Q&A: Matthew Spencer, Author of Broke Road

Q&A: Matthew Spencer, Author of Broke Road

In Broke Road, bestselling author Matthew Spencer delivers another gripping crime thriller featuring Detective Rose Riley. From a haunting opening phone call to the richly layered investigation that follows, Spencer draws on forensic insight, deep procedural research, and a visceral sense of place to craft a story pulsing with tension. In this Q&A, he shares the real-life inspiration behind the chilling case, his evolving connection to Riley, and the surprising turns the novel took along the way.

Broke Road opens with a chilling phone call—what inspired this case, and how did the story take shape from there?

The case stems from a discussion I had with a forensic pathologist. He explained how he would go about murdering someone in a way that would create confusion or consternation for a forensic pathologist such as himself at autopsy. In other words, he was telling me how he would go about committing an undetectable murder. That became the foundational idea of Broke Road, and the phone call at the beginning of the novel is the Homicide cop, Riley, being woken in her bed and sent out to a scene in the lower Hunter Valley where a woman has been found dead in her home. I wanted to drop the reader straight into it: Riley travels to the scene and we go with her. The story unfolds from there.

Detective Rose Riley is a standout character. What drew you to her voice, and how has she evolved since Black River?

Riley began as one of three main characters in the early drafts of my first novel, Black River, but as the manuscript developed, she began to emerge from the shadow of her boss—Homicide Chief Inspector O’Neil—and become the dominant voice of the book (alongside the journalist, Bowman). I think that’s what drew me to Riley: she’s a foil to Bowman, almost an antidote to the journalist. With Broke Road, the process continued, and Riley is the heart of the book: the opening four chapters are purely from her perspective. And the murder scene is on the edge of the district where Riley grew up, so she’s approaching her childhood home. Riley and her family left the region when she was eleven, so she’s not running into family or close friends, but nonetheless there’s a lot of memories for her here.

The Hunter Valley setting feels so alive—both its beauty and its darker corners. Why did you choose this region for the book?

It’s geology, for a start. Triassic cliffs, a Permian swamp. I’m fascinated by that stuff: there’s a line in Black River about how Sydney sits on sandstone washed down from Broken Hill a quarter of a billion years ago. The Hunter’s industries come from its geology—coal and wine. I was interested in how they don’t come together, how the coalmining town of Cessnock stands apart from the wine industry, how it refuses to become any sort of centre for wine tourism. From there, I had communities rubbing each other up the wrong way, creating friction.

You’ve been praised for your police procedural detail. What kind of research do you do to get it so right?

I had professionals who I interviewed for Black River, and they were willing to talk to me again for Broke Road. That was invaluable, and they were all very generous with their expertise and their time. I talked with a Homicide detective, a forensic investigator, and the forensic pathologist I mentioned earlier. There were others I spoke with, but those three were my primary sources. And it was ongoing, through the book. If I got stuck, or felt I needed a jolt of reality, I’d go back to them with whatever it was that was the problem. As I say, they were very generous with their time! So there is a seam of real procedure in the book. I find I like to start with that and then expand. As I push out into fiction, literally making it up, I just try to keep it convincing. It’s not my job to be factual, it’s my job to bring the reader along for the ride. My editors are critical here too, as one of them is even married to a cop. We really work at verisimilitude—to remove anything that might cause a reader to start doubting our credibility. That comes down to the smallest details. If a reader starts doubting the small stuff, it won’t be long before they’ll put the book down.

Without giving too much away—what surprised you most while writing Broke Road?

I feel there’s a greater richness to this book, compared with Black River. I don’t know if it’s better, but I feel there’s more meat on the bones—in character, in place, in plot. That’s a result of time—it took three years to write. That’s a lot of redrafting, and a lot of collaboration—I had a lot of feedback and support from my publishers and early readers, in particular my structural editor Kate Goldsworthy. The result of all that it is I think ‘Wow, look where things ended up from where we started!’ And the other surprise, and this heads to spoiler territory so I’ll shut up, except to say that I write by the seat of my pants, there’s no whiteboard or even an outline of what’s happening or where things might be heading, and the value in that is you can change course—you can end up with this character doing something, when all along you thought it would be someone else …

Broke Road is available in bookstores now.

Buy a copy of Broke Road here.

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        Publisher details

        Broke Road
        Author
        Matthew Spencer
        Publisher
        Allen & Unwin
        Released
        01 July, 2025
        ISBN
        9781761069208

        Synopsis

        A late-night phone call is never good news for Homicide Detective Sergeant Rose Riley. This time she's being sent up to the Hunter Valley, where a woman has been found dead in her home.

        Rose grew up further along the valley. She knows that for every vineyard and golf course resort visited by tourists to the 'wine country', there are as many dilapidated fibro houses and drug dens, in the shadow of one of the state's largest prisons.

        A media hound points the finger at the husband, angering Rose, but capturing the attention of journalist turned true crime author Adam Bowman. His book on the 'Blue Moon Killer' made him famous but the case nearly cost Rose her life, and she's not sure how she feels about seeing him again.

        Suspects abound, from the grieving husband to sinister business interests and suspicious locals. But when new evidence connects the crime to an old case, Rose realises they have no time to lose. The murderer is ready to strike again.

        Matthew Spencer
        About the author

        Matthew Spencer

        Matthew Spencer was a journalist at The Australian for twenty years, with long stints running the Foreign News desk and as Opinion Editor. He has written for newspapers and magazines in Uganda and Kenya and been published in The Australian Financial Review and The Sydney Morning Herald. He was born in Parramatta. The son of teachers, he lived with his sister Kate on the 320-acre campus of a boys' boarding school. Long summers on the largely deserted property while exploring the remnant bush with its tributary of the Parramatta River inspired this book. Black River is to be published by Allen and Unwin in June 2022.

        Books by Matthew Spencer

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        1. YongCoop22 says:

          Matthew Spencer’s background in journalism clearly shaped his storytelling voice. Growing up on the boarding school grounds sounds like it gave him a unique perspective and setting to draw from https://wscasino-au.com/games/. It’s exciting that Black River brings those influences together in his debut novel.