Snapshot
Text, $29.95 pb, 337 pp, 1920885722
Dirty Weekend
Hodder, $32.95 pb, 376 pp, 0733618529
Cool crime
Garry Disher’s Snapshot continues his police procedural series about Mornington Peninsula detective Hal Challis, begun with Dragon Man in 1999 (before that, Disher wrote an excellent series of thrillers about a career criminal named Wyatt, starting with Kickback, 1991). Snapshot is 100 pages longer than Dragon Man, but, paradoxically, it is much more pared back, leaner and smarter about what a police procedural (PP) can be.
A bit lost in the byways of the Peninsula (and Disher’s opening is eloquently economical in conflating two kinds: a subculture of partner-swapping sexual byways, and the geography of back roads and byways in the area), a therapist and her seven-year-old daughter turn into a strange yard. A car follows them in, with consequences. Challis gets the case. Complication: the victim’s father-in-law is Challis’s undependable, careerist superior, Superintendent McQuarrie, who won’t stop interfering with the case, doesn’t want to know about his son’s wife-swapping and pushes for the quick (and dirty) solution.
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