Tuesday, 16 December 2025

Deserted

Jane Harper is known for writing gripping crime novels in which information is drip-fed to the reader. Her novels portray different aspects of the Australian landscape - outback towns, sleepy coastal hamlets, dense forests. Best known for her debut, The Dry (2016), the first in a trilogy featuring Federal Police investigator Aaron Falk, her books have been adapted in to feature films and a Netflix series. 

Harper's latest novel is Last One Out (2025) is set in the fictional town of Carralon Ridge, a small town in rural New South Wales that has been hollowed out over time by the Lentzer mining company which has bought up properties to expand operations. The buy outs have caused tension within the town between those who will fight to remain in their homes and those who have 'sold out' and sought to leave the town behind. The dusty main street is full of border up buildings and the pub opens infrequently. Those who stayed live with the distant thrum of the mine and the occasional heavy vehicle rattling past their doors. 

Rowena Crowley moved to the Ridge over twenty years ago, married a local man Griff, and raised two children - Sam and Della. Ro worked in the small medical practice and enjoyed her life. Five years ago, on her son's 21st birthday, he disappeared. Sam's rental car was found near some abandoned buildings along with his footprints. His absence caused the family to disintegrate with Ro and Della moving to Sydney and Griff staying behind, working for the mining company. 

It has been five years since Sam disappeared. Ro has returned to Carralon Ridge for her son's annual memorial service. She also wants answers about what happened to her child. With only a few families remaining, she starts to unravel the events of what happened to her son that day.

Unlike other crime novels, there is no gruesome murder, no police procedural. Last One Out is a novel about loss. The loss of a child, of a home. of a community, of a way of life. The impact of the large mining company looms large over this town, with those who remain in this dusty place grieving for the loss of their friends, family and heritage. 

Last One Out is a slowly paced novel which takes a while to get moving. In parts it felt a bit repetitive, as Ro tried to grab on to her memories of Sam's last day, but I understand what Harper was trying to achieve. I liked the depiction of Ro and her relationship with Griff, irrevocably altered by the loss of their son and her moving away. The only thing I struggled with was trying to get my head around the landscape of the town. I have grown used to the maps Chris Hammer includes in his novels and I wish there had been one here. 

The Last One Out is rather sombre but well worth a read. 

My reviews of other Jane Harper novels are also available on this blog:

Saturday, 13 December 2025

A Question of Belief

Quarterly Essay, the Australian journal about politics and culture, has just hit a major milestone with the publication of QE100 - its 100th issue. Each issue features a single essay (about 20,000-25,000 words in length) written by some of Australia's leading thinkers and writers including David Marr, Don Watson, Laura Tingle, Margaret Simons, George Megalogenis and many more. 

I have been a subscriber for over a decade and, while some topics at first glance seem uninteresting I have always learned something. While I don't always blog about them, some essays have lingered long in my mind and among my favourites are:

I was excited when I heard Sean Kelly was going to be writing QE100 as his book The Game: A Portrait of Scott Morrison (2021), one of the best political books I have read and I enjoy his articles in The Age/SMH. Plus, the subject of QE100 is The Good Fight: What Does Labor Stand For? - a topic worth exploring. 

One would expect the Labor party - that established Medicare and the NDIS - would be working hard on social equity. A huge part of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese narrative is growing up in council housing, having been raised by a single mother on a disability pension. Throughout his 30 years in Parliament he has always championed the working class. Albo's 'father figure' was Tom Uren, who served in the Whitlam and Hawke governments, and was a champion for social justice, civil rights, indigenous land rights and protection of the environment.

Kelly is clearly disappointed in the federal Labor party. They appear to be well positioned for success - a competent team in a majority government, without a viable opposition, and their party is in power in most states - but for whatever reason they seem tentative in their approach to governing. This should be a period for nation-building reform, so what is going on?

Rather than declaring a definitive stance of what it means to be Labor, the party have spent a long time defining themselves as what they are not.  They have positioned themselves in opposition to the Liberal/National Coalition. But the Coalition has lurched further to the right, and as the past few elections have shown, the Coalition appears to no longer have a defining ideology. How does Labor position themselves against something so ill-defined? 

Kelly points to the consensus making that has been a hallmark of Albanese's leadership. While it may seem like unity is a good way to govern, it can result in bad policy - aiming for safe rather than brave. Kelly writes (p17):

'how hard it can be to spot the distinction between cooperation and submission; between solidarity and insipid obedience. One might easily become the other, unnoticed until it is too late; one might even be both at once.' 

Albanese has had moments of political bravery. His efforts to establish a Voice to Parliament for our First Nations people was courageous, but ultimately unwise as there was not bipartisan support. He also backtracked on the Coalition's 'stage three tax cuts' which would have done little to help those struggling most with cost of living. But more often than not, Labor does not pursue policies that you would expect of them - on climate change, LGBTQIA+ discrimination, tax reform - preferring the 'path of least resistance' (p 33). Given Albanese's long-held desire for high speed rail, I figured that would be one of his nation-building projects but it is not on the agenda. It seems that Kelly reckons Jim Chalmers (like Paul Keating before him) may be the braver person on the front bench.

Kelly writes (p36)

'If you want the very best outcome - not simply the one which you can convince most people to support - then conflict is inevitable. You may not win, but that is not the same thing as deciding not to fight.'

I had expected Kelly to dig more into the behind-the-scenes of the modern Labor Party, especially given his past experience working in the Rudd/Gillard office. For example, the weird factions at play in the party room that led to the dumping of competent ministers (like Mark Dreyfus, Ed Husic) and of not making the most of talents like Tanya Plibersek.  

Ultimately, the picture painted of Albanese is one of beige blandness, playing it safe to stay in government as long as possible. You need an effective opposition to have a good government, and as the Coalition cannot decide on where they stand either, that currently seems a low prospect. I like Albo. He is a good bloke and means well. Here's hoping he reads QE100 and gives some thought to articulating a clear direction for our country, one beyond electoral cycles. Now's the chance to do something that makes a positive impact for generations to come.