Ratings4
Average rating4
Crime is not my thing really. Tried it in my youth once or twice but never felt that thrilled about. A few years back the rave was The Dry by Jane Harper, so I thought I might give that a chance on release. It was OK.
Bad Debts by Peter Temple I got after my wife was watching the Jack Irish TV series. What I caught looked pretty good TV wise. Temple had also won a Miles Franklin for Broken Shore, so there was interest there. This is better than The Dry, but then that may be because the banter between the characters to me is typical strine chat in certain circles. I do enjoy this kind of thing occasionally. Quick-witted and quirky, I have worked with a few blokes over the years that made me chuckle as the day went by; such was their use of the lingo. I suspect that Plot wise this is a mash-up of the author's knowledge of the Melbourne underworld and political corruption that as a journalist he would have heard about from his time in the media.
Drunk driver goes to jail for running over a political activist and then years later after release gets killed after he is shot dead by police under suspicious circumstances. Left a desperate message on Jack Irish phone, his once drunk lawyer at the time of his imprisonment and now comparatively sober, who feels a sense of guilt for not helping him in what was a stitch up, follows up what is going on. Let's say Jack has a few adventures on the way to the inevitable conclusion, and that is maybe why crime is not for me.
Be that as it may this is an easy read, it moves along at a good pace and the inbetween stuff such as the footy banter and horse racing betting plunge break the story up in a good way.
Recommended to all the old Roy Boys out there.