Member Reviews

This is the fourth book of the Caleb Zelic series and although I enjoyed the other three titles, I was a bit disappointed with this one.

Viskic’s jumpy style has never bothered me before but in Those Who Perish, she was relentless. The short sharp sentences work for action scenes and shouldn’t have been, in my opinion, used so constantly. There was no transition from an ordinary scene to a tense one. With no peaks and troughs, I found it difficult to be emotionally connected.

The plot also felt unrealistic. I mean, the main mystery plot is that a sniper is killing people and everyone just shrugs and carries on like this happens in Australia every other day?

I can’t say I felt satisfied with the resolution either. There were too many threads which didn’t seem to be tied together in the end.

And I won’t even begin to say how irritating I found Caleb’s personal ending/resolution. Caleb who had, up to this book, been the hero, albeit flawed due to his upbringing, but the hero nevertheless. However, in Those Who Perish, most of his behaviour when it comes to his personal life was overly self destructive and it felt that Viskic was just adding unnecessary drama. Making your reader dislike your hero at the end of a four book series isn’t a good idea -- at all.

2 1/2 out of 5

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I wish I had found this author earlier. (This is the first book read by Emma Viskic.

Caleb Zelic, a deaf PI struggling with both his family & Job. His brother Anton who has got addiction issues, is finally getting treatment at a facility which is run by a very off physician on an island. Unfortunately someone is trying to spook and to kill.

Caleb also finds out that his partner Kat is pregnant and this is also weighs down on him and his job.

Which just leaves two questions remaining.
Who is the sniper?
Can he find him before it's to late?

This book is very dark and very twisty and constantly had me guessing right until the end of the book. This was read within a day sitting as I just could not put it down and had the "one more chapter" feeling to it.

Thanks to Netgalley & Publisher for this Advance reader copy for in return my honest review.

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Caleb Zelic, first met in Resurrection Bay, the first of this Australia set mystery/crime series, is a complicated man who tries to do right by everyone but often seems to short change himself. He is a deaf P.I. with only slight residual hearing when he uses the best of hearing aides. Otherwise he relies on careful lip reading and experience. And being careful.

In Those Who Perish, the fourth and last book of the series, Caleb and Kat are together, married and expecting a child very soon after suffering miscarriages. They are planning the future and Caleb is working on the adjustments of mindset and lifestyle he needs to make as a soon-to-be new father. Then he receives an anonymous text advising where “Ant”, his younger brother Anton, is. Caleb hasn’t known Ant’s whereabouts since the end of the last case and fears for his health. So he acts.

By acting, Caleb places himself in the middle of another dangerous situation which impacts everyone he knows and loves.

Another well written, constructed crime novel from Emma Viskic. I recommend this book along with the rest of the series. I believe that you could read and enjoy this as a stand alone, but you would miss the background of the characters developing relationships.

A copy of this book was provided by Pushkin Vertigo through NetGalley.

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I have a love-hate relationship with this series. I love the setting, the prose, and the characters. I absolutely abhor the angst Caleb have about Kat and Ant. Especially Kat and the on-off vibe of their relationship. I guess this is an inherent part of Caleb's personality that has been mentioned in the book and therefore, it's like watching a car crash where you know it's going to be bad and you don't really want to see it but you can't turn your head away. That's exactly how I feel about this whole series.

As always, Caleb stepped into a mystery bigger and ever more dangerous but this time, as he's about to become a father, he really needed to question his involvement. And yet, things got out of hand very quickly with his life and those he loves in danger. Of course, the ending is never what I thought it'd be with all the miscommunications and misunderstandings adding to the complexity of the twists and turns that ends with a big splash. 

My thanks to Pushkin Press for ecopy of book via NetGalley in exchange of my honest thoughts

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Those who Perish is a most enjoyable read, Emma Viskic's writing style is superb, she puts her words into action and gives much life and movement to her characters. The story is fast-paced, has a great plot, and keeps you at the edge of your seat. Great entertainment!
I downloaded a free copy of this book through NetGalley and this is my honest review.

