
The The Kotuku Creek Chronicles: Comic Kiwi Rural Crime with a Political Twist
by David McGill
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These three comic novels revolve around the local creek featuring a gold strike, the sudden appearance of a geyser and the theft of a valuable stamp, threatening damnation and salvation for the sleepy New Zealand coastal community of Kotuku. In the first chronicle the 1980s government restructuring has closed the post office, the
petrol pumps and the railway station. Ex-postmaster Jack Cavanagh and struggling storekeeper Ron Atkinson are trying to unify the villagers and the retirement home snobs to save the last vestige of village life, the bowling
club, target of property developer and drug pusher Bob Rogers. The gold-seekers overwhelming the village offer Bob further potential, but he goes too far when he tries to ransom Jack's daughter. A generation later an earthquake creates a massive geyser that inspires a tourist invasion and exploitation by Bob Rogers and government agencies, opposed by local Māori protecting their land. Jack Cavanagh just wants to find his missing grandson Jason and friend the ex-stationmaster Rangi Rangihau. A mistreated, pie-pilfering Great Dane is
Jack's best chance, if he can entice it out of hiding. The final chronicle set in 1949 has a swarm of fortune hunters looking for a missing and very valuable Kotuku stamp, including the young Bob Rogers and other unscrupulous criminals employing arson, intimidation and the kidnapping of Jack Cavanagh's son in pursuit of the stamp. The chronicles depict villagers defending their peaceful lifestyle against threats from outside exploiters, a parable perhaps for the resilience of ordinary Kiwi blokes and fiery females.
About the Author
David McGill has been a full-time writer of non-fiction and fiction books about New Zealand since 1979, after being a feature writer in New Zealand, Australia and England. His speciality has been heritage subjects, notably the long-running newspaper column 'Cityscapes' on heritage buildings, along with investigative stories of social issues and humorous features. His 61 published books include six best-selling collections of New Zealand slang, the twice republished Ghost Towns of New Zealand, seven thrillers spanning detective and counterintelligence operative Dan Delaney through seven decades of New Zealand and world history. He has worked as a journalist and employed top New Zealand cartoonists to create his slang covers and the three comic novels that make up his latest book 'The Kotuku Creek Chronicles'. He was born in Auckland, where his daughter and granddaughter live. Journalism took him to Wellington and then to a coastal village nearby that is not unlike the coastal village he grew up in, and wrote a non-fiction acount of, and now is fictionalised in the three Creek Chronicles. He has too many owl figurines from a lifetime of collecting.