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The BONE IS POINTED von Arthur W. Upfield
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The BONE IS POINTED (Original 1938; 1938. Auflage)

von Arthur W. Upfield

Reihen: Bony (6)

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326779,826 (3.77)42
Jack Anderson was a big man with a foul temper, a sadist and a drunk. Five months after his horse appeared riderless, no trace of the man has surfaced and no one seems to care. But Bony is determined to follow the cold trail and smoke out some answers.
Mitglied:jotoyo
Titel:The BONE IS POINTED
Autoren:Arthur W. Upfield
Info:Scribner (1998), Edition: 1st Scribner Paperback Fiction ed, Paperback, 304 pages
Sammlungen:Deine Bibliothek
Bewertung:****1/2
Tags:Mystery, VR, e-book

Werk-Informationen

The Bone Is Pointed von Arthur William Upfield (1938)

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Some elements are still familiar: Bony once again visits a far-flung locale (this one in Queensland) to investigate an old crime (the disappearance of a jackeroo named Anderson). He doesn't work undercover this time, though, and his open investigation creates ripples throughout the people on Karwir Station and the neighboring Meena Station. Not everyone wants Anderson's disappearance to be solved, it seems ...

It was refreshing to find that Bony's educated charm, while it had its usual effect of wiping away racist thoughts from most of the people he meets, met with resistance this time around.

She ought, she was sure, to despise him for his birth, to regard him as she had always regarded half-castes, as unfortunate people, but, well, not quite nice. And she was angry with herself, and angry with him that his personality made it impossible for her to despise him.

In past books part of Bony's genius has been his ability to understand the blacks he encounters in a way that his white colleagues don't, here that understanding is used against him in ways that put his life in peril. ("Pointing the bone" is a sort of curse that aboriginals use against their perceived enemies, which generally results in the illness and eventual death of the target.)

In fact, it's the deeper exploration of the aboriginal spiritual practices, which include telepathic communication and the ability to inflict injury through incantations and from a distance, that captured my imagination most in [The Bone Is Pointed]. It was a fascinating look into a culture wholly unfamiliar to me. But if your tolerance for mysticism is low, you may find it difficult to suspend your disbelief enough to fully immerse yourself in the the story. Which would be a shame, because it's a first-rate mystery. And as usual, Upfield's prose rises above the genre standard, as when he describes the beginning of the rabbit migration that forms the backdrop for the novel's climax:

Natural caution and fear were in a flash of time driven out of these Meena rabbits. They became controlled by one mass idea like the people of a totalitarian state. Formerly each individual unit lived independently of other units, swayed by fear and governed by hunger; now they had no desire other than to obey the order. Even the primary instinct of self-preservation had been taken from it. From a shy and docile creature, self-willed and possessing a degree of cunning, it had become an automaton in a mass relentless in purpose, irresistible in movement, entirely fearless. ( )
  rosalita | Jan 16, 2023 |
Boney is almost defeated by tribal magic
  ritaer | Jul 11, 2021 |
Inspector Napoleon Bonaparte, Bony to friends, is one of Queensland, Australia's best detectives, albeit a thorn in his bosses sides. He is sent to the outback to solve the 5 month old disappearance of a hated sadistic ranch hand. Bony is a half caste who the aboriginals do not trust, and the whites are often confounded by his investigation skills. Bony is proud of his heritage and his prowess as an investigator. His pride becomes the one thing that allows him to finish his investigation despite interference from the local aboriginal tribe. This was an interesting story written and taking place in the late 1940s. Times were different. ( )
  Raspberrymocha | Feb 22, 2021 |
In this tale Bony appears as a Queensland C.I.B. detective on leave, turning up at an outback station where a rouseabout has gone missing during a storm. His horse turns up at the station the morning after the storm riderless and there is no trace of Jack Anderson. No black trackers are available because the whole local tribe has gone to visit a female elder thought to be dying. By the time a tracker can be found heavy rains have obliterated Anderson's tracks.

During the story Bony becomes ill with the "Barcoo sickness" but station owner is convinced that the bones has been pointed at him. At first Bony is determined that he will not succumb but he becomes weaker and weaker despite the attempts of the local policeman to help him.

Bony is also proud of his reputation that no case that he has tackled has ever gone unsolved, but that is because he stays on the case until the very end, despite telegrams from his superiors that he must return to the city immediately.

What impressed me was the detailed observations of Aboriginal culture and customs that the author must have recorded. He also presents both sides of the argument with regard to preserving aboriginal heritage. One station family in particular recognise the damage that contact with white people has done to the aborigines, but at the same time are a bit patronising in the way they deal with the aborigines on their station. The character who has disappeared has mistreated aboriginal stockmen, whipping one almost to death, and so is very unpopular. No-one can work out why "Old Lacey" the station owner has kept him on.

There is more than one mystery in this book, and it is good reading, despite the warning from the publisher that Arthur Upfield reflects attitudes of his time, not necessarily views we would share today. ( )
  smik | Mar 17, 2018 |
Interesting mystery about a part of the world I know little about---the Australian outback. The hero of the series is Detective-Inspector Napoleon Bonaparte, son of an aborigine mother and a white father. There is a white family who has done their best throughout three generations to protect a local aborigine group from government and religious authorities. At the end of the book a vast number of rabbits migrate. ( )
  raizel | Feb 7, 2017 |
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Jack Anderson was a big man with a foul temper, a sadist and a drunk. Five months after his horse appeared riderless, no trace of the man has surfaced and no one seems to care. But Bony is determined to follow the cold trail and smoke out some answers.

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