"You wouldn't want to be lost out there for too long. It's the panic that gets you. Everything starts to look the same After a few days, makes it hard to trust what you are seeing." He glanced outside. "Drives 'em wild."
I actually prefer Jane Harper's second novel Force of Nature to her highly acclaimed debut The Dry. I just love the concept of five ill-matched female colleagues forced to spend a long weekend on a team-building hike in the remote Giralang Ranges in East Australia. Brilliant opening chapter with the corresponding male team completing the hike and making it back to camp in plenty of time, drinking coffee, checking their phones and making jokes about the tardiness of the women's team. As time moves on they become concerned. The search team come in, confident of swiftly locating the women and bringing them out. They return stone-faced as the light begins to fade.
Jane Harper's low-key, likeable detective Aaron Falk receives a disturbing voice mail from one of the women on the hike and also heads out to the Giralang Ranges recalling that the area was the scene of a notorious serial killer in his youth. The five women are ill-equipped for hiking in the outback with hiking boots that don't fit and rucksacks with straps that chafe the skin. Not enough water, not enough food. Courtesy and camaraderie breaks down under adversity and the five colleagues - all at different levels of seniority within their organisation - are reduced to scuffling over their only phone with a faint signal.
Jane Harper is good at the slow-burn plot and setting up red herrings among her characters. What does the guy at the petrol station know? Who exactly is the man running the corporate events? Is the woman known to have a drink and drugs problem too obvious a suspect? As in The Dry the landscape itself adds a sense of foreboding - a 'green sprawling mass of bushland' where you only have to walk a little way in any direction and it all starts to look the same.
While we're on the subject of outback noir let's not forget that other great novel by Colleen McCullough who was writing a love story set on a remote sheep shearing station in Drogheda, New South Wales back in 1977. I've just reread The Thorn Birds and for me the most interesting part of the story is not the affair between Meggie and the priest but the gradual unfolding of the character of Fee, Meggie's strange silent mother.
Amidst the ghost gums, wilga trees, cockatoos and the silver grass of Drogheda, McCullogh brilliantly portrays how the climate controls life and work.
Any recommendations for further reading would be welcome!
9 comments:
Sadly, I read very little Australian fiction and could do with putting that right. Force of Nature sounds absolutely fascinating! I love a book with a very strong sense of place and it sounds like this one has that.
I would highly recommend Jane Harper's first three novels,Cath - The Dry, Force of Nature and The Lost Man. Her last two I was less keen on.
Yes I read the first three Harper novels. And Force of Nature was pretty good ... the premise lures you right into it. I liked the last half of the book the best - when things pick up. I'm always a sucker for wilderness kinds of stories ... or in the outback. I noticed that they made a movie of Force of Nature too with Eric Bana playing detective Falk. It came out in May and I haven't seen it. Speaking of outback books ... you might like Robyn Davidson's book Tracks about her journey in the outback set in 1977. It was also made into a pretty good film. Glad to see you posting again.
Oh thank you. I will check out the Robyn Davidson. Yes I'd like to see R
Eric Bana as Falk. I do enjoy posting and catching up with all my favourite bloggers but work seems to take up so much of my energy - I need to retire! Sadly a lot of the bloggers on my sidebar are no longer active.
I love Jane Harper's novels and have yet to read one that I haven't liked. I think my absolute favorite is The Lost Man. It isn't an Aaron Falk mystery, but the story is so incredibly compelling, and the writing is spot on.
Yes The Lost Man was fantastic! The way she described the 45 degree heat under a 'monstrous sky' and the red dust of the stockman grave was so good. Look forward to her 6th novel.
I have yet to read any Jane Harper books, but I always have them on my radar. Looks like I am really missing out. So glad you wrote this post. I'm excited to move them up my TBR pile :)
Jane Harper is one of my favorite mystery writers, and the Aaron Falk series are all great, but I think her best is The Lost Man. Hoping she will have a new book out soon.
I never did read The Thornbirds. I liked most of what I read by McCullough, but I hated The Independence of Miss Mary Bennet so much that it really put me off her as an author.
Like you, I thought the second book was better than the first (although she did a good job of conveying the heat and dry environment). I haven't read the third Falk book yet so this is a good reminder.
In terms of recommendations, have you read Jane Casey's books featuring detective Maeve Kerrigan? My sisters and I love these. The first book is called The Burning.
Constance
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