| Weathercock
Black |
| M.J
Bruty |
| Pan
Macmillan |
| 190
pages, $25 |
|
 |
M.J.
BRUTYS first novel Weathercock Black is a
fast-paced, full-scale espionage adventure set within
the Australasia region.
The plot follows David Grant, an Australian agent from
Brutys 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 to be the
difficult task of setting a good espionage who-dunnit
in our region 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 does 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, it seems the 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 well-researched 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. Hopefully well see a
lot more from her.
CPL Damian Shovell
|