From Publishers Weekly
Everyone calls the drowning of young Melbourne antiques dealer Augustine Manifold a suicide—except for his distraught mother and Phyrne Fisher, the heroine of Greenwood's long-running series set in 1920s Australia (
Murder in the Dark, etc.). Brainy, beautiful, blue-blooded and rich to boot, the enviably stylish PI somehow manages to juggle the demands of two adopted daughters, an exotic lover and a full social calendar with multiple cases, including a hunt for the illegitimate heir to a fortune—all while rarely missing a morsel of her cook's inspired creations. Greenwood keeps the action moving as swiftly as milady's Hispano-Suiza, save for the initially confusing flashbacks at the end of many chapters that eventually become pieces in the solution of the Manifold puzzle. But there's no quibbling with the author's ability to create a sybaritic piece of period escapism. As Phryne's mates would say approvingly: Bonzer!
(July) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
It’s 1929, and Phryne Fisher, the Australian flapper and private investigator, has a couple of cases on her plate. A man’s suicide might not be as cut-and-dried as it appears, and there’s the matter of an illegitimate child who stands to inherit a vast sum of money, if Phryne can find her. As usual, Greenwood populates the novel with an assortment of offbeat characters, from socialists and psychics to adventurers and antiques hunters. The story moves along at a brisk clip, and Phryne has plenty of opportunities to unleash her acid tongue and apply her razor-sharp wit. Another fine entry in this long-running and deservedly popular series. --David Pitt
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.