an extraordinary conspiracy with direct personal consequences.
My Thoughts /
I finished this one a week ago but house/pet sitting duties for my daughter got in the way of posting my review, because….well… priorities. Now if y'all would look at me with puppy dog eyes, wiggle your butt and do a little excited wee on the floor every time you see me I 'might' have posted this earlier, but then again, probably not.
1930's Australia was one of hardship. Bookended by the stock market crash on Wall Street in 1929 and the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939, the term ‘1930s’ is used almost interchangeably with ‘the Great Depression’. They were years characterised by economic upheaval, skyrocketing unemployment rates, political and social unrest, and the shattered promise of the 1920s Australian dream.
It's this time period (1930s) that author, Sulari Gentill, has set her Rowland Sinclair series, of which, A Few Right Thinking Men is book #1.
The story opens with a newspaper article taken from The Sydney Morning Herald, dated December 11, 1931, in which the Herald details the report of a shocking murder scene found in one of Sydney's affluent suburbs. The deceased gentleman, Mr Rowland Sinclair, died in his own home, after or during a brutal attack.
After my initial what the heck shock moment that the namesake of the series is found dead in the first paragraph of the first book (!) I realised that the deceased Rowland Sinclair was, in fact, our MC's uncle. Oh, phew, first crisis averted.
For this series, the author has created a wonderful cast of eclectic characters, from Bohemian artists to upper class gentry. Politically, it's a time of great upheaval. The tension between the Proto-Fascists and the Communists is very high, and both factions are committed to an armed rebellion. Then, there's our MC, Rowland Sinclair. The youngest son of an extremely wealthy and influential farming family, Rowly is a gentle man, an artist, an amateur sleuth with wit, heart, and a knack for solving inscrutable crimes.
As the popularity of the Communist Party had risen through the Depression, so too had patriotic organisations at the other extreme. The daily papers often carried the severe images of the Fascist leaders in ascendancy in Europe. In Italy there was Mussolini and, in Germany, Hitler was becoming ever more powerful. Mosley was pushing the Fascist cause in Britain. In New South Wales, Eric Campbell had come to prominence. Rowland was aware of the popularity of the New Guard, chiefly among the wealthy, but he was not particularly interested in politics. He had in any case always regarded Campbell and his followers as a bit of a joke.
The police don't seem to be taking the death of his uncle very seriously, so Rowly takes it upon himself to unravel the mystery surrounding his uncle's murder. Using both his family's wealth and influence, Rowly infiltrates the ranks of the new guard, and with help from his roommates, Edna, Milton and Clyde they infiltrate both factions in a desperate and risky attempt to draw out the murderer and find justice for his uncle.
The author's research into the time-period is thorough, as such the reader will have no trouble finding authenticity with the story. Gentill combines her fictional characters with real-life people and events, and each chapter is prefaced with the inclusion of an historical newspaper clipping, which relates to something mentioned in or at the end of the previous chapter.
CAUSES OF CRIME SYDNEY, Wednesday According to Reverend H.S. Craik, chairman of the Congregational Union, the present crime wave is not due only to leniency of punishment, or the educational system, or the lack of home education or moving pictures, but to the four combined and underlying all are evil thoughts.
— The Canberra Times, 10 December 1931
For lovers of Kerry Greenwood's Phryne Fisher series, I think you would enjoy Gentill's 1930s male counterpart Rowland Sinclair.