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Those Who Perish is the fourth and - according to the blurb - final book in Emma Viskic's series featuring deaf private investigator Caleb Zelic. I'd recommend it as an interesting read to those who are looking for something a little different in what's become a very competitive genre.
Summoned by an anonymous text, Melbourne-based private investigator Caleb Zelic stumbles into a dramatic standoff in his hometown of Resurrection Bay. A sniper is positioned in a public toilet block and his troubled brother Ant is cowering in a garden bed, the security of which is rapidly lessening as the sun begins to rise. Caleb is drawn to nearby Muttonbird Island, where Ant is currently an inpatient at a rehab clinic. The stakes are further raised when Caleb and Ant discover a human body part on a secluded beach, again coming under fire from an unseen gunman. Meanwhile, Caleb has been retained by his old friend Mick to investigate a bizarre form of poison pen active amongst the Resurrection Bay footy club community. Will the Numbats overcome the scandal to survive for another season?

Returning to Resurrection Bay also enables Caleb to spend much-needed time with his wife Kat, who's now in the last stages of a much-awaited pregnancy. Emotions are understandably running high, and Caleb is feeling the pressure to move their family base back to their home town of Resurrection Bay, away from most of his professional opportunities and the support of Melbourne's deaf community.

Author Emma Viskic's prose style is well-fitted to the genre and subject matter, comprising as it does a stream of consciousness with an impressionistic vibe, frequently utilising sentence fragments, rather than traditional "longhand" narrative prose. This gives the reader an experience of punchy immediacy. Viskic also uses the device of a non-hearing protagonist to full effect, as while there are many situations in which Caleb struggles, he does put his lip-reading skills and the acuity of his other senses to good use in the course of his work as an investigator.

My thanks to the author, Emma Viskic, publisher Pushkin Press (Pushkin Vertigo), and NetGalley for the opportunity to read and review this title.

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PI Caleb Zelic receives an anonymous tip that his drug-addict brother Anton is in trouble, and he immediately rushes to the scene and practically into the line of sniper fire. Both Ant and Caleb escape, but clearly Caleb’s plan to steer clear of dangerous situations for the sake of his pregnant wife will not work out. There’s danger all around in this book, and if Caleb is to restore his damaged relationship with his brother—and prevent the police from holding Ant responsible for a murder he did not commit—he is going to have to take serious risks. Caleb is an excellent and complex protagonist, a deaf PI who shows us a community and a culture, someone who gets the job done while navigating everyone else’s biases. Tensions abound between characters in different groups: hearing and deaf, aboriginal and non, islanders and non. Insiders and outsiders are in conflict on the island, in the rehab center, and in community social centers. Caleb forges ahead at great personal cost to save his brother and solve the crimes, even a vaguely silly subplot about the football team mascot. Unfortunately, the overuse of sentence fragments caused the book to feel too much like an outline and made it harder to appreciate the unfolding story. I was sufficiently distracted by this to check the last book to find out whether it was a quirk I had somehow overlooked in the author’s previous work. No—the last Caleb Zelic book had a sprinkling of sentence fragments used effectively for flavor; in the current novel, entire paragraphs go by with scarcely a subject-verb pairing in sight.

Thanks to Netgalley and Pushkin Press for a digital advance review copy.

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I wish I'd found this series earlier (thanks to the publisher for the ARC) because Viskic created a terrific. unique character in Caleb Zelic, a deaf PI struggling with his family and his job. His brother Anton, who has addiction issues, is finally, finally getting treatment at a facility run by an odd physician on an island. Unfortunately, someone is trying to spook and kill. Caleb heads there and finds more than he expected. His partner Kat is pregnant and this weighs on him as well. Who is the sniper? Can Caleb find him? This is dark and twisty and a good read.

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Thanks to Netgalley for a copy of this book for an honest review.

Oh Caleb, what have you done?? I love Australian crime novels and this series is brilliant. So gritty and full of suspense.

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Another nail-biting read in what has been a reliably good Aussie crime series. I sincerely hope this is not really the end, although if it is, I have to hand it to Emma Viskic for finding a good place to leave the story.

Just a few months after the events of Darkness for Light, Caleb Zelic, deaf PI, has been summoned back to Resurrection Bay in the middle of the night by an anonymous text message. Apparently his brother Ant has resurfaced, and may be in trouble. Arriving in the coastal town as dawn is about to break, Caleb does indeed find Ant in more than a spot of bother - under sniper fire. So begins Caleb's latest heart-pounding investigation, where protecting his loved ones is just a difficult as uncovering the truth. As we've come to expect, Caleb's stubbornness and fire is balanced by Kat's calm, but this time the stakes are higher than ever for this couple, with the birth of their baby imminent.

