Cover Image: Bay of Martyrs

Bay of Martyrs

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Member Reviews

I could not get into this story, and found the writing a bit wooden. I stopped reading after 10% and then skimmed to see if it got it any better.

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I have read all of Tony Black's novels, and this one was another killer read. A body washes up on a beach. A journalist, named Clay gets the story first, and starts investigating the murder. He gets in the way of the police, and this was quite entertaining as well! The book grabs you from the beginning and this doesn't change until the end. Highly recommended.

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Synopsis/blurb.....

True Detective set on Australia’s South Coast.

Clay Moloney, a cynical reporter with a regional Australian newspaper, is expecting an easy Sunday at work when the body of a young woman washes up at the Bay of Martyrs. The death is an inconvenience for Clay, who’s content filing obituaries and re-writing government press releases on the new multi-million-dollar airport. But the more he digs into the Bay of Martyrs incident, the more he realises the girl’s death is not a case of misadventure, despite what the police tell him. Clay becomes obsessed with the murder investigation, putting himself and his co-worker Bec, an Irish-born photographer, in danger. Will Clay achieve justice for the young student, or will those in power stop him before he uncovers the truth?

Master of Tartan Noir, Tony Black, collaborates with Australian author and journalist, Matt Neal, to create a thrilling criminal case of murder and corruption set on Australia’s South Coast.
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My take....

An enjoyable reading trip to Australia’s South Coast in the company of veteran author Tony Black and newbie Matt Neal.

Bay of Martyrs is where the body of a young woman washes up on the beach, frightening a visiting family and setting in motion the twitching nose of reporter Clay Moloney. The death is quickly ruled as misadventure, which fails to satisfy Moloney’s gut instinct. Police laziness at work, or worse?

Clay and his sidekick, the new to Australia, Irish photographer Bec O’Connor sniff around the death in-between covering the more mundane aspects of the job on a regional newspaper.
I liked the two main characters. Bec O’Connor has a few skeletons in her closet regarding her family and clearly has issues with her mother. You kind of feel she is running away from events of the past, though I don’t think we fully understand why.

Clay Moloney is 40 and a bit world-weary. He likes a drink and the odd toke and has an on-off relationship with a bit of a bunny boiler. We discover a bit about his past life and loves as we venture through the book. Interesting, without distracting or taking any pace away from the mystery.

Together they make for a lively pairing. Adding a bit of spice to the mix is Bec’s romantic (or just casual fun?) relationship with one of Clay’s mates, a police officer – Eddie Boulton. Clay pumps Eddie for information on the police’s progress or lack of interest in the death, and feeds a few titbits back to stimulate some police action. Eddie pumps Bec and Clay doesn’t quite understand how he feels about the fling……amusement, jealousy or what?

In addition to the dead girl, we have a side story regarding a local politician and a major regional investment in an airport expansion at Warrnambool. An expansion which seems to benefit the politician pushing for it, Wayne Swanson and the wealthy developer, Lachlan Fullerton of Fullerton Industries that has been awarded the contract. It’s a deal which Clay has his suspicions about and which when the finances are taken apart analytically, doesn’t seem to stack up.

Ever the irritant we have Clay at various points annoying his newspaper bosses, the police, Swanson and Fullerton, as well as Bec and Eddie and the on-off girlfriend. The - dig, dig, dig, shake the tree, see what falls out – school of investigative journalism seems to work. A beating from the police reinforces Moloney’s belief that not everything is on the up and up.

A really enjoyable mystery, a great setting with plenty of local flavour, interesting characters, and a decent resolution to our initial questions. I did feel a slight irritation at the twist on the final page, a kind of Disneyesque ending I could have done without. That said, I’ll be keen to see what Clay Moloney in the hands of the authors gets up to next.

4 from 5

Read in May, 2017
Published - 2017
Page count – 234
Source – review copy from publisher Freight Books, after also being approved on Net Galley
Format – paperback version


http://col2910.blogspot.be/2017/06/tony-blackmatt-neal-bay-of-martyrs-2017.html

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Bay of martyrs is a great read and I have no hesitation in recommending it to others.

