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Unnatural Habits
Unnatural Habits
Unnatural Habits
Ebook373 pages5 hours

Unnatural Habits

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries, now streaming on Netflix, starring Essie Davis as the honourable Phryne Fisher

"Among Phryne's pleasantly dashing adventures, this one stands out for its emphasis on sexual orientation and institutional coverups." —Kirkus Reviews STARRED review

The decidedly raven-haired Miss Phryne Fisher returns to delve deep into the dark side of Melbourne, Australia.

It's 1929, and girls are going missing. Little, pretty golden-haired girls. And they're not just pretty. Three of them are pregnant, poor girls from the harsh confines of the Magdalene Laundry. People are getting nervous.

Polly Kettle, a pushy, self-important girl reporter with ambition and no sense of self preservation, decides to investigate and promptly goes missing herself.

It's time for Phryne and Dot to put a stop to this and find Polly Kettle before something quite irreparable happens to all of the missing girls. It's all piracy and dark cellars, convents and plots, murder and mystery...and Phryne finally finds out if it's true that blondes have more fun.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 4, 2017
ISBN9781464208232
Unnatural Habits
Author

Kerry Greenwood

Kerry Greenwood was born in the Melbourne suburb of Footscray and after wandering far and wide, she returned to live there. She has degrees in English and Law from Melbourne University and was admitted to the legal profession on the 1st April 1982, a day which she finds both soothing and significant. Kerry has written three series, a number of plays, including The Troubadours with Stephen D’Arcy, is an award-winning children’s writer and has edited and contributed to several anthologies. The Phryne Fisher series (pronounced Fry-knee, to rhyme with briny) began in 1989 with Cocaine Blues which was a great success. Kerry has written twenty books in this series with no sign yet of Miss Fisher hanging up her pearl-handled pistol. Kerry says that as long as people want to read them, she can keep writing them. In 2003 Kerry won the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Australian Association.

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Rating: 3.8453946723684207 out of 5 stars
4/5

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Pretty good presentation of the mystery and its solution. Much different from the TV episode less dramatic more gritty.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    In 1929 Melbourne young females from differing backgrounds are going missing so Polly Kettle, trainee reporter, decides to investigate. But this is just the start of the problem. So Phryne Fisher investigates with the help of her increasing minions when Polly goes missing.
    This is well-written interesting mystery with a group of well-rounded characters. Of the several books of the series that I have read this was the most enjoyable.
    A NetGalley Book
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Pretty blonde girls are disappearing. Four seem to have been kidnapped, but there are no ransom notes to the families. Three girls, poor and pregnant, run away from the Magdalene Laundry, where they are forced to work under harsh conditions. They were sent to the convent because of their ‘condition’ and are more than likely not welcome back to their family. No one knows where they’ve gone.Reporter Polly Kettle, a girl from a well-to-do family, with a pushy attitude and no common sense, disappears. Her father hires Phryne Fisher to find her. In doing so, Phryne learns of other the missing girls and winds up with three cases to solve.Phryne’s investigations take her into the world of white slavery, piracy, unwed mothers, convents and their secrets. With so much going on, she involves the whole family to help following clues by playing parts and getting information.I’ve yet to tire of this series. For me it is a great escape!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Perfect Phryne

    The best of the Phryne Fisher novels I’ve read so far. These have an air of the cozy mystery about them, but the series has dealt with some hard-hitting subjects, and this one looks at the Magdalen Laundries, and white slavery.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    *Disclaimer- I never grant more than 3 stars to a cozy mystery. For me, a 3-star rating means that this is an excellent example of the genre.*

    When I want to try my luck on a new -to me- cozy mystery series, I have a weird habit. I choose an installment at random and begin. It may be the 2nd in the series or the last, but never the first. I feel I am getting a better grasp of the writing and the characters and the introduction to the plot is quicker. It paid off in the Mary Russell mysteries, it was a disaster in the case of Maisie Dobbs, but here, my acquaintance with Phryne Fisher was interesting.

    Without giving too much away, we find ourselves in Australia during the 1920s, where Phryne starts investigating a strange and disturbing case of missing girls. The Church, the social institutions, hospitals, brothels, the Press, everything plays a part in this sensitive case. So, Phryne has to face a number of well - set obstacles from the patriarchal society and the religious convictions in order to discover the truth and the reporter who went missing during the process of her personal investigation.

