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"I might not know much about art," says Whelan, summarizing his number one job skill, "but I've been a member of the Labor Party long enough to recognize the aroma of a rodent when it wafts my way." Whelan's knack for the apt turn of phrase adds a special charm to this book. When he meets a wealthy patron of the arts, he notes that the man resembles "a cross between Aristotle Onassis and a walnut."
In some thrillers, the hero is simply put in harm's way. In this one, Shane Maloney goes the extra mile and puts the hero in a ridiculous situation, then puts him in harm's way. At one point, our beleaguered hero is trapped in a warehouse full of puppets and the only method of escape he sees is to don an enormous octopus costume with stilts and sidle towards a high window. Of course, he falls, hurts his ear, and has to endure Van Gogh jokes for the rest of the adventure. "The trick with stilts, in case you ever need to know," Murray Whelan advises, "is to stay in motion. Much like a bicycle. Or politics. Stand still and you're stuffed. Keep moving or you take a dive." That's sound advice. This book has wit, an amiable protagonist, and velocity. What's not to like? --Jill Marquis --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Funny politics in Australia,
This review is from: The Brush-Off (Hardcover)
Meet Murray Whelan, gofer and fixer for the newly appointed Minister of Water and Arts. He has no ideas about arts, but then politics is politics, and how difficult can it be? He finds out without delay, when young artist Marcus Taylor is found floating in the moat in front of the National Gallery. Time for damage control. But then things become increasingly weird. The overpriced picture of a shadowy, and also dead, artist named Victor Szabo. Hold it! Is the picture a fake? Who painted the duplicate? How about all those suave self-made millionaires and their sudden interest in art? Mayhem erupts as everybody tries to cover up their nefarious schemes. And Murray in the thick of it, of course. The book is presented as a mystery. But that part does not come off too well with all the fun intervening. Rather, it is a send-up comedy about Australian politics and the doers behind the scenes. If you really want to laugh for a few hours, then read this book.
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Murder and Mayhem Bookclub review,
By
This review is from: Brush Off (Paperback)
The things a ministerial assistant must do. Murray Whelan's exact job title and the details of his expected duties have never been fully explained but they certainly call for a deft kind of versatility in adapting to all possible situations a Labor party man might find himself inserted into. In yet another show of party shuffling, Murray's boss Angelo Agnelli has picked up the Arts portfolio, and Agnelli's need to endear himself to a new brand of people has now become Murray's personal headache. With suitable gothic dramatism, a failed artist has chosen the first day of Agnelli's new reign to off himself in the moat of an arts building, leaving behind a likewise dramatically worded suicide note which of course blames someone else for the necessity of the deed.
Being rather sceptical that anyone could be willing to die for their art these days, and with the thought that making a public comment about the lack of Government funding is rather pointless once you're dead (as in not being there to reap any possible changes or benefits as a result of your stunt), Murray rolls out the rolodex and gives himself a crash course on the fine art of receiving an arts grant. There's a lot of re-appearing names in all of this, and somehow it all comes to Murray being trapped in a closet, listening to someone else's bump'n'grind. Throw in a feared face from Murray's childhood, more than one smarmy arts patron, the usual various little toadies and conniving blood-suckers out to silence any who dares to question their mechanations and there you have it, just another day in the life of the unappreciated, the world of the Labor party underclass. Murray Whelan's second outing takes place a few years after STIFF and uses a similar format in that Murray must juggle the affairs of his office with looking after his young son, lamenting his lack of a romantic life and out-stepping various political minefields along the way. This has less to do with the Party and more to do with the small-town nature of the Melbourne arts community that seems here to be all too quick in offering up a carcass for the culture vultures when the situation is required. This is a tighter work that spends a little less time on Australian larrikism and more on digging out the rather innocuous bad guys that lurk about in the town's business community, with the Arts here being well and truly about money, the ego and shameless elf-promotion. Maloney manages to make Murray Whelan the hero and at the same time a likeable every-man, putting the poor creature in some truly awful situations and not being adverse to bashing him about the head a bit in order to extricate him from them. Maloney's analogies via Whelan's mouth are of the best kind - insightful, funny, wry and, we suspect, spot-on. To acknowledge the gripes that there is little mystery in THE BRUSH OFF, one can only balance that with the fact that the writing is so bitingly good on several platforms that it seems a shame to categorize the read into any particular genre. An Australian can only cringe if these novels are described as social commentaries on our kind (whatever that may mean) and it is impossible for an Aussie not to identify something of themselves in the characters encountered in this novel. Maloney skilfully has a lend of all that we Australians regularly have a whinge about, and displays it all beautifully against a background of multi-cultural Melbourne. Always fast and funny, Melbourne author Shane Maloney hits us between the eyes again with another crafty little adventure, starring one of us, Murray Whelan.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Australian SF Reader,
By Blue Tyson "- Research Finished" (Legion clubhouse) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Brush Off (Paperback)
The dodginess in this novel is in the art world. When an artist of some notoriety is found dead, Murray gets involved. With Agnelli now Minister for Arts he is pretty keen for Murray to clean up this problem, but the bodycount keeps rising.
Murray also gets trapped in a factory with some huge parade float puppets, very amusing.
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