Cliff Hardy
Created by Peter Corris
"Not for the first time I reflected that a hundred and twenty a day wasn't a good rate for getting dead, but there was no point in upping the fees. A thousand a day is still a poor deal."
-- Cliff Hardy
One of the more solid and stand-up private eye series to come
out of the 1980's features Sydney, Australia P.I. CLIFF HARDY. Cliff's a tall bloke, pretty fair shape, with a nose that's been busted a few times. He's been at various times a boxer, a soldier (in Malaysia), a timber worker and an insurance investigator. He's a tough-minded guy, with a strong independant streak, one reason he didn't last in the insurance racket. He's been known to carry a Smith & Wesson .38, all nice and legal, and occasionally a Colt .45, that isn't, and he isn't a stranger to a bit of knocking about, either giving or receiving. Basically, he's a "cold bastard. Good at his job though." He's appeared in at close to thirty novels, and several collections of short stories and Corris is still cranking them out. There was even that rarity of things -- a good PI movie -- made from one of them.
In many ways, Cliff's a throwback to an earlier, simpler time. Imagine a slightly shopworn Joe Mannix down under and you've got Cliff pegged.
He lives in the slightly seedy Glebe neighbourhood near the dog track and works out of an office with dirty windows on St. Peter's Lane in the slightly lmore upscale Darlinghurst area, next to Primo Tomasetti, Cliff's tatooist pal. Cliff was married once about "a lifetime ago," and he's currently involved in a rather weird little six months on/six months off relationship with Helen, a married woman. He likes tennis, beer and white wine, but detests tea. He is, however, rather partial to Ford Falcons. When his battered, rust-ridden but beloved 1964 model finally gave up the ghost in the late eighties, he replaced it with a used 84 model, same colour, less miles, less rust. In many ways, Cliff is like his beloved Falcons. Nothing fancy, but solid and dependable, a few too many miles on the clock, maybe, but still able to get you there.
And the whole series is like that as well -- nothing flashy, but good reliable reads, well-written, with an appealling, down-to-earth hero, pulpy without being stoopid, and some very interesting settings and keen insights into Australian culture. A wonderful contribution to the genre.
All of which helped make Cliff's one screen appearance to date,
1985's The Empty Beach, starring a then-unknown Bryan Brown,
such a treat. It's an entertaining, enjoyable low-key Aussie film,
with Brown playing a sardonic, battered Hardy on the trail of
a missing millionaire, and some great twists, an unusual ending
and plenty of action. Hardy's creator, Peter Corris, lent his
leather jacket to Brown for the film.
Australian author Peter Corris is a former academic and journalist
who's been a full-time writer since 1982. He has published over
fifty books of fiction and more than a dozen non-fiction titles.
Corris writes about another Australian detective, one Richard
Bowning, who plies his trade in the 1940's. Corris also
writes about Australian Federal Security agent Ray "Creepy"
Crawley and Luke Dunlop, an agent for the Witness Protection
Agency in Australia.
For those of you who like their private eye fiction straight
up, and aren't afraid to cross borders, you can't really go wrong
with the Hardy books. It's a solid, entertaining and never disappointing
series. Recommended hardily.
UNDER OATH
- "A true original Corris's portrayals of Australian crime
stand out uniquely - forceful, hard-driven, compassionate."
(James Ellroy)
.
- "Our best tough guy is Peter Corris What distinguishes
a good Cliff Hardy is a mix of interest in the Sydney dirt being
dished, strong focus, palpable visuals and grudging empathy with
the battered, warped but crazily ethical Hardy take on life and
people.
(The Bulletin)
.
- "Corris is one of our great storytellers."
(The Sydney Morning Herald)
.
- "If Corris does not quite have the comedic chops of a Robert B. Parker or a Robert Crais, he more than compensates by restoring the dramatic tension of a hero who is truly a lone knight, who can be hurt, even killed, and who has no one he can really trust. This is good stuff, in a classic vein. Read him. Grade: A."
(The
Brothers Judd: Private Eye Reviews)
NOVELS
- The Dying Trade (1980) ...Buy
this book
- White Meat (1981)...Buy
this book
- The Marvelous Boy (1982)
- The Empty Beach (1983)
- Make Me Rich (1985)...Buy
this book
- Deal Me Out (1986)
- The Greenwich Apartments (1986)
- The January Zone (1987)
- O'Fear (1990)
- Wet Graves (1991)
- Aftershock (1992)....Buy
this book
- Beware of the Dog (1992)
- Matrimonial Causes (1993)
...Buy
this book
- Casino (1994)
- The Washington Club (1997)
- The Reward (1998)
- The Washington Club (1998)...Buy
this book
- The Black Prince (1999)
- The Other Side of Sorrow (1999)
- Lugarno (2001)
- Salt And Blood (2002)
- Master's Mates (2003)
...Buy
this book
- The Coast Road (2004)...Buy
this book
- Saving Billie (2005)...Buy
this book
- The Undertow (2006)...Buy
this book
- Appeal Denied (2007)....Buy
this book
- Open File (2008)
- Deep Water (2009)
COLLECTIONS
SHORT STORIES
(By the way, the Playboy and Penthouse sources mentioned below are the Australian editions.)