Although I've enjoyed all books in this series, this one may be my favourite yet. It incorporates all the things we've come to love about Caleb's universe; a tight plot, relentless pace, character growth, irreverence and what seems to be a realistic insight to deafness. Above all, the thing I enjoyed the most this time was having Ant feature prominently in the story. The relationship between the brothers is completely relatable.

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This the last book in the Caleb Zelic series and it finishes in a good place with all the ends tied up neatly.

This final story is a gripping one with Caleb and his brother Anton in a very dangerous situation with a sniper, no less, coming after them. Viskic writes in short disjointed sentences which certainly made me feel tense but not always in a good way. Sometimes I just felt irritated and wished she could have used the technique a little more sparingly.

I have always felt from the beginning that being a P.I. may not be the best job for someone as deaf as Caleb is, especially since he cannot hear the bad guy coming. The author makes a very thorough job of describing how someone with deafness feels about it and how they cope in everyday life.

Those Who Perish is an effective conclusion to Caleb's story and I am glad I read it.

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4.5~5★
“[She] might not be top of his suspect list but she was on it, and it was much easier to observe someone when they didn’t know he could lip-read. Easier too, not to have to deal with all the You Poor Thinging.”

Caleb Zelic can speak well, but he’s deaf and prefers not to advertise it. Partly pride (hides his hearing aids under his hair – if he bothers to wear them), and partly for reasons to do with his investigations. People don’t realise he can eavesdrop across a room, and it helps if potential enemies don’t know he won’t hear them sneaking up from behind.

He responds to an anonymous text message: “—Anton in danger. Res bay foreshore 6 am

Anton is his often-estranged brother, a drug addict who reforms from time to time and then relapses. They share a low opinion of their late father and have a close connection, but it has been strained past breaking point more than once when Caleb has given up on him.

Caleb hasn’t known where Ant is and has no idea what the message means, but he races to the Resurrection Bay Foreshore to find out what’s there. A body, a sniper, Ant on the run.

How will he explain to his heavily pregnant wife, Kat, that he needs to put himself in danger – again? She has enormous support from her mother, Maria, the Bay’s first Aboriginal doctor and the owner of the local clinic. Plus, there are sisters, aunties, and her whole mob, all waiting for this baby.

He’s anxious about the next ultrasound, since they’ve lost previous pregnancies, and he wants Kat to stay calm and safe and not worry. He’s always fearful he’ll lose her to an old boyfriend, Jarrah, who is still in the picture and captain of the local footy team whose finances Caleb has been investigating.

“Good-looking, talented, pillar of the Koori community – and definitely still yearning for Kat. Bastard didn’t even have the decency to be unlikeable.”

When Kat does enlist Jarrah’s help with something, Caleb is horrified.

“She touched his arm. ‘Don’t worry, he’s safe. He’s mob.’ A lot of history in that short phrase: more than eighty thousand years of culture, two and a half centuries of fighting dispossession. But she was wrong about her actions being safe.”

Nobody is safe in this story. Caleb ends up on a sparsely populated island to investigate the private rehab clinic under the pretext of visiting Ant, who is being treated there.

The behaviour and suspiciousness of the locals is typical of people in a small community or country town. On the one hand, they may grudgingly acknowledge your existence.

“[He] hoisted the box easily, gave Caleb the country handshake: slight lift of the chin. Very slight. Caleb replied in kind.”

On the other, they may pretend you aren’t there.

“He turned for his car, leapt back as a white sedan zipped past, . . . A faint note joined the tinnitus: car horn blaring. Coughing, heart and dust in his mouth. People were staring at him from the shop and jetty. A curtain twitched in a house opposite. Like he was five again, learning the dangers of silent traffic. So much for being discreet.”

The storytelling style varies from smooth prose to short, punchy phrases, which is how I see Caleb’s mind working. He often hears conversations that way – just a few words here and there that he has to piece together, hoping to make sense of them. You can almost feel the fear yourself.

