The Dying Trade by Peter Corris
Written: Dec 27 '07
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Product Rating:
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Pros: A solid and complex detective mystery.
Cons: ..
The Bottom Line: The first Cliff Hardy detective mystery featuring a tough, hard-nosed Sydney-based private enquiry agent.
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| damieng's Full Review: Peter Corris - The Dying Trade |
We meet Cliff Hardy in the exact spot from where all private detectives worth their salt should be introduced, behind his shabby desk in his shabby office. The Dying Trade introduces us to a tough private enquiry agent, an ex-boxer with a no-nonsense attitude, a cynical outlook on life and his surrounding city of Sydney and healthy dislike for fools in power. Peter Corris wastes no time in painting him as the typical hard drinking, chain smoking hard head waiting for clients to come knocking down his door.
In this case no-one walks into his office, instead the phone rings and he is summonsed to the home of Bryn Gutteridge at Vaucluse, one of Sydneys most exclusive addresses. Gutteridge wants to hire Cliff because his sister, Susan, has been receiving threatening phone calls and letters, harassing her so completely that she has checked herself into a clinic where she is undergoing treatment to deal with the shock. It sounds like a simple job for Cliff find the source of the harassment and report back to Gutteridge.
As anyone who has read a Cliff Hardy novel will know, though, the seeming simplicity of the original job is usually in direct inverse proportion to the complexity with which it eventually plays out. By simply tracking down Gutteridges sister and stepmother, Cliffs investigation explodes in two momentous ways. The first of these comes when he intercedes in a domestic dispute between Ailsa Sleeman (Bryn and Susan Gutteridges stepmother) and her toy boy, chucking the bloke in the backyard swimming pool. The second comes when he shows up at the Longueville clinic to see Susan, confronts the clinics owner, Dr Ian Brave, pushing his weight around and getting himself knocked out for the first time in the series.
By the time he scrapes himself up and makes it home nursing the first impressions he has made, Bryn Gutteridge rings to call him off the case in fear for his life. Hard on the heels of this setback comes a call from Ailsa Sleeman she now wants to hire Hardy after an attempt is made on her life. Hardys activities have caused a chain reaction within the Gutteridge family and Cliff is now well and truly roped into it.
What follows is a case that grows in complexity as family secrets are unearthed and picked apart revealing the kind of intrigue that threatens to rip it completely apart. Fortunately with Cliff Hardys sharp mind complemented by an even sharper tongue we are guided through a mystery that culminates in the most amazing (and unexpected) ending.
The Dying Trade is not merely a significant book because it is the first in a series that will grow to 30 strong. It also contains a well-constructed mystery that twists first in one direction before almost inexplicably taking off in another, drawing together apparently unrelated scraps into a deviously lurid family drama.
The plotting of the book is tight and the narrative is terse, coming from the mouth of Hardy with a cynical and sometimes harsh delivery. Hardy thrives on confrontation and as a result the story moves from phase to phase very rapidly as the detective mows down each lead, agilely clicking the pieces of the case into place. Its up to the reader to keep up and make the necessary connections as Hardy uncovers them.
Because the story has opened with Hardy sitting alone in his dismal office, you get the impression that he is a bit of a loner, a tragic detective with a bottom-drawer drinking problem and a bleak, directionless existence. With the possible exception of the drinking bit, Hardy belies these first impressions with an impressive array of friends and contacts who always seem happy to oblige him when he turns to them for favours. There is a magnetic appeal to the man, an ineffable charm that he occasionally uses when brute force doesnt work.
This is a surprisingly complex and rather sticky first investigation which makes The Dying Trade a memorable series opener. However I think its the unflappable nature of Cliff Hardy that has drawn crime fiction fans back time and again.
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, Appeal Denied, 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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