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Kittyhawk Down (Inspector Challis Mysteries) [Hardcover]

Garry Disher


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Book Description

July 2005 Inspector Challis Mysteries
“A police procedural . . . featuring a squad of interestingly flawed homicide cops … working multiple cases that feature multiple puzzles and a pool of incisively well-drawn murder suspects. . . . First rate.”—The New York Times Book Review

“Gripping. . . . As the story neatly advances from the viewpoints of characters both major and minor, Disher artfully employs misdirection. . . . Fans of [Peter Robinson or Ian Rankin] will find much to like in this dark whodunit.”—Publishers Weekly

“Procedural fans looking for something a little different will devour this one…. Enough dark overtones to elevate the series into the Ian Rankin league.”—ALA Booklist

The once-peaceful beach resort of Bushrangers Bay, not far from Melbourne, is the site of multiple crimes that must be investigated by Homicide Squad Inspector Hal Challis of the Mornington Peninsula Police Force and his staff. A toddler is missing; an unidentified corpse has been fished from the sea; cars are being stolen and torched; letter boxes are being burned. And then one of Challis’s own friends, Kitty Casement, who runs an aerial photography service and flies a Kittyhawk, is murdered. Figuring out the connections and identifying the criminals absorbs all the energy and intelligence of this cast of sympathetic but complicated policemen and women.


From the Trade Paperback edition.

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.3 out of 5 stars  9 reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Great story--however, Kindle formatting is horrible for this series 23 July 2012
By Cheryl A. Reynolds - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Kindle Edition
I checked this book out of my local library via the Kindle, same as the first in this series, and I didn't really have any issue with the storyline itself--except that it is perhaps rather "busy" as it follows several of the police personnel in the station and switches points of view frequently. However, I very much enjoy the atmosphere and the diverse and interesting characters.

My issues with this and the first book are the horrible formatting for Kindle. The spacing is way off, with mostly double spacing, sometimes random bigger spaces and single sentences looking like paragraphs, and other times having paragraphs run together, switching points of view with no space at all, just one big run-on glob of prose. Often you have to stop to think and realize that the story is about someone else now, not the person who's been the center of attention for the last five pages. There are hyphens in the middle of longer words in the middle of sentences (on the Kindle) that I assume are leftover from the print version where a word didn't fit on a line and was carried onto the next. I also found a few outright spelling errors or use of the wrong form of a word both in this and the first book in the series. This is extremely distracting at least to me, pulling me out of the story time and again. If I had actually purchased this book rather than borrowing from the library, I would have been complaining very loudly and asking for a refund. I don't know whose job it is to handle the formatting from print to Kindle, but whoever it is, they fell down on the job badly. It's too bad, because as much as I enjoy the actual story in the books, I think it will be quite some time before I read the next unless I can find it in print.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A Brief Review of Kittyhawk Down 7 Sep 2008
By D. Fleagle - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Garry Disher has another winner with Kittyhawk Down. Protagonist, Hal Challis, and his team of investigators are realistically portrayed in their fears and cognitive skills on the job. Disher books contain a great deal of "noir" with a glimmer of hope for humankind that keeps avid mystery readers turning pages to find that grain of good. Nice descriptive text for those of us who haven't been to Australia.
5 of 7 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Australian procedural is dark and emotionally charged 10 Oct 2005
By Lynn Harnett - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Disher's thoughtful, emotionally charged police procedurals, set in a bucolic coastal area of Australia, feature Inspector Hal Challis, a lonely loner, beset by pathetic calls from his ex-wife, who's imprisoned for the attempted murder of Hal himself.

Hal's relationship with journalist Tessa Kane suffers a bit from his wife's suicide threats and then a bit more with Hal's interest in a fellow small-plane buff, a woman who takes aerial photographs and suddenly needs his help when she's inexplicably attacked.

Meanwhile, readers of Disher's first Challis book, "The Dragon Man," will remember his team. Ellen Destry nabs a rapist with satisfaction, but drags her feet going home to her nagging husband; Scobie Sutton bores everyone silly with the joys of fatherhood, but his daughter has head lice again; young Pam Murphy can't seem to curb her spending or her ambition and boorish John Tankard lusts after her while despising her zeal for work.

And the Meddler, a local busybody and inveterate letter writer, who has just discovered his hurtful nickname, decides to take his meddling a step further. Shifting viewpoints keep us a couple steps ahead of the cops as the murders pile up, but with the deft use of twists and red herrings Disher keeps his mysteries until the page-turning conclusion.

Character drives these absorbing, darkish procedurals from an award-winning author whose success in Australia deserves to be echoed here.
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