The Chalon Heads Explained

The Chalon Heads
Author:Barry Maitland
Country:Australia
Language:English
Genre:Novel
Publisher:Allen and Unwin
Release Date:1999
Media Type:Print
Pages:326 pp.
Isbn:1865080470
Preceded By:All My Enemies
Followed By:Silvermeadow
Awards:2000 Barry Award finalist

The Chalon Heads is a 1999 crime novel by the Australian author Barry Maitland.[1]

It was the fourth novel in the author's Brock and Kola series of novels.[2]

Synopsis

The young wife of ex-criminal Sammy Startling has been kidnapped and the ransom note was decorated with Chalon Head stamps of the young Queen Victoria. These stamps are both rare and valuable and detectives Kathy Killa and David Brock go to Cabot's philately store to meet Startling and investigate the crime.

Publishing history

After its initial publication in Australia by Allen and Unwin in 1999, it was reprinted as follows:

The novel was also translated into Russian in 2008.

Epigraph

Critical reception

A reviewer in The Canberra Tmes noted: "This is a very carefully crafted crime novel that is rich in detail and interesting minor characters. The plotting is suitably serpentine and Maitland keeps us on our toes with some very unexpected turns. The plot unfolds at a good pace, helped along by a couple of well-staged chase scenes and a particularly grisly discovery...Stamp collectors will also probably find the philatelic detail interesting and there is even an Australian angle in the form of the three Chalon Head stamps from Van Diemen's Land which are central to the plot...Overall The Chalon Heads is very good, although Brock lacks the distinctive edge to make him, and the series, stand out from the rest of the very good British police novels that are around."[7]

Stuart Coupe in The Sydney Morning Herald was very enthusiastic about the novel: "The Chalon heads is significantly better than almost all the police procedural novels I've read in recent years, with Maitland displaying an impressive and convincing grasp of the machinations and motivations of working police officers, their strengths, weaknesses and foibles. This novel is right up there with the best contemporary crime fiction and, with Allen & Unwin in Australia and Orion Books in Britain as Mailtand's new publishers, one can but hope the author gains the increased international recognition he so clearly deserves."[8]

Awards

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Chalon Heads by Barry Maitland (A&U, 1999). National Library of Australia. 10 May 2024.
  2. Web site: Austlit — The Chalon Heads by Barry Maitland . Austlit. 10 May 2024.
  3. Web site: The Chalon Heads by Barry Maitland (A&U, 2000). National Library of Australia. 10 May 2024.
  4. Web site: The Chalon Heads by Barry Maitland (Orion, 2000). National Library of Australia. 10 May 2024.
  5. Web site: The Chalon Heads by Barry Maitland (A&U, 2007). National Library of Australia. 10 May 2024.
  6. Web site: The Chalon Heads by Barry Maitland (Felony & Mayhem Press). National Library of Australia. 10 May 2024.
  7. Web site: "Shifting Cities" . The Canberra Times, 29 May 1999. 10 May 2024. .
  8. Web site: ". " . Sydney Morning Herald, 26 June 1999. 10 May 2024. .
  9. Web site: "Barry Awards" . Stop, You're Killing me. 10 May 2024.