The Broken Shore: A Novel
By Peter Temple
4/5
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About this ebook
Winner of the Colin Roderick Award for Australian writing, the Ned Kelly Award for Australian crime fiction, and the CWA Duncan Lawrie Dagger Award.
Peter Temple's The Broken Shore is a transfixing and moving novel about a place, a family, politics and power, and the need to live decently in a world where so much is rotten.
The Broken Shore, his eighth novel, revolves around big-city detective Joe Cashin. Shaken by a scrape with death, he's posted away from the Homicide Squad to the quiet town on the South Australian coast where he grew up. Carrying physical scars and more than a little guilt, he spends his time playing the country cop, walking his dogs, and thinking about how it all was before. But when a prominent local is attacked in his own home and left for dead, Cashin is thrust into what becomes a murder investigation. The evidence points to three boys from the nearby aboriginal community—everyone seems to want to blame them. Cashin is unconvinced, and soon begins to see the outlines of something far more terrible than a burglary gone wrong.
Peter Temple is currently being hailed as the finest crime writer in Australia, but it won't be long before he is recognized as what he really is—one of the nation's finest writers, period. Born in South Africa, Temple is writing a dynamic kind of literary thriller that ultimately defies classification.
Peter Temple
Peter Temple (1946-2018) is the author of many crime novels including Truth and The Broken Shore. Five of his novels have won the Ned Kelly Award for Crime Fiction. He was the first Australian author to win Britain's Gold Dagger Award for The Broken Shore. He worked as a journalist and editor for newspapers and magazines in several countries. He lived in Victoria, Australia.
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Reviews for The Broken Shore
27 ratings32 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Great crime novel.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I am so very glad I followed up on a suggestion from my aunt that I delve into Peter Temple's mystery novels. Strong shades of Reginald Hill transplanted to an Australian environment made this very difficult for me to put down. Wonderful characterisation, complex and believable plotting and a "voice" that is redolent of small town Australia. Enthralling. More please!
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This book is a bit grisly and I found it difficult to keep the characters straight. I'm not a big fan of the author's style, but overall the story was intriguing and it kept me interested.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This is categorized as a crime novel, but it is so much more. It is set in a small seaside town outside of Melbourne, and the ostensible story is about the investigation of the murder of its wealthiest inhabitant. In prose that is precise, crisp, and beautiful Temple develops his complex characters--a wounded detective, a wandering "swaggie" (handyman), disenchanted aboriginal youths, local politicians, and elderly pedophiles--while also immersing us in life in the life of a small Australian town.This book won a prestigious British award for best crime fiction, and Temple's next book Truth, which features some of the same characters as The Broken Shore, although another crime novel, won the Miles Franklin Award in 2010, the first time a crime writer has won an award of this caliber anywhere in the world.Highly recommended even if you think you don't like crime novels.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I’m not normally a reader of crime fiction, but Peter Temple won the Miles Franklin for his later novel Truth, so he must be a cut above average. As I understand it, Truth is a semi-sequel to The Broken Shore, so I figured I’d read that first.The Broken Shore is essentially a hardboiled detective novel, complete with a jaded and cynical protagonist. Joe Cashin is in semi-retirement from the homicide squad after being badly injured in an attack by a drug lord that also left a younger detective dead. He now heads up the four-man police station in his quiet hometown of Port Monro, in coastal Victoria. He takes care of his dogs and is keeping himself busy by rebuilding his family’s old homestead. When a local billionaire is found murdered in his mansion, Cashin finds himself drawn back into the world of high profile crime.I read this while I was visiting Melbourne again, my adopted hometown, before going to the United States. It made me weirdly homesick – for a place which is not technically my home – in a way I can’t articulate. I think it’s the fact that most of it takes place in the Victorian countryside, which is still a bit of an alien place for me. Melbourne feels more like home than Perth ever did, but I never quite got used to Victoria’s old, well-settled, green countryside – a place where, unlike Western Australia, it’s perfectly normal to find a mansion owned by a wealthy horse-breeder out in the sticks.A bit less plausible was “the Daunt,” the Aboriginal township at the edge of the town of Cromarty (also fictional). It’s considered a place apart, and the local police fear raiding suspects’ houses there in the aftermath of the murder for fear of inciting what one character describes as “a Black Hawk Down situation.” This would have been more plausible in WA or the Northern Territory or Queensland; I’m not aware of any towns in Victoria with sizeable Aboriginal populations. Similarly, the character of Bobby Walshe – an up-and-coming Aboriginal politician in the fictional United Party – also felt very contrived. Temple engages well in general with the