Book Reviews - Browse Book Reviews Categories Book Reviews - Search Book Reviews Book Reviews - About Us Book Reviews - FAQ
 
Book Reviews Categories

Accessories Arts & Photography Audio CDs Audiocassettes Bargain Books Biographies & Memoirs Business & Investing Calendars Children's Books Computers & Internet Cooking, Food & Wine Entertainment Gay & Lesbian Health, Mind & Body History Holiday Greeting Cards Home & Garden Horror Large Print Literature & Fiction Mystery & Thrillers Non-Fiction Outdoors & Nature Parenting & Families Professional & Technical Reference Religion & Spirituality Romance Science Science Fiction & Fantasy Sheet Music & Scores Sports Teens Travel e-Books & e-Docs

Link Partners:
Literature Forums Define Words Electronic Dictionary Writers Wanted Writing Forums Writing Articles Writing Resources Cheat Literature Vault XBox Cheats Cheats Literary Escape Cheat Codes PS3 Demon Gaming PS3 Cheats XG Cheats



















































































































































 

Book Reviews

Paydirt
Book: Paydirt
Written by: Garry Disher
Publisher: Thomas T Beeler
Average Customer Rating: 5.0 / 5

Westlake worthy
Rating: 5 / 5
Despite all the intellectual disdain for American culture, there are a number of great literary genres that are distinctly American, among them the hard-boiled detective and crime noir story. In fact, it seems not too much of a stretch to say that the prose and story-telling styles of Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler were as influential, or more so, than those of any of the more high-toned literary icons of the 20th Century, with the added distinction that folks who tried to like them actually produced readable books, while those who tried to write like Joyce, Woolf, and Faulkner generally produced drek.

Strangely enough though, two of the best current practitioners in these genres are Australian. The Cliff Hardy series by Peter Corris is among the select company of great homages to Sam Spade and Philip Marlowe, while the Wyatt novels by Garry Disher are probably the best crime series since Donald Westlake's Parker books (written under the pseudonym of Richard Stark) of thirty and forty years ago. From the one word name of the antihero to the problems with the "Outfit" (organized crime), the Wyatt stories actually quite resemble Westlake's.

Here's Disher's description of his protagonist :

Wyatt was forty years old. Respectable men his age were marking time until their retirement. The hard men his age were dead or in gaol.
Wyatt was different. He'd never been burdened by doubt, uncertainty or personal ties. He worked from an emotionless base. He could
cut to the essentials of a job and stamp his cold hard style on it.

He needs to be cold and hard in this, his second, caper, as he's being hunted by the Outfit after crossing them up in the first book; he's trying to pull a payroll job in the unfamiliar surroundings of Belcowie, three hours north of Adelaide; and he's got untested partners, including a woman, violating one of his own rules.

The language is terse, the action brisk and brutal, and the book terrific. Cover blurbs for such novels always refer to them as realistic. I suspect the opposite is actually true. Thankfully there aren't many criminals as smart and emotionless as Wyatt, otherwise we'd all be in trouble.

GRADE : A




Mystery called Paydirt
Rating: 5 / 5
Speaking as an American who has lived in Australia for 2 years, I can say this is authentic and I felt as if I were Down Under with these pure Australian characters, the town, and scenes along the highways. This adventure mystery kept me cheering for the main character and feeling a part of it, as it quickly kept revealing clue after clue. Americans will have no trouble understanding the book as there is no obscure Australian terminology, AKA Aussie slang. Compare this mystery to Garry Disher's "Kickback" written in 1991.


 
 
 



Against All Enemies
by Richard A. Clarke

The Da Vinci Code
by Dan Brown

Worse Than Watergate
by John W. Dean

Eats, Shoots & Leaves
by Lynne Truss & Lynne Russ

The South Beach Diet Cookbook
by Arthur Agatston

The South Beach Diet
by Arthur Agatston

The Spiral Staircase
by Karen Armstrong

Angels & Demons
by Dan Brown

The Maker's Diet
by Jordan Rubin

South Beach Diet Good Fats/Good Carbs Guide
by Arthur Agatston

South Beach Diet Book by Arthur Agatston
Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown

The Purpose Driven Life by Lemony Snicket

© Copyright 2024 Book Reviews. All rights reserved.