“Go now. Sniper might come back. Turning. One step then the other, down the driveway, into the car. Few tries to get the keys in, engine started. Slow reverse, driving away. The shakes hit him a few kays down the road. Clammy-skinned nausea.”

I do not like reading that this is the last of the Caleb Zelic series, but I will admit that Viskic has finished it off well, although not how most readers would have expected. I’m telling myself that she’s left it open-ended enough that maybe . . .

Incidentally, this would work fine as a stand-alone book. You don’t need to remember or know anything from the previous books – but read them, they’re good!

Thanks to NetGalley and Pushkin Press for the copy for review from which I’ve quoted.

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In this fourth, and probably last, outing for Emma Viskic’s deaf investigator Caleb Zelic has rushed from Melbourne to his home town of Resurrection Bay after receiving a message from an unknown source that his brother Ant is in danger. When he finds Ant, he is hiding in the shrubbery on the foreshore trying to avoid being killed by a sniper. Caleb manages to distract the sniper long enough for Ant to escape, but when a body turns up in the bay, Caleb knows he’ll have to go out to the island where Ant is living to find out what sort of trouble he’s in this time.

Caleb is relieved to find Ant in a rehab facility on the island determined to finally kick his drug addiction and get back with his girlfriend. However, it’s soon apparent there is something wrong on the island; something that’s making people feel afraid to talk. Warning notes and dead foxes left for people, bullet holes made in letterboxes and another body all help to ramp up the fear and make the locals close ramps.

The plot turns out to be complex and somewhat obscure and it takes Caleb (and the reader!) quite a few wrong turns before he is able to get a handle on what has been going on and why Ant might be in danger. Caleb’s wife Kat is now within weeks of having their baby and, although she has moved back home to Resurrection Bay to be with her extended family and highly competent doctor mother, Caleb is concerned about spending so much time on the island. Especially since there is almost no mobile phone reception and the ferry service to the island is limited.

Viskic’s unique characters are what make this series so enjoyable. Caleb is a unique and interesting protagonist who has allowed readers some insight into the deaf world. Although he copes well with his acquired deafness through lip reading and signing, he is still flawed and vulnerable in other ways that affect his relationships. Artist Kate, an indigenous woman is also a terrific character, especially with her large family of siblings, cousins, nieces and nephews and her mother who knows exactly how to keep Caleb in his place. A secondary plot involving the theft of the suit of the footy club’s mascot, Norman the Numbat didn’t quite get off the ground for me but provided some moments of light relief from the more deadly main plot. Let’s hope Caleb goes on to lead a quieter life from now on, especially now he is a father.

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When Caleb Zelic received an anonymous message saying his brother Anton was in danger, Caleb dropped everything and headed from Melbourne to Resurrection Bay. When he found Ant, hiding from a sniper, he was thankfully safe, but angry and aggressive. When he headed back to the rehabilitation clinic on Muttonbird Island, Caleb let him go and headed to see his pregnant wife, Kat. But he had to leave her again and head to the island. He had to see Ant and work out their relationship as he hadn’t seen or been able to find Ant in months. The fragile link between the two brothers needed to be mended.

But Caleb’s suspicions escalated on the island – there was a small community of folk who were close mouthed and wouldn’t speak to him, including the shop owner and many others. The doctor running the clinic, who Ant thought a lot of, rose the hackles on Caleb’s neck and the locals who wouldn’t look him in the eye – what was happening? What was he up against? It was hard enough with his being deaf, but with all that was going on, he knew the danger was high…

Those Who Perish is the 4th and final episode in the Caleb Zelic series by Aussie author Emma Viskic and I thoroughly enjoyed it. Caleb had a rough trot this episode, making mistakes, finding danger every way he turned. But it was good to see him and Ant trying to reconcile. I’m looking forward to seeing what Ms Viskic has up her sleeve for us next. Highly recommended.

With thanks to Echo Publishing and Pushkin Press for my ARC to read in exchange for an honest review.

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4 +

Australian authors are very good at quirky characters and even quirkier plots. This is the fourth and final book in Emma Viskic’s amazing Caleb Zelic series. Caleb is a deaf PI who reads lips very well although there are occasional, and often amusing, mistakes made.