    The novel was a nice deviation from what I have seen lately in the Cozy Mystery genre. Phryne is a charming character, brilliant, considerate, sassy and opinionated in a realistic way, without sounding too abrupt or condescending. She outsmarts her opponents with right arguments and sheer cleverness, not by trying too hard to appear ‘’bad-ass’’ or however else they call it nowadays. (Honest to God, I do hate this expression…) Her minions, the young people who act as her ‘’Network’’ -yes, too much ‘’Sherlock’’, I know- are very entertaining. Each one represents a different ‘’type’’ and provides a healthy kind of humour without trying to sound smart or inappropriate given the subject matter of the story.

    What I really appreciated was the inclusion of many themes worthy of discussion in the novel. There is the tyranny of patriarchy that causes young people to rebel and react without thinking, trying to find an escape. There is the intense presence of the political conflict of the time, with the battle between Capitalism and Communism, the strengthening of the Women's Movement, and the emergence of the theory of Eugenics that caused disaster, mayhem and misery during the following decades. The fact that Kerry Greenwood didn't hesitate to deal with such a disturbing subject in a delicate, realistic and brave manner was a very pleasant surprise.

    So, is this mystery something groundbreaking or innovative? No, it isn’t, it doesn’t have to be. All it needs to be is well-written, faithful in the depiction of the era and respectful towards the reader. And this installment succeeds in all these and becomes an entertaining ‘’quality’’ light read.

    ARC kindly provided by Poisoned Pen Press and NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Synopsis:1929: pretty little golden-haired girls are going missing in Melbourne. But they're not just pretty. Three of them are pregnant, poor girls from the harsh confines of the Magdalen Laundry. People are getting nervous. Polly Kettle, a pushy, self-important Girl Reporter with ambition and no sense of self preservation, decides to investigate--and promptly goes missing herself. It's time for Phryne and Dot to put a stop to this and find Polly Kettle before something quite irreparable happens to all of them. It's a tale of convents and plots, piracy, murder and mystery . . . and Phryne finally finds out if it's true that blondes have more fun.Review: This was quite a lot of fun, with Phryne living up to her reputation as a sleuth.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Perhaps my favorite in the Phryne series.... such just punishment!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Unnatural Habits by Kerry Greenwood is the nineteenth book in Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries. It is 1929 in Melbourne, Australia and the Honorable Phryne Fisher is on her way to a meeting of the Adventuresses Club with Dr. Elizabeth MacMillan (Mac). Along the way, they encounter a woman being attacked by some thugs. After rescuing Polly Kettle, they take her along to the club. It seems that Miss Kettle is a reporter for the Daily Truth working on a story about girls who have gone missing from Magdalene Laundry at Abbotsford Convent. The three young women were pregnant and no one seems to care that they have disappeared. Miss Kettle is determined to stick with her story and soon departs. The next day Phryne gets a visit from DI Jack Robinson who reports that Polly has been abducted and asks Phryne to investigate. Phryne needs to retrace Polly’s steps in order to find the missing reporter. Will Phryne and her compatriots be able to find Polly in time?Unnatural Habits follows Phryne Fisher on another investigation. I found the mystery to be complicated with multiple parts. It was a little convoluted at time, but it was interesting. I did feel, though, that the story was a little too long. The author could have cut out some of the eating and bathing (we do not need details on every bath and meal) for a more concise story. Unnatural Habits has entertaining characters with Phryne at the forefront. Phryne is smart, sassy, strong, social and so much more. I wish the author had not made Jack so bland. He fades into the background. The author did an amazing job at capturing the time-period (clothes, language, food, cars, entertainment, etc.). While Unnatural Habits is the nineteenth book in the series, it can be read alone. The author provides all the details a reader needs. I am giving Unnatural Habits 4 out of 5 stars. Pick up a copy of Unnatural Habits to go on another adventure with Phryne Fisher and her troupe of family and friends.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I love Kerry Underwood's books and especially the Phryne Fisher series. Set in 1929 (love reading about that era) Phryne Fisher is a force to be reckoned with. She goes in with an authority that tells everyone "I am here and here's what we are doing". Her "crew" is filled with some pretty quirky characters and I found myself chuckling at them and their antics several times.A great series that, while I have not read all of them, I have certainly enjoyed the ones that I have read. I love when people say something can't be done and she replies "yes, it can", here's the money, get it done! Thanks to Poisoned Pen Press and Net Galley for providing me with a free e-galley in exchange for an honest, unbiased review.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    As usual for this series, this book was excellent. Really excellent. Phryne is like the 1920's, female version of James Bond. She's not a spy, mind you, but that same self assurance, unlimited means, elegant taste and ability to strike fear in all hearts, as well as lust in the male ones. She answers to nobody and lives by her own standard of ethics and morality, not the law. Nothing scares her.Unnatural Habits covers more than a few plots - a missing girl, mistreatment of unwed soon-to-be-mothers, a string of abductions of both women and girls. Phyrne tackles them all with efficiency. Relying much more heavily on her family than in the past to resolve these problems, it seems she is more frustrated in her efforts than in previous books. This frustration and how she deals with it rounds out her character a bit, I think.

