The Trojan Dog Explained

The Trojan Dog
Author:Dorothy Johnston
Country:Australia
Language:English
Series:Sandra Mahoney
Genre:Crime Fiction
Publisher:Wakefield Press
Pub Date:2000
Pages:268 pp
Isbn:1-86254-486-7
Dewey:823/.914
Followed By:The White Tower

The Trojan Dog is a detective fiction novel by Australian author Dorothy Johnston. It is the first novel in the Sandra Mahoney series.Published in 2000 in Australia, and in North America in 2005, The Trojan Dog was one of the first Australian novels to give electronic crime a central place.

Plot summary

The novel is set in Canberra in the months leading up to the 1996 Australian Federal election. Sandra Mahoney has been out of work for some years, raising her son Peter. Now that he is in school full-time, Mahoney returns to the work force and is hired by Rae Evans, head of the Australian Labor Relations Service Department Industries Branch.

A sum of $900,000 is stolen, and Evans is accused. The theft requires a certain expertise in computer technology, which Mahoney is convinced Rae Evans does not have. Mahoney is assisted by one of the department's IT staff, an eccentric, shambling Russian called Ivan Semyonov. Along the way Mahoney gradually learns some of the basics about computer crime. As the investigation into Evans and the theft progresses, Mahoney enlists the aid of an ACT detective sergeant, DS Brook, who is himself suffering from leukaemia.

Mahoney and her team meet a cast of mad public servants, each of whom is, in one way or another, a suspect; these include Bambi, a wordless child-woman who always wears a red cape, and Felix, another IT person, only ever encountered rushing into the department in his jogging shorts. Mahoney and Semyonov finally set a trap and catch the real thief.

Themes

The atmosphere of paranoia that Canberra finds itself in, in the waiting time before an election, is important for the story. A change of government, with its accompanying change in policies, often means bureaucratic upheaval – government employees are redeployed or made redundant, and entire departments are restructured or scrapped.

Awards