With an election looming, a homicide cop on his heels, adultery in the air and a gun buried in his backyard, political minder and spin-meister Murray Whelan is in for a frenzied few days. Ordered to infiltrate the toughest union in the country, the worlds of politics and crime are about to collide in a taut thriller full of humour.
Shane Maloney (born 1953) is an Australian novelist, based in Melbourne, best known for his crime fiction novels. He is a graduate of the Australian National University.
Maloney has written non-fiction and journalistic essays, but is best known for his six crime fiction novels - in the "hard-boiled" sub-genre - featuring Murray Whelan, a Labour party functionary working for a Victorian state political member, who finds himself investigating crimes linked to his job. The series (1994 - 2007) is popular for its wit and its portrayal of Melbourne's political and social culture. The novels are set slightly earlier than written, during the late 1980s when Labour was in power at both a federal and state level. The first two novels, "Stiff" and "The Brush-Off", were adapted into TV movies starring David Wenham in 2004.
"The Brush-Off" won the Ned Kelly Award for Crime Fiction in 1997. In 2009, Maloney received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Crime Writers Association of Australia.
Shane Maloney manages to make the tedium of trade unions and their politics fun. The story moves fast, probably too fast, a lot happpens on a small time, there’s no real depth, but it’s a fun read.
It’s not The Wire season 2, but it might make for an ok coronation street storyline over a few weeks of telly.
It’s a bit of escapism and isn’t offensively bad in anyway.
Not as sharp and witty as the predecessors in this series Murray Whelan manages to deal with too much too readily to make it credible enough for the readerto be captured in the story
Shane Maloney and Murray Whelan are both dear to my heart. Too close to reality for comfort. Hilarious portrayal of leftie politics, union agitators and standover tactics. Probably enhances the reading experience if you hail from Melbourne and your idealistic political hopes are already somewhat bruised. However, I am certain these political currents are universal so any reader will appreciate the humour. I have all the Murray Whelan novels and treasure every one. Love the disclaimer:"The author of this book, its setting and its characters are entirely fictitious. There is no such place as Melbourne. The Australian Labor Party exists only in the imagination of its memebrs"
Wonderfully authentic characterisation of inner city Melbourne and the machinery of ALP/Union operations. Amusing observations and one-liners. Gritty when it needed to be. Come back Murray, there's plenty of work left to be done.
In this book, we see the introduction of Red--Whelan's son--who is a character we grow to love in the later Murray Whelan mysteries. This one's funny, like the others, but not as funny...
I'm a fan of Murray's adventures but this instalment is the best so far in terms of being a thriller. I really didn't want it put it down, itching to find out what happened next.