The Ottoman Motel

Christopher Currie

The Ottoman Motel
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Text Publishing Co
Country
Australia
Published
2 May 2011
Pages
320
ISBN
9781921758164

The Ottoman Motel

Christopher Currie

Welcome to Reception…

Simon and his parents arrive in the small town of Reception and check in to the Ottoman Motel. Then, while Simon is asleep, his parents disappear.

Are they lost? Has something terrible happened to them? Have they simply driven away and left him?

All Simon knows is that he is alone in a strange town. And, as a desultory police investigation begins, he realises he is unsure who he can trust.

The local police constable is kind; a B&B owner gives Simon a place to stay. The citizens of Reception have taken him in - but why does it seem as if no one is trying to find his parents?

The Ottoman Motel is not just an intriguing character-based mystery, but a moving and nuanced study of childhood fear and loss. With this assured and emotionally sophisticated debut, Christopher Currie proves himself to be one of the brightest young novelists in Australia.

Review

When a boy’s parents go missing in a small hick-town on the isolated coast of NSW while visiting his estranged grandmother, you might assume that this is a deep psychological tale of impending doom. Instead, whatfollows is a finely plotted and well-paced mystery perfect for teens.

Eleven-year-old Simon wakes at the motel to find his parents gone. Immediately he is swept up in the claustrophobic kindness of a rural community and thrust into the care of local Samaritan Ned Gale, who is also housing Simon’s sick grandmother Iris. Alongside Ned are local policewoman Madaline and a cavalcade of burly fisherman and publicans, all willing to help with the search. Add Ned’s children and the mysterious orphan boy, Pony, into the mix and we can’t help but be suspicious of each character’s intentions, forgetting about the missing couple as other stories and secrets leak out. How these disparate plot strands are controlled and deftlytied proves to be Currie’s strong point. In fact, they become the most interesting part of the book in a kind of adventure-thriller sense. Because what soon becomes apparent is a Blyton-like detective bent, where the children outwit the adults. But the book strives to be more than that.Lurking below the surface are powerful motifs of abandonment and loneliness, most clearly drawn in the disappearance of Ned’s wife two years before.

This is reminiscent of Chloe Hooper’s A Child’s Book of True Crime, and perhaps O’Brien’s In the Lake of the Woods, but the tension in Currie’s first book never gets close to the fear and horror we see there. Regardless, it is an admirable debut from a writer who is already well-known for his short fiction.

Luke May is assistant manager of Readings St Kilda.

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