Sunday, 16 January 2022

 

The Stoning, by Peter Papathanasiou.

 

  


          Aussie Outback Noir:  this is the most recent variation of Down Under Crime writing, and there are already several established masters of the genre i.e. Gary Disher and Chris Hammer -  one would have to have something excitingly different to say to be able to buy these gentlemen a beer,  but with his debut novel, Mr Papathanasiou may even get them to shout a beer for him:  yep.  It's that good.

            Detective Sergeant George Manolis is sent from the city to investigate the brutal, biblical murder of the local schoolteacher in the small, dying town of Cobb.  She has been tied to a tree and stoned to death.  Investigating, he finds that the local police station follows its own rules which change according to circumstance – like the local hospital;  both places are loathed by the locals because they can only provide services they are staffed and funded for – which are minuscule.  By unhappy contrast, the new Detention Centre for ‘Reffos and worthless Boat People’ has ample staff and all mod cons for their charges.  There is huge resentment from those who remember when Cobb was a bustling, prosperous community – the town that George remembers from his childhood, when his late father Con used to run the local Milk bar.  George cannot believe his eyes at deterioration of everything, helped along by liberal supplies of drugs and alcohol:  add to that the racism and prejudice against the local Aboriginals – and anyone even slightly different, and Cobb is a place to leave, not to settle in.

            Yes, Cobb is a place to stay away from, but George doesn’t have any choice but to stay, especially when someone sets his beloved old Chrysler Valiant on fire the first night at his accommodation, then the replacement wreck he is given for the rest of his stay has the brakes sabotaged:  he misses death by a whisker.  Yes, there are plenty of secrets waiting to be revealed to a Detective of George’s capabilities, including his family’s hurried departure to the city while he was still a little boy, and the fact that the local police sergeant does everything he can to avoid meeting with George.  Everyone wants to know who stoned that poor woman to death, but no-one wants to tell him anything.

            Mr Papathanasiou has woven an intricate, compelling story encompassing many of Australia’s contemporary ills;  the hypocrisy of politicians;  sexual and racial prejudice, and the disintegration of what used to be salt-of-the-earth communities.  George solves the case (I guarantee no-one will guess whodunit!) but returns to the city a chastened man, perhaps paving the way for a sequel, which would be very welcome.  FIVE STARS          

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