We spent last weekend camping in a bend of the river at our friends’ farm, not far from where we live. It’s a sheep property; you have to open three gates as you navigate your way down the rutted track through the paddocks and then down to the river to the campsite. It’s right on the river, tucked in among massive old river red gums – ‘widow-makers’; no-one pitches a tent under them – and young trees. It’s private but not truly isolated, though it feels like it is because it seems to take longer to get from the gate down to the river than it did to drive there.
Nine friends; we’ve been having these farm camps for years now, but this time, there was a newcomer. Was this the perfect cast and setting for a ‘bush noir’ crime novel?
Well, no. It was all very jolly, the new friend was lovely and we all drove home happily leaving no corpse behind. Blame my weekend reading, Jane Harper’s Exiles, for my over-active imagination.
Exiles is her third novel featuring investigator Aaron Falk, and it’s set in a South Australian wine-growing area. Since my husband’s family comes from SA, I can picture the Maralee Valley (the Barossa) as easily as I could the parched farmlands of The Dry and the Gariwerd/Grampians landscape of Force of Nature. For me, as a country dweller, her well-observed rural settings and landscapes are an especial pleasure and she rarely strikes a false note.
Falk is in town to attend the christening of his friends Greg (another police officer) and Rita Raco’s child. The ceremony was meant to happen the year before, but when a local woman went missing at the local Food and Wine Festival, all plans were upended and Falk joined the community in the search. The woman’s body was never found, but it is generally accepted that the new mother was suffering post-natal depression and took her own life by slipping into a nearby dam, leaving her baby at the Festival, all alone in her pram. It’s something doesn’t ring true to a number of people. There’s a renewed appeal for information… and the secrets and lies begin to emerge.
Harper does these stories so well. Small town, tight knit community, a crime rooted in the past. A perfect Aussie camping holiday read.