Monday, May 8, 2017

Broken Shore

Broken Shore by Peter Temple
May 11, 2017


PERSONAL INFORMATION:
Born 1946, in South Africa; immigrated to Australia, 1980. Avocational Interests: Cabinetmaking, horse racing. Addresses: Home: Ballarat, Victoria, Australia.
CAREER:
Worked as a journalist and editor for newspapers and magazines, including Australian Society; taught journalism, editing, and media studies at a number of universities; self- employed writer/editor, 1995--.
AWARDS:
Four Ned Kelly awards, for Bad Debts, 1996, Shooting Star, 1999, Dead Point, 2000, and White Dog, 2003; Colin Roderick Award, Federation for Australian Literary Studies, 2005; Duncan Laurie Dagger award, 2007, for The Broken Shore.

WRITINGS:

"JACK IRISH" SERIES  (Australian TV series, shown on PBS)

  • Bad Debts, #1. 1996 (also, DVD, Series 1)
  • Black Tide, #2  1999 ( DVD, Series 1)
  • Dead Point, #3 2000 (DVD, Series 2)
  • White Dog,  #4 2003

OTHER NOVELS

  • An Iron Rose,1998.
  • Shooting Star, 1999.
  • Identity Theory, 2004
  • The Broken Shore, 2007 (Australian movie for TV)
  • Truth, 2010

The Broken Shore
Shaken by a scrape with death, big ­city detective Joe Cashin is posted away from the Homicide Squad to a quiet town on the South Australian coast where he grew up. Carrying physical scars and not a little guilt, he spends his time playing the country cop, walking his dogs, and thinking about how it all was before. When a prominent local is attacked and left for dead in his own home, Cashin is thrust into a murder investigation. The evidence points to three boys from the nearby Aboriginal community; whom everyone wants to blame. But Cashin is unconvinced, and soon begins to see the outlines of something far more terrible than a simple robbery gone wrong.


Title Read­alikes
1. The ways of the dead by Neely Tucker, ­ Reason: Though the Broken Shore is set in a tiny Australian town, and The Ways of the Dead in Washington D.C's inner city, both well­ plotted, bleak mysteries focus on bigger, darker crimes obscured behind easy solutions with racist undertones. ­­ Shauna Griffin
2. Dry bones in the valley  by Tom Bouman Reason: Both are intricately plotted mysteries featuring rough, rural settings and harried, time­worn protagonists (a veteran cop in rural Pennsylvania in Dry Bones, an Australian detective on leave after an injury) who become entangled in murder cases clouded by class issues. ­­ Kim Burton


Author Readalikes
1. Pelecanos, George P. Reason: Both Peter Temple and George Pelecanos write dark crime stories that feature hardboiled detectives who walk the mean streets of their cities and are compelled to find the truth. With a strong sense of place, the books have taunt plotting, well developed characters, graphic violence, and a bleak outlook. ­­ Merle Jacob