clash between Aboriginal and white Australia, which is the subtext of the first half of the novel, but our society isn’t quite at the level where Australian fiction can realistically have a David Palmer character. Which is sad, but there it is. It wouldn’t have stood out so much if the rest of the book hadn’t been pitch perfect in capturing the mood, the tone and the dialogue of a small Australian town.Those flaws aside, the first half of the novel is great – it’s fast, it’s punchy, it has a particularly well-written scene in which a police operation in a rainstorm goes badly wrong. Temple imbues Cashin with a world-weariness which sets the tone of the novel but avoids becoming too despondent or grating, and I thought I began to see why he went on to win the Miles Franklin (beyond the above-average level of prose and characterisation, for a crime novel). I honestly thought the crime would go unsolved, or be pinned on Aboriginal teenagers Cashin knew to be innocent, and that The Broken Shore would break free of the neat conclusions found in a traditional murder mystery.But in the second half new suspects emerge, and the investigation goes on, and unfortunately it doesn’t have the same flair as the first half of the novel. The ultimate murderers, in fact, feel more like pantomime villains, and the climax of the novel is a violent set-piece which belongs more in a cop movie than in the quiet, thoughtful, semi-literary novel I thought The Broken Shore was going to be.I still liked it a lot. I can unequivocally recommend it to fans of crime and mystery fiction, especially in Australia. I just felt a little let down by the ending, but perhaps I was unprepared for the genre conventions. I’ll still read Truth.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Wow great story but a tough book to get through. Many other reviews have said what I would about this book.1. Considering Australians not only have slang for everything, use strange terms (for an American reader), and love to shorten words just for the sake of shortening them (servo= service station, para=paramedics), it is amazing someone didn't shorten this book.2. At least one hundred pages could be removed from this book and not affect the central story line.3. To many distractions (side stories) competing with the main story.With all that being said it is a very good murder mystery, but it is a tough read, not only because of the Australian slang- which the glossary in the back of the book covers some, but not all of the foreign words, but the language is at time reminiscent of an Irvine Welsh book, with prolific use of the C word. Don't say you were not warned.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The Broken Shore by Peter Temple is a above-average police procedural that had me engrossed for days. Joe Cashin, a Melbourne homicide detective has been assigned to the rural area in south-eastern Australia that he grew up in. He is recovering from injuries that were sustained while on the job. Now having to deal with constant pain is part of his life. Unfortunately, small-town doesn’t mean small crime as all too soon Joe finds himself involved in a murder investigation of a prominent local man. The plot unfolds slowly but the style and sense of place were riveting. The author doles out information, letting the reader slowly put the facts together both on Joe’s back story and with the investigation. I have a feeling that this story with it’s racial tensions, corruption at various levels and such a dark view on humanity in general is one that would be familiar in many countries. The author also knew when to give the reader a break from such a bleak outlook and his use of humor was spot on. Of course, I just have to mention the two wonderful Standard Poodles that Joe has, these are not pampered show-dogs, but actual hunting hounds and it is very clear that this author knows not only dogs but this particular breed of dog.I have checked and it appears that there is a further book set in this area, but it also appears that the main character in the next book is not Joe Cashin, but his immediate supervisor and friend who had a supporting role in The Broken Shore. I will definitely be looking for this book and keeping my fingers crossed that this author brings Joe Cashin back as I would really like to read more about him.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5The cover quote was "Read page one and I challenge you not to finish it", unfortunately for me not only did page one not capture my attention, neither did the following 150+ pages I tried thinking it must improve. Whilst it may accurately capture life in a small town in Victoria, none of the characters are sympathetically drawn and the rampant racism expressed by most of them I found disturbing and a little difficult to believe was so widespread. Not recommended despite the cover hype.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I enjoyed The Broken Shore, set in Australia, and featuring a troubled cop and a good mystery. Deciphering the Aussie slang is part of the fun of this book. A rich and respected old man is beaten and left for dead, and suspicion points to 3 punks from the aboriginal community nearby. However, for cop Joe Cashin, the circumstances don't ring true, and he continues to investigate even when told to back off and suspended for not doing so. Very atmospheric and haunting.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Broken Shore definitely succeeds as a gripping page-turner, and fans of crime fiction will find much to love about it. For non-devotees such as myself, this tale of murder in small-town Victoria (Australia) showcases some of the limitations of the genre: the hyper-masculine (yet secretly wounded) hero, the sometimes obvious red herrings and the intriguing yet completely implausible denouement. That said, it's surely a class above Dan Brown-style dross in terms of both writing and plot, and would make pleasing holiday reading for many.