Free shipping on orders over $99
Sticks and Stones

Sticks and Stones 2

it's time for a killer to leave his mark

by Katherine Firkin
Paperback
Publication Date: 02/06/2020
4/5 Rating 2 Reviews

Share This Book:

 
$32.99

A terrifying, twisting debut from an exciting new voice in Australian crime fiction. It's time for a killer to leave his mark . . .

‘He didn’t have to be normal, the boy realised. He just had to pretend.’

It’s winter in Melbourne and Detective Emmett Corban is starting to regret his promotion to head of the Missing Persons Unit, as the routine reports pile up on his desk.

So when Natale Gibson goes missing, he’s convinced this is the big case he’s been waiting for – the woman’s husband and parents insist the devoted mother would never abandon her children, and her personal accounts remain untouched.

But things aren’t all they seem. The close-knit Italian family is keeping secrets - none bigger than the one Natale has been hiding.

Just as the net seems to be tightening, the investigation is turned on its head. The body of a woman is found . . . then another.

What had seemed like a standard missing person's case has turned into a frightening hunt for a serial killer, and time is running out.

But to really understand these shocking crimes, Emmett and his team will need to delve back through decades of neglect – back to a squalid inner-city flat, where a young boy is left huddling over his mother’s body . . .

ISBN:
9781760893026
9781760893026
Category:
Crime & Mystery
Format:
Paperback
Publication Date:
02-06-2020
Publisher:
Penguin Random House Australia
Country of origin:
Australia
Pages:
400
Dimensions (mm):
233x153x30mm
Weight:
0.52kg
Katherine Firkin

Katherine Firkin is a Melbourne journalist, currently with CBS New York.

She has over a decade of experience and has worked across every medium – print, online, television and radio.

Katherine began her career at the Herald Sun newspaper (News Corp), where she specialised in sports reporting (winning an AFL Media award in 2008), before moving to breaking news, including crime and court reporting. During this time, she covered some of Victoria’s most notorious criminal affairs, including the death and funeral of underworld figure Carl Williams.

She has also worked for Seven West Media (7 News, 7 Sport), 3AW Radio, the Nine Network's Today show, and Network Ten, and has been a regular international correspondent for multiple global outlets.

Katherine has been writing fiction from a young age, and she studied literature and journalism at university. Her debut novel is inspired by the many criminal trials she has covered.

Click 'Notify Me' to get an email alert when this item becomes available

Reviews

4.0

Based on 2 reviews

5 Star
(1)
4 Star
(0)
3 Star
(1)
2 Star
(0)
1 Star
(0)

2 Reviews

I picked this up from Angus Robertson just before Melbourne went into the second lockdown and it's given me several nights of wonderful escapism!
It's a really well done police procedural set around all the major Melbourne landmarks. I'd heard great reviews and the bookseller recommended it.
Wish there was more!

Contains Spoilers No
Report Abuse

3.5★s
Sticks and Stones is the first novel by Australian journalist and author, Katherine Firkin. After a year in the Missing Persons Unit (possibly slated for downsizing), Detective Senior Constable Emmet Corban is feeling a little jaded. “One thing he knew now with certainty was that when someone went missing, it was nearly always because they simply didn’t want to be found”.

But Natale Gibson’s disappearance is different: it is uncharacteristic for this mother, with her close family ties, to leave her two young children. As for his other case, Emmet is fairly certain that nomadically-inclined Rosemary Norman is just taking a break from her over-protective brother. Until a mutilated body turns up.

Emmet is surprised to be handed the lead in this case that he assumed would transfer to Homicide, and determined to use this chance to impress his superiors. He is expected to handle his MisPers cases simultaneously so is relieved to be assigned some experienced homicide detectives.

His most eager junior staff member is a little frustrated at his mundane assigned task and takes some initiative that could jeopardise their one solid lead. Then things really hot up when another body is found near the site of the first with a similar MO. Do they have a serial killer on their hands?

It’s quickly clear that Firkin’s protagonist is a competent detective, although his Homicide colleagues have him second-guessing his decisions. From the chilling prologue through to the exciting climax, Firkin keeps the reader guessing: even the most astute reader will have trouble separating the perpetrator from the many red herrings.

The story is given from multiple perspectives, and interspersed with account of the present-day events is a narrative that follows the fates of a young boy put into the welfare system when found at the side of his deceased, drug-addicted mother. Readers familiar with Melbourne will especially enjoy the many mentions of locales in which the story plays out.

Unfortunately, parts are a little clunky: where the reader should be wholly absorbed in characters and incidents, the author’s fingerprints are sometimes apparent. And among quite a few stereotypes, none of the characters really appeals or stands out.

There is also a lack of strong female characters: many of the women are portrayed as having a naivete and lack of judgement that would be unusual for 21st Century city dwellers, especially in this “me too” era. While there’s room for improvement, this is a good first effort.
This unbiased review is from an e-book copy provided by The Pigeonhole and Penguin Random House

Contains Spoilers No
Report Abuse