The Undertow by Peter Corris
Written: Dec 30 '06 (Updated Dec 30 '07)
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Product Rating:
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Pros: Plenty of intrigue and violence.
Cons: ..
The Bottom Line: This is Peter Corris' 30th Cliff Hardy novel and continues on a great PI series.
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| damieng's Full Review: The Undertow |
The 30th Cliff Hardy novel, The Undertow sees Cliff taking on a case for his long time friend Frank Parker. Parker is a former police detective, now retired, and wants Hardy to check up on a 20 year old murder case for him. After all this time, Parker is concerned that the wrong man may have been gaoled for a murder that saw one doctor dead and the other accused of hiring a hit man. Where the case gets sticky is that Parker had been the lover of the convicted doctors wife, Catherine.
Now Catherine has contacted Frank with the news that her husband, who has since died while serving his prison sentence, was innocent of the murder and wants Frank to do what he can to do what he can to prove it. But why has she gotten in touch with Parker after all this time? Well, she had a child that she claims could be his love child and now the young mans life has gone off the rails . She thinks that if the truth about the man he has known as his father were to be revealed he might be able to pull himself together and be saved.
Out of a sense of duty to his friend, Hardy takes the case and his investigation leads him to an underground plastic surgery racket, one used by people who want their appearance altered for other than cosmetic reasons. His questions inevitably stir up a reaction from someone who doesnt appreciate the past being brought up and suddenly the stakes are raised much higher and his investigation becomes a fight for survival.
The crux of the matter is that Dr Gregory Heyson, the man convicted of murder, looks to have been an innocent man who may have been set up. But who set him up and what was the reason for doing so? Someone doesn't want Hardy to find out and that's the type of thing that just makes him all the more determined.
Cliff Hardy appears to be a contented man and methodically works his case with a minimum of fuss and a steady flow of alcohol. Not one given to serious self-reflection, he is given cause to pause and ponder over a comment that one man makes at the end of an interview when he tells Hardy he is drawn to intrigue and violence like a moth to a flame. The intrigue he agreed with but wondered seriously whether he welcomed the violence. One thing is for sure, he doesnt dodge the prospect and it finds him often enough in this case to leave the argument well and truly open for debate.
Its an unusual situation to come across a hardboiled PI living in a comfortable personal relationship and Cliff Hardy has had his rough moments to say the least. At this point in his career hes in one of the more tranquil phases, enjoying a steady relationship with freelance journalist Lily Truscott. In a way, the state of his relationships have pretty much acted as a barometer for his state of mind while working on a case. The more steady it is, the greater the concentration and the better his decision making process seems to be. Such is the case in The Undertow.
Like all other Cliff Hardy investigations, the focus remains squarely on the case, rarely wavering to more mundane matters such as lifestyle. We have to pick up the snippets thrown in passing to glean information on that front. Hardys first person narration ensures that we get a good perspective on his reaction towards the people he comes in contact with and the way he digests clues. The result gives us little room for surprises or twists but a fine example of dogged detective work unearthing a few nuggets and plenty of action.
With the spare dialogue that fans of Peter Corris have become accustomed to and the forthright no guts, no glory attitude of Hardy, The Undertow thrusts us into an old crime. And yes, theres plenty of intrigue and violence to draw Cliff (and us) in, but its also a case that promises to bite him fairly and squarely on his arse.
The Cliff Hardy series:
The Dying Trade, White Meat, The Marvellous Boy, The Empty Beach, Heroin Annie, Make Me Rich, The Big Drop, Deal Me Out, The Greenwich Apartments, The January Zone, Man In the Shadows, O'Fear, Wet Graves, Aftershock, Beware of the Dog, Burn & Other Stories, Matrimonial Causes, Casino, The Washington Club, The Reward, Forget Me If you Can, The Black Prince, The Other Side of Sorrow, Lugarno, Salt and Blood, Masters Mates, The Coast Road, Saving Billie, The Undertow, The Big Score
Recommended:
Yes
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Epinions.com ID: damieng
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Location: Sydney, Australia
Reviews written: 427
Trusted by: 94 members
About Me: Stop thanking me for my patience...I don't have any.
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