    She has a great family of characters around her: her two adopted daughters, her personal maid, the Butlers, Bert and Cec and Tink, the newest member of the family. Each individual and interesting in their own right, and a lot of fun to read about. My only complain in this book is Phyrne's new habit of referring to them all as minions, which seems disrespectful and not at all in keeping with the personality Ms. Greenwood has gone to such great lengths to establish for Phyrne. Ms. Greenwood does an excellent job of relaying the history of Melbourne in 1929 (give or take) - she really brings the city to life and as a transplant to Melbourne I love reading about the areas I recognise and learning about the history - the good, the bad and the very colourful.

    I adore this whole series, and I'm hard pressed to even name one book in the whole that isn't excellent and a recommended read to anyone enjoying the genre. I look forward to Phyrne's future adventures and pray Ms. Greenwood never tires of her.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This was lovely, a nice little mystery novel with delightful characters and an interesting setting. No surprises though, I had almost everything figured out before the reveal. The easy level is made up for in the character of Phryne and the setting of 1920s Melbourne.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Most all taboos are exposed and dealt with in the most satisfying manner in this installment of the Hon. Miss Phryne Fisher: Homosexuality, white slavery, prostitution, rape, kidnapping, and so-called "Charity" to unwed mothers by Nuns.

    How very interesting and engaging, not heavy at all.... Lin Chung is also aboard & accounted for in this mystery. I just love the description of Phryne's household (with the exception of the Malachite bathtub). I find Phryne & her household very refreshing in comparison to most other mysteries I read and the food & drinks, seem divine as well.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Unnatural Habits is Kerry Greenwood at her cozy best. It has a complex plot and is packed with action. Several young girls, some of them pregnant, have disappeared. A reporter named Polly Kettle is searching for the girls. Before she herself goes missing, she tells Phryne that she suspects the girls are forced to work in the convent laundry under conditions so cruel it is a wonder they survive long enough to give birth. She also tells Phryne that blond girls are disappearing and she believes the two things are related. With the help of Phryne's many contacts and her minions, the mystery is well on the way to being solved.

    Even though I would call it a cozy mystery, the book engages in some strong social commentary. Back in the early part of the 20th century, conditions in Abbotsford convent's Magdalen Laundry really were as dire for the unfortunate women obliged to work there as those in the sweatshop as it is depicted as here.

    The author might have written a light read but it doesn't mean she hasn’t done good research. As always, there is very rich history of the culture of 1920's Melbourne inside Greenwood’s books. Melbourne comes alive in Greenwood’s world, so vivid and colorful, that you just want to go there to have a look for yourself.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Nearly a quarter of a century on from the start of the series, Phryne Fisher is going as strong as ever. This remarkable, seemingly ageless, sleuth has gathered quite a household around her now, and also has the local police in her pocket. Most of Melbourne's high society either count her as a friend, or they owe her something, and so she has passage into places that the police on their own could never penetrate, like the Blue Cat Club and the Abbotsford Convent and the Magdalen laundry.For me Kerry Greenwood seems to have captured well the essence of society's attitude to unmarried mothers, as well the growing militant unionism of the late 1920s. A mark of her indefatigable research.These novels carry the hallmarks of most cozies, with a tinge of Australian history and attitudes. There's plenty of humour, and loads of well drawn characters. At the same time they are well plotted, and I think UNNATURAL HABITS is almost Greenwood at her best. Their growth in popularity, and that of the Miss Fisher television series, ensure they are also available overseas, at least in e-format, for a reasonable price.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    What a wonderful time it was to spend some time with Phryne and her minions.

