Yet another strong and viable debut from a new Australian author. This one was great. I share my maiden name with the protagonist, a strong and fearlesss Detective Sergeant, Rose Riley. Set in western Sydney, my stomping ground, this was a page turning and thrilling ride. A gritty and palpable police procedural set around the corner; I should get my son to listen to the audio version, he wants to join the force. Not to mention my daughter, sharing Riley's name, my girl studying criminology. I love my book similarities.
Bring in a tired and heavy drinking journalist slogging out the graveyard shift for The National, Bowman has ties to the story that Riley is working on. A girl murdered on the grounds of an elite boarding school that he grew up on all those years ago. Bowman, an alcoholic with OCD tendencies, forms an alliance with the team while of course being vaguely under suspicion for some of the time. So many observations were spot on, Bowman trying to control his drinking, characteristics of the working class, and the snobbery found in schools like these. Journalism and its print demise features too, and of course, with the author’s background being this precise industry, we know we are in safe hands.
Suburbs from Breakfast point, to St Marys, Mt Druitt, Toongabbie, Pemulwuy, Blayney and Orange are mentioned, and for Australians and Sydney siders like me this always adds more depth. When you grow up just up the road it’s a bit of fun. Full of all the usual Aussie colloquialisms, this was down to earth writing matched well with an interesting and unique storyline.
Riley drank a lot of stubbies with Bowman, I’m not sure all detectives have that blokey feel, but stubbies certainly do fit the Aussie way and for the fiction element this fits. Riley fits in with the best of them and drinks like the blokes, beer, wine, she's not fussy. The author mentions the RTA (which is now Service NSW) but this doesn’t matter. My pedantic editorial vibe always has to make a mention!
A gritty and details heavy mystery with elements of childhood abuse, infidelity, and corruption. The school principal was an arrogant man, his callousness and greed, and lack of sympathy for a girl killed on his campus were awful; I wanted to wring his neck! He and other old boys had a grandiose sense of entitlement; these were all explained by the character I loved - the forensic psychiatrist Farquhar who throughout guided the team with ideas; the personality reflections were extremely interesting and to my untrained eye, it seemed a lot of research went into this, I think if one was to refer to the DSM-5, one would not be led astray. I don't think I've met a fictional character quite like him. His observations included a thought provoking correlation between his alcoholism and his books, an addictive personality filling a void with booze and books. Curious!
And of course, the wonderful Parramatta River tied this all together. Wonderfully evocative with well drawn and likeable main characters, this is a series to keep an eye on. Well done to Matthew Spencer on a quality debut. Us Aussies keep churning them!
With many thanks to Allen & Unwin for my physical copy to read and review, I had such fun with entering this one with the same name and growing up in the area. Thank you!