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The ingredients of this story are all very well known and used in genre fiction: the ex-idealistic journalist, whose ideals were, with the passage of time, replaced by a mix of drugs, alcohol and cynicism, a beautiful woman who, to escape from her past, literally ends 7,000 miles away, an officer of goodwill, one rather corrupt, dirty business, and of course, murders. On the other hand it is with proven ingredients that you cook good dishes, as taught by the tradition of Italian cooking, a tradition that apparently the two authors have learned very well and infused into their novel. Nothing in this novel is uncared for or left to chance, the characters are appropriately detailed, never excessive even when it comes to a drugged out of his mind that decides to take out everyone, and that's because the authors never forget the human side.
Very well written, a very enjoyable reading.
Thank Freight Books and Netgalley for giving me a free copy in exchange for an honest review.

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Clay Moloney is a reporter with a regional Australian newspaper. He's looking forward to an easy Sunday when his editor calls him to tell him the body of a young woman has washed up at the Bay of Martyrs. Her death is ruled an accident but Clay feels there's more going on. Together with his colleague Bec, he digs deeper but will he put them in danger from those in power?

Bay of Martyrs is a collaboration between Tony Black and Matt Neal. I'd never read a collaboration before and wasn't at all sure how it would work. I imagined I'd notice where one writer left off and the other picked things up again. That's not the case though. These two work really work together and everything flows nicely.

As someone who reads a lot of crime fiction, it made a nice change to be involved in an investigation with a journalist instead of detectives. And Clay is not just any journalist. He's as cynical as they come, his most important relationship is with alcohol and he's constantly in trouble with his editor. But the discovery of the young girl's body brings about change and he quickly becomes obsessed with finding out the truth.

All in all, an enjoyable read.

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I would like to thank Netgalley and Freight Books for an advance copy of Bay Of Martyrs, the first collaboration (and hopefully not the last) between Tony Black and Matt Neal.

Clay Moloney is a cynical, washed up journalist in Warrnambool in south east Victoria. He is at odds with his editor and spends his days reporting on the local news with a current emphasis on the proposed airport development. This changes when a body is discovered on the beach at Bay of Martyrs. The police write off Kerry's death as an accident but Clay thinks there is more to it and enlists Bec, the new photographer at the paper, to help him investigate. He also smells the rat of corruption over the airport deal and starts investigating that as well.

I thoroughly enjoyed Bay of Martyrs. It is a thumping good read which held my attention throughout. It has several twists and turns, some more of a surprise than others, leading up to an amazing dénouement which I didn't see coming. It has clever, believable plotting and some great writing. I also think that spacing the novel out over a couple of months adds realism to it as days go by with no developments.

The novel, however, hangs on Clay's personality. He has turned 40 and doesn't like it, drinks and smokes too much and smokes dope to help him sleep. He has the cynicism and deadpan humour to go with his healthy lifestyle which he frequently uses on his editor as they constantly fight over his approach. His attitude changes with Kerry's death, perhaps her similarity in age to the daughter he has never seen, but it galvanises him and he rediscovers his thirst for investigative journalism. He is an incredibly annoying but very likeable protagonist.

Bay of Martyrs is a great read and I'm already hoping for a sequel. I have no hesitation in recommending it.

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I’m sorry to say this book was a bit of a damp squid.

The story was predictable from very early on. The characters were the usual collection of; corrupt politicians, dodgy developers, bent cops and a flawed journalist with different women inexplicably lining up to sleep with him.

I was looking forward to reading something different, and I kept with it till the end but ultimately it was a let-down.


It starts with a body washing up on a beach. The police decide, way too early, it’s an accidental death whilst and the main protagonist, the journalist Clayton Maloney, realises it’s far from it.

When Clayton is sent to interview the Local MP about his involvement with a new development its immediately obvious that the body on the beach, the politician, and the crooked developer are all linked.

Chuck in a bent police officer, who is thwarting Maloney in his investigations, and the only thing that is missing is the glamorous female assistant to the alcohol loving journalist and you have a story. Oh, wait there is a glamorous assistant. Bec O’Connor the photographer.

Like many of the other characters in the book O’Connor adds nothing to the plot, except for the equation of whether she’ll sleep with Maloney or the only straight copper in the book.

I have to say I am yet to read a book, that is written by two authors in collaboration, that works.

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