Caleb is summoned back to his hometown of Resurrection Bay by a cryptic message about his brother, Ant (Anton). They have a rocky relationship and Ant is an on again off again drug addict. When Caleb arrrives at the rendezvous point there is no sign of Ant but another man is shot dead. Caleb tracks his brother down at a rehabilitation clinic on a nearby island. He seems to be doing well but the clinic, in fact everyone on the island is very guarded. Is there something fishy going on here? The doctor in charge seems to have a secret past.

Someone is sending warnings in the form of dead foxes, cryptic warning notes and bullet holes in letterboxes. A body part is found on a beach Caleb is shot at. He and Ant join forces to work out what is going on before more people are killed - unsuccessfully I might add as more people are killed. Caleb has some theories but one by one they crash and burn! He is also tasked by the local football club to track down the stolen mascot Norman Numbat who has been photographed with various peoples heads photoshopped on and in various crude poses.

As usual, Caleb has the wrong end of the stick in this investigation and he must move his pregnant Koori (Indigenous) wife, Kat, to a safer location as he doesn’t want to bring trouble to her door again.

The characters are very quirky and absolutely charming. Kat’s mother, a doctor, is hilariously deadpan and Caleb and Ant come across as loveable rogues. The plot of this one is quite complex and you do not see the resolution until the very end. Now if Caleb can just stay alive long enough he may solve this one yet! I thoroughly enjoyed this tense thriller with much humour laced throughout and I cannot wait to see what the author comes up with next, although it will be a shame to say goodbye to Caleb. Many thanks to Netgalley and Pushkin Press for the much appreciated arc which I reviewed voluntarily and honestly.

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This is the fourth and last book in Emma Viskic's gritty Aussie crime series set in Victoria featuring the deaf PI Caleb Zelic. Caleb's estranged drug addict brother, Anton, has been missing for some time, still upset about Caleb's part in his downfall. After almost giving up hope of finding him, Caleb receives an anonymous text message alerting him to Ant's whereabouts and warning him that Ant is in danger. This has Caleb hotfooting it to Resurrection Bay, only to find himself and Anton underfire from a sniper. The body of a man who has has been shot is discovered, the murder victim turns out to be Peter Taylor, a twitcher who had checked himself into the addiction clinic run by Dr Ian Locke on Muttonbird Island with its isolated small community suspicious of outsiders.

Worried about Anton's safety, Caleb takes the ferry to the island where Ant is in rehab, he is in good spirits, determined to kick his addiction, spurred on by getting together once again with his girlfriend, Etty. It soon becomes clear that the sniper is on the island, with the clinic receiving threats in the form of dead foxes and notes. There is nothing Caleb will not do to protect Anton as he seeks redemption from a past from his judgementalism and where he had not been there for him. Their relationship is an uneasy and prickly affair at times as the two try to locate an ever desperate sniper, with a local community reluctant to help amidst a background of a rising body count. In addition, Caleb has been hired by Mick over the stolen local footy mascot, Norman Numbat, used to troll with photoshopped compromising photos on social media, threatening the existence of the much loved club.

Emotionally Caleb is all over the place, as well as trying to rebuild a relationship with Anton, he is feeling insecure when it comes to his aboriginal artist wife, the heavily pregnant Kat. With so much to lose, he is doing his best to ensure that she is not once again endangered by his work, but some of his actions do not help his cause. Furthermore, he is apprehensive about becoming a father and his ability to fulfil the role, given his past. This was a dark and thrilling crime read, with a offbeat and flawed deaf PI, and the unique problems and issues that arise from this. This series will appeal to those readers who love their Aussie crime, and perhaps those intrigued to see how a deaf PI might operate. Many thanks to the publisher for an ARC.

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I really enjoyed this book. It is the fourth instalment of Caleb Zelic’s story but the first I have read. It works well as a stand alone piece but I shall be going on to read the first three books. The main protagonists, Caleb, is deaf and a private investigator. We first encounter him doing a quick dash to save someone and there the mystery begins. He uses hearing aids, but they only allow him to hear things like bullets. He lip reads and uses Australian sign language.

The main theme of the book is family, Caleb is trying t help his younger brother out of trouble but at the same time keeping his pregnant wife safe. I like that they are all relatable characters. That Caleb and his wife are clearly in love and have gone through hardships.

