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Lyrebird

ebook
27 of 27 copies available
27 of 27 copies available

Lyrebirds are brilliant mimics, so if they mimic a woman screaming in terror and begging for her life, they have witnessed a crime. But how does a young, hung over PHD student and a wet behind the ears new detective, convince anyone that a native bird can be a reliable witness to a murder, especially when there is no body and no missing person? And what happens when they turn out to be right?

Lyrebirds were mimics. They didn't create the sounds they made, only repeated what they had heard. Had the bird actually heard some poor woman begging for her life? Jessica looked around uneasily. The bush that had seemed so benign and beautiful only minutes before now seemed sinister.

Twenty years ago, ornithology student Jessica Weston filmed a lyrebird mimicking the dying screams of a woman in the Barrington Tops National Park. Terrified, she took her recordings to the Maitland police to report a murder. Despite support from newly minted detective, Megan Blaxland, no one was reported missing in the area and no body found, so Jessica's claims were mocked and dismissed.

Twenty years later, a body is unearthed. Exactly where Jessica said it would be.

Megan Blaxland, now a retired senior sergeant, is persuaded to return and lead the cold case investigation. The first thing she does is contact Jessica Weston, now an Associate Professor at Newcastle University.

Jessica and Megan are appalled that the dead woman, whose last moments were heard by only a lyrebird and her killer, has been ignored and forgotten for so long. They both feel they have let the victim down, and are determined to find the killer, whatever it takes.

What they do not realise is it is not just their own lives that may be in danger.

As with her previous novel, The Mother, where she shines a light on the tragedy of domestic violence, Jane Caro once again expertly illuminates the injustices perpetrated against women, particularly those who are marginalised, within a gripping, suspenseful thriller.

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    • Books+Publishing

      February 18, 2025
      Walkley Award-winning journalist, social commentator and author Jane Caro (The Mother) returns to crime fiction for her second adult novel, The Lyrebird. The titular bird first appears in the prologue, when student ornithologist Jessica Weston films the male superb lyrebird’s mating dance and song in Burraga Swamp, New South Wales. To her horror, the lyrebird mimics the dying screams of an unknown woman. She is laughed out of the police station by all but the lowest ranked police detective, Megan Blaxland, and the lyrebird’s evidence is ignored for 20 years until a landslip reveals a woman’s skeleton in the swamp. Now a retired senior sergeant, Megan returns to the police force to close the cold case. Police enquiries expose a dark history of illegal brothels and human trafficking as bushfires close in on the investigators and suspects. The environmental threat gives the plot a needed urgency given that a small pool of suspects is identified mid-way through the novel. In the guise of a detective novel, Lyrebird is a keening cry of grief and outrage, asking: how can people do these things to each other? How can we do this to the planet? The lyrebird’s mimicry of human terror serves as both an exceptional narrative hook and a poignant symbol of nature bearing witness to humanity’s crimes. Recommended for readers who want crime fiction that confronts the real world, such as Martine Kropkowski’s Everywhere We Look and Louise Milligan’s Pheasants Nest.

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  • English

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