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Awesome. The descriptions are so vivid you can practically taste them, yet Temple writes with brevity and a laconic Australian style that touches on a squillion social and moral issues.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This was a good book indeed. The plot is built up slowly and the writer took good care of former a real life character who is not perfect. He is scarred from a previous case. The only drawback to this book is that you ought to take notes of the names, because at the end of the book I would have liked to know who was who again.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Temple is the winner of five Ned Kelly Awards by the Crime Writers' Association of Australia. Joe Cashin is a big city cop who has gone back to his childhood home on the coast of South Australia to recuperate, physically and mentally. When a local millionaire is murdered, Cashin won't accept the easy story that some local aboriginal boys are responsible. In the course of the investigation, Australian political and social divisions are examined, and the sense of place is almost another character.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Temple aims higher than a page turner, but page turner it is. An Australian equivalent of the USA's grit noir. Has all the basic detective stuff: broken detective, political department pressures, racist low-lifers, poor devils, rich devils, developers taking over the place, pedophiles, and crazed killers. Did I miss anything.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A great read, all potential immigrants should know it's not all Bondi Beach in Oz.Temple's style is quite different to European authors, particularly his dialogue which lacks pronouns. It takes a bit of getting used to but Kate in CH says that's how they talk in small town Oz. The plot is interesting enough but it was the dialogue that fascinated me. The dry humour and daily reality of the conversation paints each character perfectly. Temple is masterful at the art of showing through action and speech rather than telling.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Joe Cashin, a Melbourne detective, is working in his small home town while recuperating from a serious work injury. A wealthy landowner is fatally injured in his home and three young men from the nearby aboriginal settlement are accused. When the boys die under tragic circumstances doubt is cast over their guilt. Joe, with time on his hands does some digging and The details of the crime unravel. Good characters, well written, good plot, very enjoyable read.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Succinct, spare, witty, delightful prose. I felt like the real Australia was placed before me - the people, the places, their feelings for each other, their interrelationships. Dark and gritty but with a light, humorous touch - not an easy thing to pull off, but he's done it. Great characters too. Good twisting plot.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A good read. Good plot, and good character development. It shows the darker side of life in Australia, but is believable
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This is set in Australia. In a country town. It is very different from the usual cop/robber book. I enjoyed it.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Meet Joe Cashin - ex-homicide cop, now chief of the 4-members police station of Port Monro, Victoria. He had been injured as part of his previous career so now he is taking care of his dogs and the house that his grandfather once built - and almost destroyed. Until a very wealthy man dies and everyone seems to be happy to pin the murder on local boys.On the surface the novel is a mystery - it revolves around a murder. But Temple uses the format to tell us a story about Australia - its people and its culture; its problems and its struggles. The boys that everyone wants to be the culprit are Aboriginal; so are a lot of people in the Daunt, the area at the edge of Cromarty (the bigger city closest to Port Monro) which is a ghetto in all but name. But Cashin is not convinced and start following the leads he finds and old mysteries start to get to the surface. The mystery solution is almost cliched - it is a story we had read a lot of times. It is the setting and the world of Australia that makes the book different and unique. It is different from Temple's earlier Jack Irish books - while there the detective was the main character, here Victoria is the one that takes central stage - the setting is the book in more than one way. Combined with the storytelling abilities of the author, the book is engaging and one of the better mysteries I had read lately.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5
I found Broken Shore a tad uninteresting. Perhaps it was due to the fact that it was my second consecutive Peter Temple book, or perhaps it was the overuse of 'colourful' and politically incorrect language. Let me quickly,add that this reviewer has been around the traps a few times and heard it all before.
In many instances I felt many of the adjectives used were unnecessary and spoiled an otherwise (potentially) good storyline.
The closing was very like a television show. One minute the hero is fighting for his life, the next, life threatening wounds are overcome and he is having a laugh with his mates at the pub, so to speak.
I knew I had only one chapter to listen to and my mind may have been elsewhere.
