The Broken Shore

Peter Temple

Format
Audio
Publisher
Blackstone Audiobooks
Country
United States
Published
1 August 2007
ISBN
9781433201912

The Broken Shore

Peter Temple

Shaken by a scrape with death, Detective Joe Cashin has been posted away from the big-city homicide squad to the quiet town on the South Australian coast where he grew up. Carrying physical scars and not a little guilt, he spends his time playing the country cop, walking his dogs, and thinking about how it all was before. But when a prominent local millionaire is attacked and left for dead in his own home, Cashin is thrust into what becomes a murder investigation. The evidence points to three boys from the nearby aboriginal community–everyone seems to want to blame them. Cashin is unconvinced and soon begins to see the outlines of something far more terrible than a burglary gone wrong. Winner of the Ned Kelly Award, Australia’s major prize for crime fiction, The Broken Shore is a transfixing novel about a place, a family, politics, and power and the need to live decently in a world where so much is rotten. GLOSSARY OF AUSTRALIAN TERMS Abo: Abbreviation of Aboriginal. The usage is derogatory except in Aboriginal English. Aggro: Aggression or aggressive. (Just takes two or three drinks, then he gets aggro. ) Ambo: An ambulance worker. (The following sentence is possible: Mate the last thing I need is an aggro Abo ambo.) Bickie: A cookie. Abbreviation of biscuit. Bloodhouse: A hotel known for its fights. Blow-in: A term of scorn for a newcomer, particularly one who voices an opinion about local affairs or tries to change anything. (Bloody blow-in, what does he know about this town?) Bludger: Once, a man living off a prostitute’s earnings; now applied to anyone who shirks work, duty, or obligation. A dole bludger is someone who would rather live on unemployment benefits than take a job. Bluey: A workman’s hard-wearing cotton jacket. It can also be a blanket, a cattle dog, or a red-haired person. Boong: A derogatory term for an Aboriginal person used by non-Aboriginals. Brickie: Bricklayer. Buckley’s: To have Buckley’s chance or Buckley’s hope is to have very little or no prospect of success. The term probably derives from William Buckley, a convict who escaped and lived with an Aboriginal community. Bundy: Bundaberg rum, named for the Queensland sugar town. It is often drunk with Coca-Cola (Bundy and Coke). Burg: Burglary. Chook: Chicken. It can also mean an older woman or a silly person. Cleanskin: Once a term for unbranded animals, it now denotes someone with an unblemished record or an unskilled person or a wine sold without a brand name. Cop it: To take the blame or accept responsibility. To cop it sweet is to take misfortune or blame in a resigned way. Copshop: Police station. Corrie iron: Corrugated galvanized iron sheet. Dill: A stupid, silly or incompetent person. Dob: To inform on someone, to blame or implicate him or her. Someone who dobs is a dobbler. Fibro: Fibro-cement building material used for cheap housing, garages or shacks. Also used for a house made of fibro-cement. (Might live in a mansion now; six months ago, it was a fibro.) Flannelshirt: A person from the country or the poorer outer suburbs who wears cheap cotton shirts, usually checked. Footy: Australian rules football, the world’s finest ball game, and the ball used. (Let’s have a kick of the footy.) On my hammer: Putting pressure on me. Hoon: Once, a procurer of prostitutes, but now any badly behaved person, usually a young male. Irresponsible young drivers are hoons who go for a hoon in their cars. Mark Twain uses the expression as drunk as hoons in Sketches Old and New, where it presumably derives from Huns. Hume: The Hume Highway. It runs either from Sydney to Melbourne, or from Melbourne to Sydney. KALOF: Police acronym for Keep A Lookout For. Load: To frame someone with a crime. (They loaded him up with it, reckoned he was overdue.) Lucky dip: Relying on chance or fortune. From the drawing of a lucky number or prize from a barrel. Milk stout: A dark beer, sometimes claimed to have medicinal properties. Offsider: A sidekick, a junior helper, from a bullock-driver’s assistant, who walked on the offside of the wagon. Panelbeater: Bodyshop worker. Perp: The vertical mortar between bricks. Abbreviation of perpendicular. Pillowbiter: Male homosexual. Pommy: Someone from England. The English are often known as Pommy bastards. This has been known to be said affectionately. The term derives from pomegranate as rhyming slang for immigrant. Prac: Practice experience session, as in a teaching prac. Punter: A gambler, one who takes a punt, but also used to mean a customer or client. (What this art gallery needs is more punters coming through the door.) Quickpick: A lottery ticket that spares the buyer the task of choosing numbers by randomly allocating them. Anything chosen without much thought or care. Also a term for someone, not necessarily a prostitute, picked up for sex. Rec reserve: A public recreation area, often with a football or cricket field. Rego: Vehicle registration letters and numbers. Pronounced with a soft g, as in Reginald. Rorters and shicers: An expression joining two unlovely types: rorters are exploiters and manipulators–the verb is to ror–and shicers (shysters) are cheats and swindlers. For some reason, political rorts are alleged almost daily in Australia. RSL: The Returned and Services League looks after the interests of those who have served in the Australian armed forces. An RSL clubhouse is known as the RSL. Salvo: A member of the Salvation Army. Sangers: Sandwiches. Someone who fancied a chicken sausage sandwich could ask for a chook snag sanger. Servo: Gas station. Abbreviation of service station. SOG: Special Operations Group, an elite Victoria Police detachment used for dangerous operations. Known in the force as Sons of God or Soggies, as in: The dill says he’s got dynamite. Job for the Soggies here, mate. Spaggy bol: Spaghetti bolognese. Also called spag bol. Italian immigrants to Australia were once called spags. Stickybeak: An inquisitive person. Also the act of snooping. (Have a stickybeak around there, see what you can find.) Suckhole: A vulgar term for one who curries favor with others, an obsequious person. A future leader of the Australian Labor Party once described those in the Liberal Party who looked to America for leadership as a conga line of suckholes. Super: Abbreviation of superannuation, a pension scheme. Swaggie: An itinerant, a person of no fixed address who carries all his belongings in a swag. (A celebrated note passed to a speaker in the Australian federal Parliament advising him to change the subject read: Pull out, digger, the dogs are pissing on your swag.) A distinction was formerly made between swaggies and travelers, the latter being people looking for work. The expression Nice day for traveling means: You’re fired. Tabbing: Taking drugs in tablet form. Titsoff: Very cold, abbreviation of Cold enough to freeze your tits off. Trackie: Tracksuit. Tucker: Food of any kind. Ute: Pickup truck, an abbreviation of utility vehicle. An admired use is beaut ute. WA: The state of Western Australia. Work Experience: The Australian practice of high school students doing work, usually unpaid, to gain experience.

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