book cover of Murder in Williamstown
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Murder in Williamstown

(2023)
(Book 22 in the Phryne Fisher series)
A novel by

 
 
The always delightful heroine and her sleuthing family do not disappoint in this mélange of mysteries’ set in 1920s Australia (Kirkus Reviews).
 
Awakening unusually early one morning, Phryne Fisher finds herself with a rare stretch of free time to fill. After dropping her daughters off for their school-sponsored charity work at the Blind Institute, she visits a university professor whose acquaintance she’d made—and admired—on a prior case. At lunch, the smitten professor invites Phryne to dine at his home in Williamstown later that week.
 
Bookending her pleasant dinner with her new friend Jeoffrey, Phryne makes two disturbing discoveries: first, a discarded opium pipe in the park, and later the body of a Chinese man on the beach--cause of death not apparent, yet ultimately ruled a homicide. Shortly thereafter, the teenaged sister-in-law of Phryne's longtime lover Lin Chung disappears from her home. But when one of Jeoffrey's colleagues is murdered in front of a houseful of guests at a Chinese-themed party he is hosting, Phryne can't help but wonder--are the incidents all related somehow? And who on earth has been leaving notes in her letterbox, warning her to ‘REPENT’ and that ‘THE WAGES OF SIN IS DEATH’—?

In addition to the formidable and fashionable Phryne, this clever mystery once again features Phryne's three wards with their own mysteries to solve: Ruth and Jane, tracking an embezzler at the Institute, and Tinker, whose help Phryne enlists to uncover the author of the threatening missives.
 
Read the novels that inspired both the Miss Fisher Murder Mysteries and the Ms. Fisher's Modern Mysteries streaming series on AcornTV.

Praise for the Phyrne Fisher mysteries:
 
‘Anyone who hasn't discovered Phryne Fisher by now should start making up for lost time.’ —
Booklist
‘Phryne handsomely demonstrates once more that even a compulsion to explore every mystery that comes her way needn't interfere with her appetite for life.’ —
Kirkus Reviews


Genre: Historical Mystery

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