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Bad Debts (Jack Irish)

Bad Debts (Jack Irish)

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Author: Peter Temple
Publisher: MacAdam/Cage
Category: Book

List Price: $13.00
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Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 8 reviews
Sales Rank: 48307

Media: Paperback
Pages: 320
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 7.8 x 4.9 x 1

ISBN: 1596921293
Dewey Decimal Number: 823.92
EAN: 9781596921290
ASIN: 1596921293

Publication Date: October 26, 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: clean & tight paperback.

Also Available In:

   Audio Cassette - Bad Debts
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Customer Reviews:   Read 3 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Jack Irish Is An Across The Board Winner!   November 14, 2005
Jana L. Perskie (New York, NY USA)
15 out of 16 found this review helpful

I like Jack Irish. I like him a lot. Fortunately for me MacAdam/Cage now publishes author Peter Temple's noir novels, featuring Mr. Irish, in the US. By the way, he is not Irish at all, but the great-grandson of I. Reich, a German Jewish immigrant to Australia. In a market chock-full of detective type anti-heroes, Jack stands above the pack as the only Renaissance sleuth. He's also a man from Melbourne who gives great Aussie slang! Literary points for that! Professionally his moniker reads "licensed criminal attorney," but he branches out into debt collecting and is not above doing his own investigative work either. A horse-racing man and habitual gambler, barfly, apprentice cabinetmaker and Australian Rules Football fanatic, Irish is just pulling himself off the rails, and a serious bout with self destruction involving alcohol, when the novel begins. His wife was murdered by a disgruntled former client and Jack is only now beginning to cope with the rage and guilt while sober.

As he surfaces, he discovers that Danny McKillop, supposedly a former client, has been leaving a series of desperate sounding messages on his answering machine. Jack needs to refresh his memory since the Danny McKillop part of his past is a blur. The files show him the man was convicted of a hit and run accident, while under the influence of considerable alcohol, which resulted in a young woman's death. There were witnesses and plenty of evidence, so Irish could not have done much on Danny's behalf...even if he had been sober with his act pulled together. Recently released after serving ten years in the penitentiary, McKillop apparently wants to speak with his old lawyer ASAP. When Irish starts returning the multiple phone calls, he is informed that Danny has been murdered, like yesterday - by a cop, no less, who claims self defense.

Jack is also tipped-off that Danny may have been innocent - that the woman's death, which he supposedly caused, might have benefited some politically powerful people. A few too many convenient murders later, (inconvenient, however, for Irish who is trying to shed some light on what appears to be a series of crimes, scams and cover-ups), Jack is warned off the case. It's those powerful people again. He is scared enough to seriously consider dropping it too. I told you he is a Renaissance sleuth, and not ashamed to be called a coward either. Seriously, there is wonderful dark humor throughout, but Temple's prose communicates a sense of evil menace quite effectively. It is not difficult to understand Jack Irish's fear given what fuels it.

Although plot driven, I am extremely drawn to the protagonist and his supporting cast. These characters, and Irish's interaction with them, give wonderful depth to the book. Jack works part time for Charlie Taub, a master cabinetmaker, and is dedicated to learning the craft despite the flack he frequently takes from his employer and teacher. It is obvious that the concentration required for the demanding carpentry work gives Irish some peace of mind and some breathing space as well.

Then there are the horse racing guys - or at least that's how I have labeled them. These men do not fool around with spending a day at the track. Their well-orchestrated machinations involve spotting horses who are long shots, outsiders, and setting them up to win, against the odds, for profit and pleasure. The wonderful Harry Strang, who gives a whole new meaning to "moneyed," is the man you want to see about a horse. Cam, who has "the Eye" know more than most about thoroughbreds and when he is not advising Harry about the four-legged creatures, he is enforcing Stang's will upon the two-legged variety. The gang down at the local pub is also introduced here as is Drew, Jack's former partner, and Linda, a potential love interest.

Peter Temple has won four Ned Kelly Awards, (the Australian equivalent of the Edgars), for Crime Fiction, including one for Best First Novel with "Bad Debts." Known in Australia primarily for his Jack Irish novels, Temple has a following which could very well expand to include a US audience now that "Black Tide" (book two) has also been released.

Looks like a winning series to me - certainly based on this well written, thoroughly enjoyable debut. Highly recommended.
JANA



5 out of 5 stars A complex and richly told tale with a fascinating protagonist   November 30, 2005
Bookreporter.com (New York, New York)
7 out of 7 found this review helpful

It was somewhat distressing to discover that Peter Temple has been active for years in Australia with nary a whisper in the United States. He has won three Ned Kelly awards for crime fiction, including one for BAD DEBTS as "Best First Novel." Indeed, with no slight to the other nominees that year, upon reading BAD DEBTS one can see why. It is a complex and richly told tale with a fascinating protagonist.

