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  Whipping Boy (1992)
Posted by: Simon - 12-11-2025, 03:03 PM - Replies (1)

   


An inquiry into crimes against children uncovers corruption throughout society and danger to those who would combat it. When high-flying Sydney lawyer Cass Meredith is appointed head of a state inquiry into a child pornography racket, she sees it as an opportunity to clean up the city. But she doesn’t count on ex-Vice Squad detective John Carrigan — with his reputation for taking bribes and liking underage girls — being made her second-in-command. At the same time, Loveday Larsen, a local prostitute, is hinting she has a video which could unmask some of the country’s most powerful men as pederasts. And suddenly it’s not clear whether it’s her eight-year-old son, Mozzie, or her career, that Cass is trying to protect when she plans to send him away to boarding school. It seems that the closer Cass gets to discovering the identity of the men who torture children, the closer she gets to the truth about herself, as she, Carrigan and her young son are inexorably drawn towards the core of corruption. ‘A magnificent novel with crime at its core’ Sydney Morning Herald ‘One of our best storytellers.’ Sunday Age

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  Gabrielle - Fortress (1980)
Posted by: Simon - 12-11-2025, 02:57 PM - Replies (1)

   


A routine day for young Miss Sally Jones, teacher at remote Sunny Flat bush school, suddenly explodes into terrifying violence. Masked gunmen appear at the windows - Father Christmas, Daffy Duck and others, surround and seize the young teacher and her dozen stunned charges. Forced at gunpoint into a windowless van and driven for hours through the darkening bush, Sally, whose biggest worry up till now has been a possible, unwanted pregnancy, does her best to remain calm and comfort the children.
But words overheard from the cabin of the van reveal the worst: if the huge ransom isn't delivered swiftly, she and her charges are doomed.
Sally and the petrified kids are dumped in a disused mine. Despairing at first, then drawing on the resolve and resourcefulness of country kids and a determined woman, they manage to escape. Recaptured in a scene which reveals the full extent of the kidnappers' evil sadism, Sally realises that they must escape again - or die.
Finally, with the sadistic kidnappers closing in and nowhere to run, Sally and the children make their stand. Can Sally and her young warriors access the necessary skills and savagery to fight their would-be murderers?
Likened by several critics to William Golding's Lord of the Flies, and based on a true event in Faraday, Australia, Gabrielle Lord, dubbed Australia's 'Queen of Crime' presents Fortress to a new generation.
'...effective, harrowing, intense Australian crime fiction.' Sydney Morning Herald.

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  Felice - The Lure (1979)
Posted by: Simon - 12-11-2025, 02:54 PM - Replies (1)

   


Noel Cummings’s life is about to change irrevocably. After witnessing a brutal murder, Noel is recruited to assist the police by acting as the lure for a killer who has been targeting gay men. Undercover, Noel moves deeper and deeper into the dark side of Manhattan's gay life that stirs his own secret desires—until he forgets he is only playing a role.

In 1979, Felice Picano rocketed to fame with the publication of this shocking, controversial thriller. Riveting and candid in its depiction of the gay sexual subculture of the era, and praised by Stephen King as "Explosive...Felice Picano is one hell of a writer," 

Felice Picano is the author of 18 books, including the international best-sellers The Book of Lies and Like People in History as well as the acclaimed literary memoirs Ambidextrous, Men Who Loved Me, and A House on the Ocean, A House on the Bay. He has been nominated for several Lambda Literary Awards and is a recipient of the Ferro-Grumley award for fiction. Formerly a longtime New Yorker, he currently resides in Los Angeles.

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  The Wars of the Rowzies (2000)
Posted by: Simon - 12-11-2025, 02:51 PM - Replies (1)

       



No Goodreads entry, which shouldn't come as a surprise, although you probably don't need one if you know anything about this author's other works. To be fair though, while it's pretty standard fare in terms of what boys allegedly do when they're being boys, he does add a couple of activities nor often encountered in books of this type.

Grateful thanks to Edmund Marlowe, from whose website this was obtained.

The PDF icontained a number of errors of punctuation (especially apostrophes, which are a nightmare), continuity, and consistency. I can't promise to have eliminated all of these in the ebook, so please try to forgive me for any that remain.

doncarlos, of blessed memory, would certainly have described this as a one-handed book. 

Quote: The Woodpeckers Scout patrol, universally known as the Peckers (geddit?), go camping for a few days on land belonging to the parents of Algy, who in their absence has invited two friends down for a few days. Sparks fly when Algy discovers these intruders, who are there by permission of Farmer Gates, the tenant of the land, leading to the Wars of the title.

Needless to say, much pairing-off takes place among the fighting (or should that be the other way round?), and new friendships are forged. Lessons are learnt that were never available when I was a Scout, but perhaps I was unlucky.

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  Next Door Lived A Girl (2005)
Posted by: Simon - 12-11-2025, 02:48 PM - Replies (1)

   


Winner of the Low Fidelity press inaugural Novella Award, Next Door Lived a Girl is set in Wedersen, a working-class town in post-World War II Germany. It explores the dark transformation of young boys into young men. The town's veneer of peaceful industry barely conceals the ugly secrets that lie beneath. Moritz and his friends make a dangerous discovery that pulls them into a war with a rival gang, into the ruthless and cunning world of blackmail and consequence, and, ultimately, into a cascading series of events that will change the nature of their friendship, and their lives, forever. Written with an uncommon starkness and poetry, Next Door Lived a Girl is destined to find its place in the canon of great novellas alongside the likes of Harrison, Hemingway, and Roth. 

Quote:If you thought Kiesbye's Your House Is on Fire, Your Children All Gone was dark, well, let's just say THAT one is a rom-com compared to this book. In this one, his first novel, Kiesbye lets rip with a bloody, incest-soaked wallow through the mire.


What a way to grow up!

There is preteen sex, beatings, adults flirting and going nudge-nudge, young boys discovering someone's deepest, darkest secret and then doing a completely WRONG thing as a result, someone suffers a horrific beating and exacts an unbelievably violent revenge. And don't forget the incest!

The worst thing that happened to me growing up was finding really big spiders in my sandbox.

As you might have guessed, this is not the feel-good novel of this or any other year. I cringed and flinched and had to reread entire paragraphs because I couldn't quite believe what I'd just seen. This was a completely absorbing read and a great way to spend a dreary, rainy afternoon...but I wouldn't recommend it for most folks.

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