Deal Me Out by Peter Corris
Written: May 04 '06 (Updated Dec 30 '07)
|
Product Rating:
|
|
|
Pros: Fast paced detective novel with a fascinating ending.
Cons: Somewhat surreal nature at times.
The Bottom Line: The 8th novel in the Sydney-based private investigator series featuring tough guy Cliff Hardy.
|
|
|
| damieng's Full Review: Deal Me Out Books |
Detective stories, by and large, follow a fairly predictable formula that goes through a slow process of interviews mixed with the occasional touch of violence, maybe even some gunplay before racing off to a showdown type of ending. Deal Me Out by Peter Corris looks as though this formula will be adhered to for the first 30 pages or so before it swings carelessly into a fabulously off-beat hunt that throbs with desperation as the surroundings grow more tawdry. This is the 8th book in the Cliff Hardy series and its the kind of raging pot-boiler that has made the series Australias most popular.
Cliff Hardy is hired by his old friend Terry Reeves to investigate a gang of car thieves who have hit his business 6 times in a well-orchestrated scam. Reeves owns a car-hire firm and has hired out 6 cars to people who have supplied false names and addresses, paid with fake cheques and have taken off with his cars.
Fortunately for Hardy and for Reeves, the surveillance photos that captured the last thief arrived while Cliff was still in the office and he recognised the man as Bill Mountain. This is a little perplexing for Hardy because, although he never really got on with Mountain in the past, the man was a television scriptwriter, not a crook. What was this man doing mixed up with a highly organised crime syndicate?
The first move Hardy makes is to visit Mountain at his home, thinking that he would provide an easy link to the entire operation and would at least be a good chance to get a car or two back for his friend. But nothings ever that easy. Mountains not at home. Not to be deterred, hardy decides to do a spot of breaking and entering hoping to get some sort of clue as to who is behind the car racket. Instead, he is confronted by Mountains girlfriend, Erica Fong and after a brief and fiery get to know you decide that they would join forces to look for the missing writer.
Through a series of good detective work, good luck and bad luck, Hardy works out that Mountain has not only disappeared with the car that he stole, but also with tapes both video and audio that could prove very incriminating for the people who employed him. Hes a wanted man with a limited life expectancy. Hardy is coerced into helping the organisation find him giving him significant incentive to get the job done in a timely manner. It soon becomes the kind of case that Hardy would prefer to have absolutely nothing to do with.
Right from the start Hardys investigation moves along nicely as he wastes no time immersing himself in his investigation. After meeting and allowing Erica Fong to join him, the pace quickly builds as they find that they have formed an unusual partnership that pays rich dividends. The secret behind the success of their partnership is the combination of Hardys ordered professionalism offset by the recklessness of a woman trying to find her boyfriend. The result is a series of very entertaining exchanges between the two as well as a growing friendship and trust.
I found this to be one of the most compelling Cliff Hardy books I have read with Hardys desperation to reach Bill Mountain an almost physical thing by the end of the story. The use of a novels working synopsis written by Mountain and sent to his agent is a clever way to string the story along and effectively builds up the expectations for a dramatic conclusion. I dont normally glow about the endings of novels, but Ill make an exception this time because I thought Corris excelled himself for its unexpectedness, both for the predicament Hardy finds himself in and the surreal nature of the entire scene.
For dedicated fans of the series, there are a couple of noteworthy updates on the regular characters that take place in the course of the book. Detective Frank Parker and Cliffs room-mate, Hilda, have now moved in together and Hilda is pregnant, while Helen Broadway, Cliffs part-time love has left Sydney for 6 months as per the terms of their most unorthodox relationship. And, yes, the running cameo of Primo Tomasetti is continued in this book with Hardys office located in the rooms above his tattoo parlour.
Deal Me Out is one of the more intriguing Cliff Hardy detective novels I have read taking us on a sordid journey into a drug infused bedlam. The use of a writers novel synopsis to provide a solid guide as to the direction the investigation should take is inspired and the ending is simply phenomenal. All fans of good hardboiled detective novels will revel in this hectic outing.
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
Recommended:
Yes
|
|
|
|
Epinions.com ID: damieng
|
|
Location: Sydney, Australia
Reviews written: 427
Trusted by: 94 members
About Me: Stop thanking me for my patience...I don't have any.
|
|
|