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Tipping Point

Tipping Point 1

A Suicide, A Shooting, A Reckoning..decades in the Making

by Dinuka McKenzie
Paperback
Publication Date: 31/01/2024
5/5 Rating 1 Review

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A suicide. A shooting. And a reckoning, decades in the making. The must-read new Detective Kate Miles novel from 'a born storyteller' (Michael Robotham).

Weeks from Christmas in the sweltering heat of summer, Detective Kate Miles' estranged brother, Luke Grayling, returns home to Esserton to farewell a childhood friend - Ant Reed, dead by suicide. Within days of the funeral, another young man, Marcus Rowntree, is found shot dead in the back paddock of his property.

Almost twenty years ago, Luke, Ant and Marcus were best mates in high school and now two of the three friends are dead. A tragic coincidence? Or is there something more sinister connecting the three men?

When Luke is identified as a person of interest in Marcus's death, Kate once again finds herself in the middle of a media storm, sidelined from the case and battling accusations of conflict of interest. As press attention deepens, and uncomfortable truths about Luke's personal life and past events come to light, Kate is forced to contend between loyalty to the police force, and the bonds of friendship and blood..

Praise for Dinuka McKenzie:

'How lucky are we to have Dinuka McKenzie?' Hayley Scrivenor, author of Dirt Town

'Dinuka McKenzie has talent to burn' Dervla McTiernan, author of The Murder Rule

ISBN:
9781460762431
9781460762431
Category:
Thriller / suspense
Format:
Paperback
Publication Date:
31-01-2024
Language:
English
Publisher:
HarperCollins Publishers Australia
Country of origin:
Australia
Pages:
368
Dimensions (mm):
234x153x27mm
Weight:
0.46kg

Dinuka McKenzie

Dinuka McKenzie is an Australian writer and book addict. Her debut crime fiction novel, The Torrent, won the HarperCollins Australia 2020 Banjo Prize and will be published in February 2022. Her unpublished manuscript Taken was longlisted for the 2020 Richell Prize.

She is represented by Alex Adsett Literary. When not writing, Dinuka works in the environmental sector and volunteers as part of the team behind the Writers Unleashed Festival. She lives in Southern Sydney with her husband, two kids and their pet chicken.

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1 Review

Tipping Point is the third book in the Detective Kate Miles series by prize-winning Australian author, Dinuka McKenzie. While he’s not telling his family that he’s been fired from his financial consultancy position in Sydney, it does mean he can attend the funeral in the Northern Rivers town of Esserton of one of his best friends from school.

Ant Reed’s death was deemed suicide by Queensland Police, but Frank Reed is certain his son would never take his own life and, at the funeral, he implores Luke’s sister, Kate Miles, to look into it. But as a NSW Police Detective Sergeant, she has no authority in Queensland.

Luke’s family is surprised when he hangs around after Ant’s funeral, Kate less so when she has to collect him from the River Arms pub after a drunken altercation with a backpacker that leaves him with a black eye, nor by his antagonism towards their father during a family lunch.

Kate is called out of that lunch to attend the scene of a shooting: Marcus Rowntree, the other of Luke’s best friend from school, lies dead in his backyard. Suicide or misadventure? And then the complications begin to pile on: Luke was apparently the last person to see Marcus alive; Marcus is the son of renowned and influential Australian actor, Eric Harrington; the autopsy deems it murder; Luke is suddenly nowhere to be found.

Kate has a history with Esserton’s new Acting Station Chief, Leo Esposito, but he’s being impartial about her close involvement to persons of interest. Kate voluntarily takes leave, excusing herself from the investigation, perhaps a little chagrined that the source of a year’s irritation, Detective Sergeant Josh Ellis will be coming from Byron Bay to take over the case.

But her father, former Esserton CI Arthur Grayling insists she act to help her brother. Running a parallel private investigation into the murder, though, isn’t going to do her career any good. At least they can get him decent legal representation once he turns up.

Luke hasn’t shared the reason he was fired, but the issue has followed him up to the Northern Rivers, or maybe he has followed it. And there’s something from the trio of friends’ past that’s coming home to roost. Leo Esposito also has a touchy matter from his past that’s going to blow up in Esserton, in a big way.

Once again, McKenzie gives the reader a page-turner filled with topical subjects: date rape; sharing of intimate media clips; domestic violence and coercive control; depression and suicide. this is a tightly plotted tale with twists and turns to keep the reader guessing right up to the final reveal. The body count includes one particularly sad loss for Kate, and there are some tension-filled moments as further deaths are narrowly avoided.

Her characters continue to develop, and it will be interesting to see in which direction Kate goes from here. This is McKenzie’s best so far, and more from this talented Aussie author will be eagerly anticipated.
This unbiased review is from an uncorrected proof copy provided by NetGalley and Harper Collins Australia.

Recommended
Contains Spoilers No
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