Dragons at the Party

Dragons at the Party is a 1987 novel from Australian author Jon Cleary. It was the fourth book featuring Sydney homicide detective Scobie Malone, and marked the character's first appearance in print in fourteen years.[1][2]

Dragons at the Party
First UK edition
AuthorJon Cleary
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
SeriesScobie Malone
GenreDetective
PublisherCollins (UK)
William Morrow (US)
Publication date
1987
Preceded byRansom 
Followed byNow and Then, Amen 

Background

Cleary did not originally intended to turn Scobie Malone into a long-running series. However, after his daughter's death in 1987 his wife fell ill, and Cleary was not able to travel as widely as he liked in order to research his novels. This forced him to write about Sydney and he thought that returning to the crime genre was a way to write about Australia while still appealing to the international market.[3] The novel was a success and Cleary concentrated on writing Malone adventures until 2003.

Synopsis

The novel is set in 1988 with the background of the Australian Bicentenary. President Timori of the fictitious Pacific country the Spice Islands has been deposed in a coup and granted asylum in Australia. His aide is murdered in a bullet meant for the President and Malone must find the assassin before he strikes again.[4]

Reception

The novel was generally well reviewed. Fellow crime writer Peter Corris said that "younger writers could learn a lot from Jon Cleary: how to draw a credible character with a few strokes, how to keep a story moving, build suspense and satisfy every real reader's desire for good writing... [The book] contains some of the best action sequences I've read in years and the dialogue is always crisp and effective."[5]

gollark: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-53884401The education system really is wonderful!
gollark: Maybe.
gollark: So now I'm actually wondering if this was a botnet programmed by edgy teenagers, or something.
gollark: I downloaded one of *those* to look at, and ran `strings` on it, and as well as what look like HTTP requests (presumably trying to exploit other devices), there are sets of strings like these:
gollark: I looked at the `.sh` file there, and it appears to just be trying to download and execute a bunch of binaries for different architectures.

References

  1. Mark Thomas, 'Entertainment and Surprises in up-to-date Australian Thrillers ', The Canberra Times 13 December 1987 (p.10)
  2. Des Partridge, 'Cleary's Little Thriller Gem' The Courier-Mail 14 November 1987
  3. Murray Waldren, 'Jon Cleary: Character Builder' The Weekend Australian 1998
  4. Peter Pierce, 'Political Cocktail of Thrills', The Age 7 November 1987 (p.15)
  5. Peter Corris, 'Corris on Cleary', The Sydney Morning Herald 24 October 1987 (p.73)
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