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River of Salt

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
In 1963, former hitman Blake Saunders flees the Philadelphia Mob for a quieter existence in a tiny coastal Australian town. Life in Coral Shoals is perfect and Blake is a new man – running a club called the Surf Shack, and playing nights there with his surf music band, The Twang.But then a young woman's body is found at a local motel, a matchbook from the Surf Shack on her bedside table. When Blake's friend is arrested for her murder and the local sergeant doesn't want to know, it becomes clear that it is up to Blake – a man who knows about cold-blooded killing – to protect his corner of paradise.
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    • Books+Publishing

      February 28, 2019
      After fronting a rock band in the late 1970s and later writing for film and TV, Dave Warner now taps a rich seam of character-driven crime novels. His 2015 book Before It Breaks scored the Ned Kelly Award for best crime fiction; his latest, River of Salt, is a complex yet accessible tale that takes its time with characters and details. It’s set in the early 1960s, where erstwhile American assassin-for-hire Blake Saunders has restarted his life as a surf-guitar-loving pub owner in low-key coastal Australia. But when a protection racket and a brutal killing start to encroach on his idyllic second act, Blake circumvents local police to tie up loose ends himself—and to clear an eccentric friend of murder charges. Warner works in a lot of affectionate period details, as well as damning glimpses of the treatment of women, LGBTQIA+ people and Aboriginal people at the time. Beyond the book’s convincing action and romance beats, he explores well beneath the surface of a varied cast of characters. The twist-filled finish and critical look at the past should appeal to fans of Christian White’s The Nowhere Child, though River of Salt is slower and more fleshed out.

      Doug Wallen is a freelance journalist, copywriter and editor

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  • English

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