Outback by Patricia Wolf
Two German backpackers go missing in the hot, dry outback on their way to a job. They were last seen in the hotel in the village of Caloodie, where DS Lucas Walker is looking after his dying grandmother. Walker is tasked with unofficially looking into the case by the Federal Police. The local police believe that the backpackers have just moved on from the outback to the coast and that they will be in touch. Barbara a detective from Berlin, is certain something has happened to her sister as she was very regular with contacting her family. She travels to Caloodie to see what she can find. Walker and Barbara then bring their unique skills to an investigation that brings to light drugs trade and a serial killer. Will they be able to find the backpackers in time to save them?
Wolf’s descriptions of the outback bring it vividly to life. The heat, the dust, the danger of cars breaking down in isolated spots, the necessity to carry water and provisions and means of communication are all laid out as the young backpackers set off on a lonely road in an old car. Barbara, coming from the cold of Berlin, finds the heat overwhelming, but is still determined to find her sister and she is persistent in her researching of missing people who have disappeared in outback Queensland. The lives of the townspeople of Caloodie and the outlying areas and the effect of drought on them also provides a background to the story as does the machinations of drug dealers.
Fans of police procedurals and Australian noir will find Outback very difficult to put down. Wolf maintains the suspense as Lucas and Barbara follow different clues and I completed the book in a couple of sittings, so gripping was the tension around the missing backpackers. At the conclusion there are some threads left to complete, which are likely to appear in the second in the DS Walker series, Paradise, which I look forward to reading.
Themes: Thriller, Mystery, Detectives.
Pat Pledger