4.5★s
The Bluffs is the first published novel for Tasmanian author Kyle Perry. It is a mystery/thriller which deals with the disappearance of a group of teenage girls from a school excursion in the Great Western Tiers in Tasmania's northwest. Perry, 29, grew up in this beautiful, rugged area, and the book’s effectiveness is enhanced by his authentic depiction of the landscape. His work as a drug and alcohol counsellor informs the narrative, giving a strong sense of veracity to both the plot and the characters.
The Bluffs is set in the fictitious town of Limestone Creek, an hour’s drive southwest of Launceston. It is a gloomy place which has been devitalised by economic stagnation and social dysfunction. Many residents rely on the town’s drug dealers, brothers Butch and Murphy, to get through the day. Murphy’s 16yo daughter Jasmine is one of four schoolgirls who vanish while on a school camp in the inhospitable Great Western Tiers Conservation Area. Residents are alarmed, as the disappearances recall a true event in Tasmania’s history, a tragedy from thirty-odd years earlier, when five teenage girls were lost in the area. A local legend has evolved, which blames their fate on The Hungry Man, a feral bush dweller who kidnapped and devoured young girls.
Detective Senior Sergeant Con Badenhorst and his colleague Detective Sergeant Gabriella Pakinga arrive from Launceston to investigate the disappearances. Transferred from Sydney to the quiet of rural Tasmania, Badenhorst suffers from PTSD, which he keeps secret from co-workers. Keeping secrets is a key element in this mystery novel, and almost everyone is hiding something, and is not what they seem.
In his professional life, the author has worked with teenagers, particularly those with personality issues and/or dysfunctional family circumstances. For me, this experience informs and enriches the characters in a meaningful way. I don’t doubt that aspects of the key players in this novel are drawn from real life.
Jordan Murphy, father of Jasmine, is devastated by the loss of his daughter, but thanks to his volatile nature he is not a character to whom the reader easily warms. Grief over the death his wife some years previously, combined with his distress over Jasmine’s disappearance lead to outbursts of physical and verbal violence. Murphy’s behaviour is not improved by his excessive use of alcohol and illicit drugs, habits he shares with his brother Butch. Murphy plays a key role in the development of the narrative, but I found him a very unpleasant person, and not deserving of my empathy.
Similarly undeserving of my regard is Madison Mason, the bitchy, manipulative 16 yo girl who is friends with the schoolmates who have vanished. Madison has her own YouTube channel and is constantly using her smartphone to create video stories for her enormous number of online fans. Her interference in the search for the lost girls is despicable and the source of much tension in the novel. Madison has to be one of the most unpleasant characters I’ve encountered in fiction novels, and I have to give credit to the author for his creation of such a memorable personality.
Indeed, nearly all of the protagonists are less than likeable, and almost everyone is hiding a secret or two, including the coppers. It is in the hands of these people, the police and the townsfolk that the fate of the lost girls depends. How could they vanish without a trace, leaving so few clues?
Kyle Perry has created a fast-paced story, with lots of emotional highs and lows. The feel of the narrative is tense, helped along by the volatility of several of the characters. Definitely it is a complex story, with several subplots, and with multiple players contributing their thoughts and actions to the sometimes surprising turn of events.
I found it hard to put down this gripping novel, which is a remarkable effort for a debut novel. I think it serves very well to illustrate Perry’s professional experiences with young people today, particularly the obsession with social media and issues of self-esteem and bullying. The prevalence of drug and alcohol abuse in country towns that are in decline is depicted well, and reminds the urban reader of the importance of rural places to the welfare of the nation.