The Red Hand: Stories, Reflections and the Last Appearance of Jack Irish
By (Author) Peter Temple
Text Publishing
The Text Publishing Company
1st October 2019
Australia
General
Fiction
Long-listed for H. R. F. Keating Award 2021 (UK)
400
Width 157mm, Height 236mm, Spine 30mm
526g
The unpublished, unfinished and unmissable writings of the unforgettable Peter Temple. Peter Temple started publishing novels late, when he was fifty, but then he got cracking. He wrote nine novels in thirteen years. Along the way he wrote screenplays, stories, dozens of reviews. When Temple died in March 2018 there was an unfinished Jack Irish novel in his drawer. It is included in The Red Hand, and it reveals the master at the peak of his powers. The Red Hand also includes the screenplay of Valentine's Day, an improbably delightful story about an ailing country football club, which in 2007 was adapted for television by the ABC. Also included are his short fiction, his reflections on the Australian idiom, a handful of autobiographical fragments, and a selection of his brilliant book reviews. Peter Temple held crime writing up to the light and, with his poet's ear and eye, made it his own incomparable thing.
Peter Temple is an addiction. Read one book and you will want to read them all. * Val McDermid *
Entertaining [but] a sad reminder of what we have lost. * Canberra Times *
'The Red Hand is the kind of satisfyingly dense book youd want from an author you love, with a variety of formats within its pages for whatever mood youre in. In each piece hell, numerous times on each page there is Temples callsign: rough lives, beauty found in strange places, caustic wit, a one-liner you might note down to look at again later. There will never be another Peter Temple, but for now, theres a whole lot more to love in this book.' * Readings *
[Unfinished Jack Irish novel High Art] is vintage Temple with black humour, crackling dialogue, suspense and achingly beautiful descriptionsI kept turning the page and holding it up to the light, hoping for more words between the lines. I wanted to ring him up and demand an ending. Ultimately, I came to the conclusion that a quarter of a Peter Temple novel is worth more than the whole of many others. -- Michael Robotham * Sydney Morning Herald *
A book that simultaneously provokes joy and sadnessdropping back into the world of [Jack Irish], part-time lawyer, debt collector, gambler and furniture maker is a treat as always.' * Advertiser *
At the beginning of this anthology there sits a perfect literary gem: 100 pages of the fifth and very last Jack Irish novelI spun out the experience as long as I could. * Good Reading *
[Temple] had an honestyand concisionin his literary writings that will be sorely missed. * Herald Sun *
A treasure trove of wit and humour. * Daily Advertiser *
What there is of [unfinished Jack Irish novel High Art] is dazzlinginstantly engaging.' * Australian Book Review *
Temples characters leap from the pages. His strikingly original and witty narrative had me enthralled. * Chronicle *
[Temples stories] are a pleasure to read; energetic, idiosyncratic and big-hearted, like everything he published. * The Times *
Exacting, elegant prose offers rewards for newbies and die-hards alike. * Booklist *
Peter Temple was born in South Africa in 1946, and emigrated to Australia in 1980. He published nine novels, including four books in the Jack Irish series. He won the Ned Kelly Award for Crime Fiction five times, and his widely acclaimed novels were published in over twenty countries. The Broken Shore won the UK's prestigious Duncan Lawrie Dagger for the best crime novel of 2007 and Truth won the 2010 Miles Franklin Literary Award, the first time a crime writer had won an award of this calibre anywhere in the world. The Jack Irish series was adapted for TV with Guy Pearce in the lead role. Peter Temple died on 8 March 2018.