- This novel is the second in Steven Carroll's series featuring Detective Stephen Minter, and it is remarkably good.
- Carroll takes us well beyond the standard crime novel, exploring human character and frailty with literary precision and sensitivity. A famous politician has gone missing, presumably drowned. His clothes were found on a beach in Queenscliff, Victoria. The year is 1951, and the world is still recovering from the horrors of World War Two.
- The politician, Harry Playford, is highly popular and talented and is considered the obvious successor to Robert Menzies, the current Prime Minister. He's a complex person however, and his marriage to Olga is basically a sham. He has a mistress, Caro Martin, a lecturer in French Literature.
- DS Minter, aged only 32, has a girlfriend, Brigid Delaney. They're 'Ten Pound Poms', having immigrated under the government scheme to encourage British citizens to make a new home in Australia which was desperate for more workers and professionals to fill available jobs. Minter is charged with investigating the disappearance of the politician.
- Brigid is a government agent looking for Russian spies. She explores Playford's official files and uncovers facts about his pre-war past that could be extremely damaging to his career if exposed. He was a Jew hater in awe of Fascism. Even Bob Menzies, in a speech in July 1939 praised Hitler as 'one of the really great men of the century'.
- Playford is becoming deeply unhappy and depressed. He reflects on parliament's Question Time: 'frogs, toads, ferrets, stoats and all manner of field and riverbank life jump and squeal in either support or derision'. Without answering a question asked of him he gets up and leaves the chamber. And takes the train back to Melbourne. He was never seen or heard from again.
- The novel's resolution is mysterious but very satisfying.
- Read this remarkably good novel. It's such a pleasure.






