The Broken Shore (novel)

Book by Peter Temple From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Broken Shore (2005) is a Duncan Lawrie Dagger award-winning novel by the Australian author Peter Temple.[1]

LanguageEnglish
PublisherText Publishing, Australia
Quick facts Author, Language ...
The Broken Shore
First edition
AuthorPeter Temple
LanguageEnglish
GenreCrime fiction
PublisherText Publishing, Australia
Publication date
2005
Publication placeAustralia
Media typePrint (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages345 pp
ISBN1-920885-77-3
OCLC62116825
Followed byTruth 
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Synopsis

The novel's central character is Joe Cashin, a Melbourne homicide detective. Following serious physical injuries, he is posted to his hometown Port Munro, where he begins the process of rebuilding the old family mansion as well as his physical and mental strength. Against a background of family tragedy, politics, police corruption, and racism, he investigates the death of a wealthy local man, Charles Burgoyne. His closest friend and police superior, Villani, is the central character in the sequel novel Truth.

Style

Written by the award-winning author Peter Temple, the book continues with his trademark stark, staccato dialogue, in which superfluous words are removed and the meaning of each sentence must be dug out. In a typical example of Temple's flourish, he describes a nearby derelict town as “hardcore—the unemployed, under-employed, unemployable, the drunk and doped, the old-age pensioners, people on all kinds of welfare, the halt, the lame".

Awards

Interviews

  • Time Out New York[7]

Reviews

  • "The Age"[8]
  • "Detectives Beyond Borders" Part 1,[9] Part 2[10]
  • Island Volume 104[11]
  • "Light Reading"[12]
  • "Mostly Fiction"[13]
  • "Reading Matters"[14]

Telemovie

The Broken Shore was adapted for television by writer Andrew Knight.

The movie had its world premiere at the Adelaide Film Festival on 15 October 2013.[15] It aired on the ABC on 2 February 2014.[16]

References

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