But if my mind had wandered what does that say for the story? - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Great writing, tight, richly evocative of Southern Australia in the language, the politics, the racial issues. There are only so many stories you can spin in this genre, so those that are particularly nicely written (like this one, or the Kate Atkinson Case History novels) help lift it above the crowd. And it's a bonus for the armchair travel view of a different culture.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I have long believed that quality crime fiction, the kind built around a sense of place and well developed characters, can give the armchair traveler a better feel for a country and its culture than all but the best written travel books. Books like Peter Temple’s The Broken Shore always remind me how true that is.Big city Australian cop Joe Cashin has been exiled to the little police station responsible for the security of the small South Australian coastal town he grew up in – not that the citizens there have much crime to worry about. He has ostensibly been sent to the area to recover from a serious physical injury, but Cashin is the kind of cop whose superiors sometimes need a break from him, and no one seems in a hurry to call him back. Perhaps that is because he is not much into political correctness or going out of his way to make his fellow policemen look good when they do not deserve it.When local millionaire Charles Bourgoyne is discovered in his mansion with his head bashed in, Cashin soon finds himself at odds with others in the department who are determined to pin the crime on a group of aboriginal teens caught trying to sell the man’s watch. After the case is officially closed, Cashin, ever the introspective loner, decides to investigate the crime on his own. His investigation, made more difficult by the town’s instinctive racism toward its aboriginal population, will lead him deep into a part of the community’s past tainted by child pornography and sexual abuse. Joe Cashin is not a perfect cop. In fact, he sometimes tends to make the kind of careless or lazy mistake that can place him, his fellow cops, or the success of an investigation in danger. The older he gets, the more Cashin questions what he has done with his life. He is close to no one, including his mother and only brother, but despite not being happy about the situation, he does little to remedy it. But the man has a good heart, and a very big one, at that. He is a staunch defender of the underdog and he believes in second chances, two qualities that mark him as a misfit among his fellow policemen.The Broken Shore is filled with memorable little moments, unforgettable characters, and complicated personal relationships. It is about much more than the murder of one old man with a past of his own to protect. Peter Temple uses dialogue to develop his characters much in the way that Elmore Leonard has become so celebrated for doing. It works well for Temple, and I thoroughly enjoyed getting into the revealing conversational rhythms of his characters. Readers will be well advised, however, to familiarize themselves with the Australian slang terms in the book’s glossary before beginning the novel (a fun, standalone read, that is) in order to keep the conversation flowing at the pace at which it is meant to be read.This, my first Peter Temple novel, is actually the author’s ninth, and I look forward to reading the others.Rated at: 4.0
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Crime fiction is not my preferred genre, but this is gripping and engrossing - the detective's character is well drawn and there's some excellent dialogue.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Oh, I do like Temple's writing. Seriously do.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Fairly good yarn but I'm not really into crime books. Very accurately depicts the funny, dry, self-deprecating humour of many Australians.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The Broken Shore by Peter Temple Physically and mentally damaged cop, Joe Cashin has been put out to temporary, maybe, permanent pasture at the cop-shop in the Victorian town of Port Munro. The murder of a local bigwig puts an end to Cashin's quiet life as he is drawn into an increasingly twisted and sordid mystery. Sounds like a pretty typical detective genre plot: man-alone detective, murder and mayhem but what set this novel far above the average crime fiction is the accuracy of the language and the spare but evocative descriptions of people and place.Temple uses the land as a backdrop to the whole story, Cashins need to find peace is characterised through his seemingly futile attempt to tame the neglected family farm, whole tracts of land are tainted by the past and the crimes committed upon them and the cold, drab weather at odds with the stereotypical sunshine associated with Australia adds to the bleak, soul-sapped atmosphere.The laconic, Ocker lingo is spare, sentences short, blokes talk to the point no words wasted. Only the city folk baffle with words and political posturing. As the plot develops the pace heats up and the reader is confronted with corruption, racism, paedophilia, romance, bunny pie, political intrigue, homophobia, revenge and torture (think Edward II with a modern twist).The Broken Shore won the Crime Writers Association Duncan Lawrie Dagger plus a whole host of Australian fiction awards and transcended the limiting crime genre label to win the Colin Roderick award for best book of 2006. As a crusty old joker from the pages of The Broken Shore might say “Bugger me, it's a bloody good read mate”.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This brilliant novel, set in coastal Victoria, features Detective Sergeant Joe Cashin who is recuperating after an horrific experience in which one of his fellow detectives was killed and he was badly injured. A neighbour is found critically bashed, and Cashin is reluctantly drawn into what turns out to be a murder investigation. Local indigenous youths are suspected, but what should have been a simple intercept turns into a fatal (and highly suspicious) shooting by the local police. Temple draws fascinating characters and has a wonderful knack for terse, informative and often humorous conversation. The Victorian setting, Cashion’s dogs, a helpful swaggie, bigoted police and a host of other characters are economically and convincingly drawn. Themes of child abuse and indigenous inequality are skilfully conveyed without the slightest didacticism. Temple’s books are a joy.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I can't get enough of Peter Temple: everytime I read one of his novels I'm enthralled and impressed. The curse of degree in literature is a tendency to become dispassionate and academic, to anaylyse prose style and study metaphors, even when reading the most engaging book. Temple's work turns me into a reader again - his is the art of the flawlessly constructed page-turner.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The first Peter Temple book I have read, and I thoroughly enjoyed it. Appealing to the Australian sense of humor I found his gift in understatements wonderful. The pace of the book is not quite right at the end, it starts very slowly and continues at a good pace, till he realises that he must solve the crime and tie up all the loose ends in about three pages! Set in rural coastal Victoria, Australia, the description of the setting is brillaint, his main character Cashin, is a grumpy aging-man type character, very irritated by most things but totally endearing to the reader. AS well as being a good yarn, it touches social issues of race, politics, religion, depression and police corruption. No-one is perfect in this story, not all the bad guys get caught. Not fatalistic, more an attempt to tbe realistic. He gives hope and enjoyment in the friendships and characters that are developed in the stroy and the sense that no matter how bad things may seem, tomorrow is another day. I am looking for more Peter Temple books.