The fatally over-confident hero of Good Murder returns to
pit his meagre detective skills against military intelligence,
belligerent in-laws, a town full of G.I.s, and a creepy conspiracy to
bring on an Australian sectarian nightmare.
Failed Shakespearean actor and would-be private detective William
Power returns to Melbourne in disgrace after his disastrous brush with
theatre and murder in Maryborough. Bloodied, broken, but somehow
unbowed, he arrives in a town struggling under war rationing and full of
cocky American soldiers, and lands squarely in the bosom of his
childhood home in Carlton — a home now dominated by his sister-in-law,
the odious Darlene. But even Will’s contempt is tempered when, in the
early hours of the morning, Darlene is kidnapped, and Will finds his
mother’s kitchen splattered with blood and scattered with broken
crockery.
Needing to escape the maternal home and the growing police
investigation, Power rents a room in the spacious, Parkville home of
wealthy, charismatic, and obsessively neat Paul Clutterbuck and is
introduced to his strange society of bohemians, black marketeers, and
neanderthal henchmen. Will Power is fascinated but, before he can begin
to enjoy his new home, a savage murder is discovered. Just when modesty
and good sense threaten to intervene, Will realises that only he can
solve the murder and the mystery of his kidnapped sister-in-law, and
save the nation from impending catastrophe.
A Thing of Blood is a brilliant, wry sequel which perfectly recreates the tension and fear of wartime Australia.