A Twisty Small-Town Mystery: Read an Extract from The Cane by Maryrose Cuskelly

A Twisty Small-Town Mystery: Read an Extract from The Cane by Maryrose Cuskelly

They’re lighting the cane and Janet McClymont has not been found.

A week after she disappeared, her mother Barbara walked into Jensens’ shop and bought every box of matches and all the Bic cigarette lighters on the shelves. She then stood outside striking the head of each and every match against the phosphorus strip, watching it flare before shaking out the flame and dropping the spent stick on the road. Then she drove down to the inlet and threw the lighters into the water.

No one knew what the hell she was playing at. Then it dawned on me. With the crush about to start, and all of us believing that her daughter’s body must be lying in the cane, some harebrained notion had got hold of her. She thought she could stave off the lighting of the cane fires until Janet’s body was found. You see, in Barbara’s mind, on top of everything else that probably happened to her daughter, burning her body would be yet another desecration. But nothing is going to stop the sugar crush. It’s already been delayed. We’re almost at the end of June, what with all the searching and the upset.I mean, I understand Barbara’s need to hope that after all this time someone will find Janet’s body lying unblemished in the cane fields near where she found her daughter’s bag. Or maybe even that the girl herself is alive. You have to remember, apart from the fact that she’s been missing for so long, there’s evidence that Janet’s dead. But hundreds of people combed through those drills from Quala to Kaliope and back again for weeks looking for her and found nothing. That hasn’t stopped Barbara, though. She still goes out every morning by herself, walking through the cane fields belonging to the Creadies and the Tranters, looking for her daughter’s remains. She comes back hours later, covered in dust and dirt…

Continue reading the extract here…

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31 January 2022

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    31 January 2022

    Gripping Rural Crime: Read Our Review of The Cane by Maryrose Cuskelly

      Publisher details

      The Cane
      Author
      Maryrose Cuskelly
      Publisher
      Allen & Unwin
      Genre
      Fiction
      Released
      01 February, 2022
      ISBN
      9781760879853

      Synopsis

      Quala, a North Queensland sugar town, the 1970s.

      Barbara McClymont walks the cane fields searching for Janet, her sixteen-year-old daughter, who has been missing for weeks. The police have no leads. The people of Quala are divided by dread and distrust. But the sugar crush is underway and the cane must be burned.

      Meanwhile, children dream of a malevolent presence, a schoolteacher yearns to escape, and history keeps returning to remind Quala that the past is always present.

      As the smoke rises and tensions come to a head, the dark heart of Quala will be revealed, affecting the lives of all those who dwell beyond the cane.

      The Cane is an evocative and atmospheric thriller, and announces an exciting new voice in Australian crime writing.

      Maryrose Cuskelly
      About the author

      Maryrose Cuskelly

      Maryrose Cuskelly is a writer of fiction and non-fiction. She has lived in Melbourne for many years, but she was born in Queensland, where, in the early 1970s, there were several high-profile child abductions and murders. The disappearance of Mackay schoolgirl Marilyn Wallman, in particular, made a lasting impression on her. In 2016, Maryrose was awarded the New England Thunderbolt Prize for Crime Writing (non-fiction) for her essay 'Well Before Dark' about Marilyn's disappearance and the way it percolated through her own childhood and later life. The Cane returns to some of the themes and preoccupations of that essay. In 2019, Maryrose's book Wedderburn: A true tale of blood and dust (Allen & Unwin, 2018) was longlisted for Best Debut and Best True Crime in the 2019 Davitt Awards. She is also the author of Original Skin: Exploring the marvels of the human hide (Scribe, 2010) and The End of Charity: Time for social enterprise (with Nic Frances, Allen & Unwin, 2008), which was the winner of the Iremonger Award.

      Books by Maryrose Cuskelly

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