The writing style was very in keeping with the genre and old Marolowe stories. With small sentences and economy of works to get the pace flowing. It some places his was a bit jarred and took me a while to get comfortable with it. There were also some Australian localisms that were not in my device’s in built dictionary. The meant that there was a bit stop and starting to understand what the author was saying.

All in all this was an enjoyable read and I will gladly read more from this author.

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3.5 stars rounded up to 4. I haven't read the first three books in this series but Viskic provides enough background that I don't think it was necessary. I appreciate her handling of the world of those who can't hear as well as of the cultural differences between the worlds of Caleb and Kat. The writing keeps the plot moving along although there were times at which I was tempted to walk away from the seemingly senseless killings and chases. But I'm glad I hung in until the end.

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(3.5 stars)
Those Who Perish is my second book by Emma Viskic in the Caleb Zelic series. While I don’t really feel the urge to go back and fill in the missing books, I can understand those that do. Viskic has made a point of pulling her characters from a broader view of Australians. It’s great to read Aussie noir with Indigenous and deaf characters. Sometimes the heavy handedness of this inclusion can distract from the story: “Twig limbed and ancient, casually racist in the way of white Australians raised on a White Australia policy.” And at other times it is the story: “No fear of Mick talking to the authorities. Father and aunts members of the Stolen Generations; children ripped from their homes in the name of assimilation. Put into care, fostered out, adopted. Broken.”

Repetition of these educational moments however often makes me think the writer thinks the reader is stupid: “cops and Kooris could be a volatile mix. Not enough centuries since the last police-led massacre, not enough weeks since the last black death in custody.” Finding the right balance is clearly hard. Regardless, I’m glad Viskic has used her series of novels to advance the experiences of First Nations and deaf Australians, but I also looking forward to the day when the behaviour of “hearies” and white Australians toward those who are different from themselves doesn’t need to be described: “Big day for the gunyan. They found a black fella to blame yet?”

I think you might like this series if you liked Trent Dalton’s Boy Swallows Universe. Like that novel, Viskic’s characters are scrappy and imperfect, and her writing is colourfully Australian: “He risked getting made into vehicular turducken by slowing to ninety and escaped across to the gravel shoulder.”

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I would like to thank Netgalley and Pushkin Press, the forth novel to feature fraud investigator Caleb Zelic, set in the fictional rural town of Resurrection Bay, Victoria.

Caleb rushes from Melbourne to Resurrection Bay when he receives an anonymous text telling him his brother, Ant, is in trouble. He finds Ant, a drug addict, hiding from a sniper and undergoing rehabilitation on a nearby island. Determined to protect Ant he launches an investigation and unwittingly puts his pregnant wife, Kat, and many of the islanders in danger.

I enjoyed Those Who Perish, which has an interesting plot and some relatable characters. It is told entirely from Caleb’s point of view and that offers both good and not so good points. Caleb is deaf and relies on lip reading to hold conversations, as his hearing aids don’t seem to offer enough definition for the human voice. This is just one interesting fact in an obviously well researched novel. I always like a novel that widens my world view and offers me new knowledge and this one fits the bill nicely.

The plot is well conceived, offering a real mystery about why a sniper would be at work in a small rural area. Caleb takes a less than rigid approach to his investigating, more like pick a suspect, mostly based on personal animus, and see if anything sticks. It can be annoying but it muddies the waters for the reader and keeps the motive and perpetrator well hidden. At the same time it raises the tension and excitement as Caleb and Ant move from one dangerous situation to the next, leaving a trail of dead bodies in their wake. I was disappointed by the way the solution is exposed. It is not neatly tied up in a debrief, but more in a stream of consciousness from Caleb as he makes his discoveries in real time. This disappointment says more about me than the writing as I felt it got lost in other things and lacked the impact it should have had, given what it took to get there.

The novel has tension, excitement, a high body count and strong emotions but it also has humour. This is evident in Caleb and Ant’s dialogue but also in the subplot, where someone is sending rude, crudely photoshopped pictures of the local footie team’s leading lights in compromising positions. Well, it made me laugh. The sadness comes from Caleb being unable to judge how to handle his marriage to the very pregnant Kat. It is one misstep after another and the sad thing is that it’s done from love, not malice.

Those Who Perish is a good read that I can recommend.

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