The Build Up
by Phillip Gwynne
Pan Macmillan Australia, 2008
In the oppressive heat of Darwin, capital of Australia’s Northern Territory, you can’t even swim in the sea to cool off because of the giant jellyfish. Detective Dusty (Frances) Buchanan is a tough, smart, 30-something female cop who is single after the end of a live-in relationship with a lawyer, and who before the novel opens has been instrumental in identifying a leading suspect in the murder of a British backpacker – the region’s highest-profile murder case since Lindy Chamberlain’s baby Azaria was taken by a dingo. The presumed perpetrator, a man called Gardner, is in jail awaiting trial. Dusty is uneasy about his guilt, but is taken off the case by her new boss, “the big C”, and put onto more mundane tasks.
Depressed by the office politics at the station and frustrated by her single status, the resolutely upfront and unspun Dusty keeps herself fit by swimming in the pool in her yard and by running on the beach. For much of the first half of the book we become immersed in her life and that of the people in Darwin, fascinatingly portrayed with great local colour, as we gradually become aware that sinister events are occurring – possibly connected to a local Vietnam Veterans’ group, or possibly related to a local brothel whose location remains obscure to Dusty (and the rest of the police, who are all more concerned about the Gardner case than in anything else).
Dusty is a great character. She gives as good as she gets verbally as well as physically, but at the same time she’s vulnerable and sympathetic. She’s friends with Trace and Miriam, two very different aboriginal Australians, and the author portrays vividly the coexistence of these cultures at the edge of this hot land. As the build-up to the inevitable storms and rains continues, so does Dusty’s conviction that there is a murder to be investigated whatever her boss might say. With the aid of a German birdwatcher (there is a delightful sequence where Dusty picks him up in a bar), Dusty manages to get herself busted back into uniform and ostracised for an almost-fatal accident (which emphatically was not her fault). Undeterred, she makes an unlikely ally and sets forth to follow up what leads she can under the radar – and in the process finds some evidence that completely changes the earlier case.
There are so many great touches and themes to this novel – I can only urge you to read it. It’s full of what I call “grown up” humour, and there are so many clever nuances where Dusty’s straightforward and “straight down the line” methods bring rewards in unexpected ways, not least her caring attitude towards animals – the scenes with the pig, and their part in revealing the plot, are particularly great. The reader eager to learn about life in other regions will be well-rewarded with plenty of vernacular and vignettes. Yet along with the unsentimental and upfront telling, the novel also represents an emotional core – the author is very wise about emotions and failings; above all there is bags of humanity in the book. Combine this with an attractively independent heroine, plenty of action and humour, and a wonderful sense of place and culture, and you could want no more from a book. I do hope very much to meet Dusty again one day.
I thank Bernadette of Reactions to Reading for so kindly sending me a copy of this excellent book. Her review of it is here. The novel has also been reviewed at Mysteries In Paradise, Aust Crime Fiction and Crime Down Under.
Publisher's website.
Agent's website, with the news (2008) that the author has been commissioned to write two more novels in the series.
Interview with the author (2009), mainly about his young adult fiction, but also about his plans for the sequel to The Build Up.
She sounds like a great protagonist, one of those stubborn women who won´t take no for an answer. I just began reading one of McDermid´s Kate Brannigan stories, and I am sure I´ll also enjoy getting to know her!
Posted by: Dorte H | 29 October 2010 at 18:30
Wow! A completely rave review. A great woman protagonist and a setting in a region I have wanted to read about. Can't wait to read it. I have to see if I can get it over here.
Posted by: [email protected] | 29 October 2010 at 19:20
Maxine - Once again, you've sold me on a book. I'm so glad you found this so enjoyable and I will most definitely read it.
Posted by: Margot Kinberg | 29 October 2010 at 20:25
I'm so glad you liked this one Maxine and that it travelled OK (by which I mean that all the local stuff was understandable). I've had an email conversation with the author since I wrote my review and he said that there is always pressure to tone down the Australian-ness for wider markets. This kind of thinking makes me cranky as the thing I like about reading boos from all over the place is getting that sense that I'm visiting different places.
Posted by: Bernadette | 29 October 2010 at 22:12
Yes! Sense of place is what is often riveting. One of the reasons to read international books is to learn about a location other than our own, to broaden our horizons, learn about and understand cultures, countries, peoples, what is unique to a location. Fiction can make such a difference. News can tell us about what's happening somewhere; fiction, including mysteries, can tell us about how people feel and think, and what their lives are about.
Posted by: [email protected] | 29 October 2010 at 23:45
There was some talk about a TV series being made from this novel, but nothing seems to have eventuated. I think Dusty has the potential to make a great character. Thanks for your review Maxine
Posted by: Kerrie | 30 October 2010 at 00:01
Nice coincidence. When I came across this book and after reading Bernadettes'e review I included it in my wish list. Now I won't miss it under any circumstances.
Posted by: Jose Ignacio | 30 October 2010 at 10:23
Thanks, everyone. The book really does have many of the elements I like about crime fiction - including the sense of place. I agree with Bernadette that the sense of place (even if words, phrases and anecdotes, etc, are not readily comprehensible) is what adds icing to the cake, and my favourite novels all convey this. A good author can convey meaning and sense without needing the reader to understand every word on the page.
Kerrie - according to the 2009 link at the foot of my post, plans for the TV series were still going ahead then....and two more books ;-)
Posted by: Maxine | 30 October 2010 at 10:33