That protagonist is the wonderfully named Jack Irish, a rumpled knight with an enigmatic and fascinating backstory that undoubtedly will provide the impetus for many volumes in the years to come. Irish is what is known as a suburban solicitor, which means that he practices law in some way or another. He is not a shady character himself, though most of his friends and clients are, and the adage about lying down with dogs certainly holds true in Irish's case. His first marriage ended in divorce, and his second wife was murdered by one of his clients.

This resulted in Irish going on a functioning bender of a number of years' duration during which time he came close to losing his license to practice. As part therapy and part recreation, he assists a cabinetmaker and is also a fan of the local football club. Occasionally he is involved in the business end of horseracing with a former jockey named Harry Strang and his assistant, Cam Delray, an extremely capable gentleman who quietly and unobtrusively steals every passage in which he appears.

The impetus behind the novel is a telephone call that Irish receives from Danny McKillop, who claims to be one of Irish's former clients. Irish has no memory of the man or his case; when McKillop turns up dead in an unfortunate police confrontation before Irish can talk to him, it arouses Irish's curiosity. He is crestfallen to discover that he represented the man in what appeared to be a straightforward vehicular homicide case, occasioned by McKillop's intoxication, that resulted in McKillop's incarceration, from which he was only recently released.

Wondering if he could have done a better job on his former client's behalf, Irish begins to do some digging into McKillop's case and circumstances both before and after his release from prison. It soon develops that McKillop might have been a pawn in a clever plot that reaches to the uppermost levels of government. As Irish continues his thoughtful digging, he finds there are those who want the past to lay undisturbed and the present to remain unimpeded --- and are willing to do whatever must be done to ensure that matters continue as they have been.

American readers who are not well-versed in Australian ways will not get the gist of everything in BAD DEBTS, and some of the slang terms can be deciphered only within a carefully nuanced context. Temple, however, is such a master of his narrative that I think one is better served by plowing through any colloquial custom or expression that isn't understandable after two or three run-throughs and proceeding apace. I should note that Temple is also very funny, interspersing his dark passages with dry humor that matches the cleverness of his plotting and his characters. This is a welcome debut that will leave readers demanding more.

--- Reviewed by Joe Hartlaub



5 out of 5 stars Unsung (in the US, that is) genius, due for a far bigger readership   November 13, 2005
J. DAVIDSON (New York, NY United States)
4 out of 4 found this review helpful

I love Peter Temple's Jack Irish books, and have been evangelizing about them for the past year on my blog (http://jennydavidson.blogspot.com). I'm so glad they're being published now in the US. This is some of the best crime fiction--the best fiction, period--you will ever read. They are elegantly written and constructed, but they also pack a punch; and they've got this great Australian vocabulary thing going on that works as a kind of minor enjoyable brain-teaser as you're luxuriating in the compelling first-person voice.


5 out of 5 stars Best thriller I've read in years   October 9, 2006
W. Johnson (NYC)
4 out of 5 found this review helpful

I'v read more thrillers and mysteries than I'd care to admit, and this is the best I've read in years. "Bad Debts" gives new meaning to that tired genre "thriller." People say, "I couldn't put it down." I had to put it down several times. It was too intense to read uninterruptedly. Apart from strong characterization -- characters with whom one could genuinely empathize, exceptional plotting and engaging settings, the language is fresh and startling, the tough-guy argot of Australia. Without giving away the plot, there's one moment in which a high official explains all of the events that have driven the action to that point so as to undermine the assumptions of the reader as well as the hero. It's a daring authorial moment that draws the reader to stronger identification with the hero's shifting perspectives. Buy this book. If you don't find it compelling, you should give up reading thrillers altogether.


2 out of 5 stars i'm obviously in the minority here   September 6, 2007
E Rice (western ny state)
1 out of 3 found this review helpful

it's not that temple is a bad writer. it could be that i've read to many 'hard-boiled' mysteries over the years.

the plot is well handled, and it's the typical convoluted genre plot. i guessed most of the elements well ahead of the writing. the identity of the love interest was obvious, too. and inexplicable.

the jack irish character is also typical--the tragic occurance in his past (from which he should have recovered), the borderline job, the suggestion of possibly shady dealings. i don't know much about betting, so i couldn't tell if his involvement in the betting scheme was legal and ethical, legal and unethical, or just plain criminal. i didn't think him tough or mean, since most of his actions were reactions. i found him fairly interchangeable with other hard-boiled anti-heroes.

i wouldn't recommend this author, but i am in the minority.




australia  fiction  hard boiled  mystery  peter temple  

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