- "Blood Is Thicker" (November 1980, Playboy; also
1984, Heroin Annie; AKA The Fraticide Caper)
- "The Luck of Clem Carter" (December 1980, National
Times; also 1984, Heroin Annie)
- "Silverman" (National Times; also 1984, Heroin
Annie)
- "Mother's Boy" (January 1981, National Times; also
1984, Heroin Annie)
- "Marriages Are Made in Heaven" (January 1982, Penthouse;
also 1984, 1984, Heroin Annie; AKA The Negative Caper)
- "Heroin Annie" (June 1981, Playboy; also 1984,
Heroin Annie)
- "Escort To An Easy Death" (June 1982, Penthouse;
also 1984, Heroin Annie)
- "California Dreamland" (1983, Playboy; also 1984,
Heroin Annie)
- "Stockyards at Jerilderie" (1984, Heroin Annie)
- "Man's Best Friend" (1984, Heroin Annie)
- "The Big Drop" (1985, The Big Drop)
- "P.I. Blues" (1985, The Big Drop)
- "The Arms of the Law" (1985, The Big Drop)
- "Tearaway" (1985, The Big Drop)
- "What Would You Do?" (1985, The Big Drop)
- "The Mongrol" (1985, The Big Drop)
- "The Mae West Scam" (1985, The Big Drop)
- "Rhythm Track" (1985, The Big Drop)
- "The Big Pinch" (1985, The Big Drop)
- "Maltese Falcon" (1985, The Big Drop)
- "Cloudburst" (Penthouse-Australia; also 1988, Man
in the Shadows)
- "High Integrity" (Penthouse-Australia; also 1988,
Man in the Shadows)
- "The Deserter" (Penthouse-Australia; also 1988,
Man in the Shadows)
- "Byron Kelly's Big Mistake" (Sydney Morning Herald-Good
Weekend; also 1988, Man in the Shadows)
- "Norman Mailer's Christmas" (Sydney Morning Herald;
also 1988, Man in the Shadows)
- "Man in the Shadows" (1988)
- "The House of Ruby" (October 1990, Mean
Streets)
- "A Gift Horse" (2004, Taking Care of Business)
- "Death Threat" (2004, Taking Care of Business)
- "Whatever it Takes" (2004, Taking Care of Business)
- "The Pearl" (2004, Taking Care of Business)
- "Solomons Solutions" (2004, Taking Care of Business)
- "Cocktails for Two" (2004, Taking Care of Business)
- "Black Andy" (2004, Taking Care of Business)
- "Globilisation" (2004, Taking Care of Business)
- "Christmas Shopping" (2004, Taking Care of Business)
- "Insider" (2004, Taking Care of Business)
- "Chop Chop" (2004, Taking Care of Business)
- "Ram Raid" (2007, The Big Score)
- "Copper Nails" (2007, The Big Score)
- "D-i-v-o-r-c-e" (2007, The Big Score)
- "Crime Writing" (2007, The Big Score)
- "Blackmail" (2007, The Big Score)
- "Last Will and Testament" (2007, The Big Score)
- "Break Point" (2007, The Big Score)
- "Worst Case Scenario" (2007, The Big Score)
- "Bookworm" (2007, The Big Score)
- "Patriotism" (2007, The Big Score)
FILM
- THE EMPTY BEACH... Buy
this video
(1985, Jethro Films)
85 minutes
Screenplay by Keith Dewhurst,
based on the novel by Peter Corris
Director: Chris Thomson
Producer: Timothy Read and
John Edwards
Associate producer: Bryan Brown
Executive Producer: Bob Weis
Title Song "The Empty
Beach" written by Don Walker, performed by Marc Hunter
Starring Bryan Brown as CLIFF
HARDY
Also starring Anna Maria Monticelli,
John Wood, Nick Tate, Ray Barrett, Belinda Giblin, Peter Collingwood,
Kerry Mack, Joss McWilliam, Sally Cooper, Rhys McConnochie, Steve
Rackman, Robert Alexander, Bob Barrett, Christopher Lewis
AUDIO TAPES
- The Greenwich Apartments. (ABC Audio, Nd., read by Peter
Corris)
RELATED LINKS
Report respectfully submitted by Kevin
Burton Smith.
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