 |
|
Weathercock
Black
|
Weathercock
Black
M.J
Bruty, Pan Macmillan, 190pp, $25
M.J.
Bruty’s first novel Weathercock Black is a fastpaced, full-scale
espionage adventure set within the Australasia region.
The plot follows David Grant, an Australian agent from Bruty’s invented
super-agency AUSEC, as he and female British exchange officer Kristin
Pace seek the perpetrators behind a string of ASIS agents murdered
throughout the region.
Bruty manages to pull off what I consider the difficult task of
setting a good espionage who dunnit in our region as the story travels
through Indonesia and Papua New Guinea – as many might consider
this type of novel better suited to Europe or America, which is
why I suspect she included a British exchange officer as one of
the main characters.
Bruty has a descriptive, but flirtatious style of writing that can
annoy at times, and although she does draw upon her experience as
an officer within the Australian Army intelligence corps and thanks
subject matter experts in her acknowledgements, content is structured
with the civilian readership in mind by including preconceived opinions
of service life, as I noted about six chargeable offences within
the first two chapters.
That aside, the book is wellresearched and Bruty displays a firm
grasp of regional politics and instabilities and combines them well
with great imagination and all the intrigue, deception, betrayal
and drama needed to deliver a good cloak-and-dagger read.
A good book for out bush, and hopefully we’ll see a lot more from
Bruty.
– Cpl Damian Shovell
|