Leah Giarratano, Black Ice

Black Ice (A Detective Jill Jackson Mystery #3)Black Ice by Leah Giarratano

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Leah Giarratano’s Black Ice is a crime novel that portrays a clash between the glitz-and-glamour of the Eastern suburbs and the underworld of Sydney’s west. It follows the exploits of undercover detective Jill Jackson (“Krystal”), her super-model-good-looking party-girl sister Cassie and single mother Seren, a woman with a heart of gold who got mixed up with the wrong people and ended up doing a jail sentence while her ten-year-old son Marco was farmed out to DoCs. Together and apart these women face the threats posed by hot-shot lawyer Christian, thug drug-dealer Nader and their hangers-on.

Sounds unlikely? It is. But Giarratano is an experienced forensic psychologist whose work has given her an entree into the seedy side of Sydney’s life, so at one level we have to trust that her characters and plot scenario are authentically portrayed. Yet there was little here I recognised here about the city I grew up in. Much of the language, characterisation, plot and setting came across to me as if they could easily translate into a Hollywood movie.

Maybe to critique Giarratano’s book for its lack of distinctive “Australianness” is unfair. Yet I couldn’t help thinking that when the author did go for local colour – like her description of the underground food court off Dixon Street – it brought the narrative to life.

There were flashes, too, of edgy, lyrical writing: “Right now, just eleven o’clock in the morning, thrumming beneath the city was Saturday night, waiting to be released. It pulsed and throbbed, biding time, emitting sub-threshold vibrations that caused apprentices to focus for once, to hurry to finish their morning shifts. Fifteen-year-old schoolgirls drilled each other on the elaborate fairytales they’d created for their parents, about who was sleeping at whose house, and what to do if the oldies actually checked. The beautiful people sipped coffees in cafes, waking slowly, apparently languidly, but Saturday night waited beneath them and the beat started an itch they knew would not be scratched until the dark came…” (p207)

While not exactly a page-turner, the novel didn’t drag. Part of my problem with it might be because Giarratano’s main character, the detective Jill Jackson, is a character regular readers will have met before. That crucial set-up, where a reader is introduced to a character and a bond of empathy is formed, was missing for me. I didn’t know enough about Jill and her background to really care what happened to her – until some of her backstory was revealed halfway through. Even then, though, her conflict with her sister and its denouement which could have been – should have bee, an emotionally moving scene – coincided with the plot climax in a way that both seemed unlikely and an odd choice by the writer. (Who has an epiphany – and *talks* about it! – at a crime scene?)

The one character I did feel empathy for from the start was single-mum Seren. But I found myself resisting this empathy because I felt the author’s manipulation: Seren’s character, the naive ex-con, didn’t ring true to me. The scenes of her pre-release from prison, however, were among the books most vivid, frightening and memorable. Here Giarratano’s background really gives us an insight into a world most of us – thankfully – will never have to know firsthand.

Giarratano chose to distance her main character from the thick of the fray before the climax, a choice which surprised and disappointed me. But maybe that was because, by then, I was expecting her story to adhere to the narrative conventions of Hollywood: I wanted the main character to have something more at stake, something I could get worried about. The ending, while satisfying, didn’t deliver that extra bang that such stories usually contrive to create, either. But why should it? There were some neat twists.

Despite the shortcomings and reservations expressed here, I enjoyed this book. Maybe it was always going to be a tough call, reading and reviewing a simple crime novel after having just finished Charlotte Wood’s brilliant – though flawed in its own way, too – novel of small-town Australian life and family, The Children.

Read as part of the Aussie Author 2011 challenge, this review first appeared in GoodReads.

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Beyond Fear – edge of the seat thriller

Beyond Fear, by Australian author Jaye Ford, is a book that grabbed me from page 1 and never let me go. Although I’d read this story in manuscript, once I had the book in hand, out went the cooking and the housework. Luckily I had time off work. It was even more thrilling to read it in one go. Everyone I’ve spoken to who has read it has literally not been able to put it down.

According to the Jaye, the story was inspired by the real-life stabbing of a teenage girl who witnessed her best friend’s rape and murder before being left for dead. The story’s premise begins with the scenario – how would such a woman react years later when confronted by another potentially violent situation? Would she cave or cope?

Like Jaye, I’m a dedicated fan of psychological thrillers like those by writing duo Nicci French, so I loved the fast pace and all-too-human characters of this page-turning novel. An incredible debut for first-time author, Jaye Ford – hopefully it’s the beginnings of many great reads to come.

Jaye’s second book, Scared Yet?, is due out in March 2012.

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Review of Beyond Fear by Jaye Ford by Elizabeth Lhuede is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
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Marching Powder, Rusty Young – true crime review

I read Marching Powder: A True Story of Friendship, Cocaine, and South America’s Strangest Jail over one wild, windy weekend, only getting up off the couch to eat, say hi to my long-suffering partner and sleep. Then I checked out some reviews.

Strange, but I agreed with both the 5-star and the 1-star comments. It’s a fascinating, page-turning story, told in a simple, easy-to-read style. It has touches of surreal comic brilliance, as it tells of the narrator Thomas’s survival through incredible hardships and injustices of his 4-year sentence for drug-trafficking in a Bolivian jail. The first-person narration allows Thomas to gloss over the enormity of his crimes, not only of the original trafficking offence, but his subsequent drug-use and drug-dealing inside the prison, his bribery of prison and court officials, and his bashing of other inmates (described by horrified visitors as torture).

Whereas some readers have seen Thomas’s crimes and apparent lack of remorse as a flaw in the story, I see it as a strength of the book’s real author, Rusty Young, who allows “Thomas” to speak for himself, to spin his yarns of prison life in a way that is engaging, but not totally believable – Thomas is the archetypal unreliable narrator and readers can judge him for themselves.

Although I missed some contextualising by the “Rusty” character at the end – some hint that we’re not meant to swallow Thomas’s story uncritically – it wasn’t hard to read between the lines. The overall impression I got is that Thomas the person shares the personality profile of many successful criminals: a sociopath – a narcissistic manipulator who charms people and gets them onside, but always manages to see to his own needs; someone who ultimately has very little moral sense of culpability of responsibility for the hideous crimes he’s perpetrated against others.

Far from being a weakness, I see this narrative choice as one of the story’s strengths. But because of Thomas’s unreliability, I’m not so sure the book should be characterised as “non-fiction” or “biography”.

Creative Commons Licence
Review of Marching Powder by Rusty Young by Elizabeth Lhuede is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Based on a work at elizabethlhuede.wordpress.com.
Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at http://www.elizabethlhuede.com.