Accessibility Tools

  • Content scaling 100%
  • Font size 100%
  • Line height 100%
  • Letter spacing 100%
Print this page

How I Became the Mr Big of people smuggling by Martin Chambers

by
June–July 2014, no. 362

How I Became the Mr Big of people smuggling by Martin Chambers

Fremantle Press, $27.99 pb, 220 pp

How I Became the Mr Big of people smuggling by Martin Chambers

by
June–July 2014, no. 362

How I Became the Mr Big of People Smuggling is sold as a crime novel, but this is a crude categorisation for an unusual book. Mr Big is more like a fictional memoir; the story of Nick Smart, a high-school graduate who signs up to work as a jackaroo at the remote Palmenter Station, but quickly discovers that it is a front for a people-smuggling outfit. He then kills the station’s murderous namesake and takes over the operation.

However this might read at first glance, and despite some risky plot twists, it is a surprisingly plausible story. Martin Chambers shows great perspicacity in exploring how Smart descends into people-smuggling by almost imperceptible degrees, but his insights do not stop at psychology. Every scene seems to spring from either personal experience or meticulous research, from the intricacies of building a barbecue to the repulsiveness of cleaning up the fly-blown bodies of dead refugees. This attention to detail does not entail mechanical prose, though, and at times Mr Big shows impressive flashes of lyricism.

From the New Issue

You May Also Like