A month ago my Mum thrust Jane Harper's debut novel -The Dry - in my face and said that I should read this. My Mum and I have a penchant for Murder mystery type books. I think that it is the British Agatha Christie streak that runs through us - but we enjoy a good murder mystery. This is a little bit more of a thriller (as most crime novels are nowadays), but it was as Australian as Bush Tucker and fairly well written. Well, as good a read as "The Dry" was, I think this one has it beaten.
It could be that I bounced back from reading the loathsome new Jack Reacher novel. Lee Childs is an awful writer and his formulaic, predictable tripe leaves one desiring something enjoyable. Jack Reacher: Past Tense, was a book of short sentences (if you stretch the definition of sentences to a handful of words, always starting with a preposition, put together in an arbitrary manner) and little substance. Graphic descriptions of the violence and incoherent plot issues are the most enjoyable aspects of the book. I was on holidays - and it was there.
Force of Nature is much more thoughtful. Aaron Falk is a Federal Policeman in the financial division of the fraud squad. The first book dealt with his hometown and the murder of his childhood friend. It was the Australian drought through and through. Harper deals with some more nuanced family issues this time - and there are some lovely little dialogues between his partner Carmen Cooper and Falk. She pushes him into interesting admissions and acknowledgments & I appreciate how she acts as the method to unveil some of Falk's struggles; rather than spicing it up with a love interest. The tender kiss followed by "I am still getting married" and the climax of the book is refreshingly real and understated. I love the way that there is no sex or violence in this work, rather some lovely writing explicating the terror of the Australian Bush and the dank fug of Australian Rainforests.
As the story unfolds there are some interesting character development amongst the girl on the hike. The delicate mocking of the corporate world with smarmy job titles like the 'Strategic head of forward planning' and obsequious characters who hold their servile responsibilities in the middle of the Bush, reminds one of the periphrasis of Dickins's "Office of Circumlocution" in Bleak house.
The story is about five women who enter the bush on a corporate team building exercise and four re-emerge a few days later. Alice goes missing, which drags Falk into the story as Alice is a whistle-blower against money laundering within her company. There is one really thoughtful passage that deals with Free will / determinism and a reflection of their lives and the role choices play. It is well weaved into to some interesting discussions amongst the lost girls.
I love the character focus in this book, it makes the crime/suspense aspect all the more riveting. Falk didn't play as much of a role as in the last book - however, I do not think that the book suffered from that.
Jane Harper is a great writer - however, it did become a little clumsy at the end. The short chapters didn't speed up the tempo of the denouement, and the clichés started to emerge. All in all 4 out of 5 stars. Even though it hasn't won the accolades that her first book did, I think that it is better.
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