Before It Breaks

Before It Breaks (2015) is a police procedural novel by Australian writer Dave Warner.[1] It won the Ned Kelly Award for Best Novel in 2016.[2]

Before It Breaks
AuthorDave Warner
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
GenreCrime fiction
PublisherFremantle Press
Publication date
2015
Media typePrint
Pages337 pp
ISBN9781925161205
Preceded byMurder in the Off-Season 
Followed by 

Plot summary

Detective Inspector Daniel Clement has left the homicide squad in Perth, Western Australia, to return to Broome, the town where he grew up. He and his wife have separated and Clement wants to be near his daughter. His police work is a long series of petty theft and drunken violence incidents until a body is discovered by Jasper's Creek with an axe wound to the head. Clement is called upon for his homicide skills and takes control of the case, initially thinking it a simple case of opportunistic murder. But as he digs deeper into the victim's background, and after a second body is found with the same type of head wound he and the Broome police come to the conclusion that there is something more sinister at play.

Critical reception

Fiona Hardy, reviewing the novel for Readings, found the novel "a wild ride" and noted: "’70s punk-rocker Warner nails laconic Australian characters but has infused Before It Breaks with a sharp writing style. So immersive in its description of the outback that you could almost swat at the words on the page like the ever-present flies and use the pages to fan yourself from the heat, it bleeds casual realism, honest but never dreary, regarding the non-blockbuster limitations of technology on blurry pictures, office procedure and officers learning the ropes on their first murder, or the determination needed to traverse through hundreds of kilometres of searing West Australian space just to interview one person."[3]

Ned Kelly Award judges' comments: "The eighth novel from songwriter Warner nails the brief: well-drawn characters you could swear you've met somewhere already, and an intriguing plot with roots in other places and other times, studded with incidents that ought to be bizarre but which Warner renders believable. What really raises this book above the pack, though, is a stunning sense of location: a depiction of Broome and its environment so vivid that you can practically taste it. Or, on occasion, run from it."[4]

Notes

  • Dedication: For Nicole, shelter in the storm.
gollark: IRC is basically *the* chat protocol of, er, last millenium.
gollark: Really‽
gollark: Have you heard of IRC before?
gollark: Which has another bridge bot connecting to Heavserver #apionet which has an IRC/Discord bridge.
gollark: We're connected to Heavserver #omega-quarantine now.

See also

References

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