    Phryne is on her way to meet a friend for drinks when she a lady about to be assaulted, but before she is, she is rescued by those that keep an eye out for Phryne. The lady is Polly Kettle, a reporter, who is chasing a story about three pregnant girls who have gone missing. Before Phryne can get much more information from Polly about the young, unmarried girls, Polly goes missing, too. About this time Jack, her police detective friend, asks if she could help checking on some other young ladies who have also gone missing. They seem to be unrelated, but the more that is learned, maybe they are some how related.

    With the help of Dorothy, her adopted daughters and delightful young man, Tinker, Phryne is off to sort through the known facts. This leads her to a nearby convent, which is hardly very charitable and to a Socialist commune.

    Another great addition to Phryne Fischer series by Kerry Greenwood. I'm looking forward to more in the series.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I have truly missed reading Kerry Greenwood. I prefer the Phryne Fisher series over the Corinna Chapman series. Both series are set in Australia, but the similarities end there. The unnatural habit refers to nuns. The series is set in the 1920's with a wealthy, but determined heroine. Phryne shares her wealth with many, and is constantly trying to improve a woman's life. This story involves the abduction of young, virginal, blonde young women. Greenwood introduces each chapter with a small quotation, most of the quotations are from Shakespeare's Measure for Measure, and I find this device interesting and challenging. Greenwood does not appear to be a fashionable dresser, but Phryne has all the latest fashions. I also enjoy the way Greenwood incorporates many other fields into her writing: religion, politics, law, and medicine. Many vasectomies are performed by an avenging angel, which may be stretching the actual emergence of this procedure. Many kudos to Greenwood’s interesting series.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Great latest offering from the Phryne Fisher series, this one bowls right along. Phyrne as wonderful as ever: human, humane, dressed to kill, determined, lethal, loving. The mystery is moved along by character, hers and others. It's not an insubstantial plot, but it takes a slightly secondary role. Enjoyable as ever. Highly recommended.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Phryne Fisher is at it again down under in Australia. She has added a new member to her house household in the form of "Tinker" an adolescent from an overly large fishing family. This time out a young, female newspaper reporter disappears as well as pre-adolescent blonde girls in great number from orphanages and off the streets of town. Also, numerous unwed mothers have gone missing. It's up to Phryne to straighten out the mess so that others can take credit for it, which is how she prefers it. She does so with her usual elan and verve. I did find myself struggling some with the Australian culture and dialect, but it's still another wonderful entry in the Phryne Fisher series.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is the nineteenth outing for Kerry Greenwood's Phryne Fisher and my first. So I have eighteen adventures to look forward to reading. Phryne Fisher is fearless, uninhibited and somewhat exotic and she has a great little crew of misfits who help her do her detecting. Greenwood throws in some historical references for the time period and place and focuses on women's issues, creating a pleasureable read, times nineteen...
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The divine Miss Fisher returns—for the 19th time. If you are new to Phryne Fisher, and author Kerry Greenwood, you are missing a great, erudite, fun and sometimes-risque series. This book, like all in the series, can be read without reading previous books. Ms. Greenwood does an excellent job of bringing new readers up to date without any repetition or blather. Yet each volume brings us a fuller understanding of the complexities that are Phryne.In Unnatural Habits, protagonist Phryne (pronounced fry-nee) is swept into an unpleasant mess involving kidnapped girls, white slavery and personal abuses by church organizations that should have had the welfare of their parishioners at heart. It is 1929, Melbourne, Australia, and Phryne, not born to wealth but now indulging herself in nice things since her father's ascension to a title in England, is determined that her wealth will not only give her a comfortable lifestyle, but help better the lives of those around her. Those include her adopted daughters, Jane and Ruth, her cook and houseman Mr. and Mrs. Butler, her aide-de-camps Bert and Cec, and her maid-cum-sidekick Dot.Greenwood does a wonderful job of making the characters believable, and fully fleshed out in realistic behaviors and mannerisms. In this book, when a determined and misguided girl reporter, Polly Kettle, goes missing while investigating a church-run laundry, Phryne and Dot step in to help. There are layers of evil to penetrate and piracy afoot! Greenwood explores more than just the fleshpots of the Roaring 20s; she also shows a world where the poor, while always with us, are abused and misused for the benifit of others, while leaving them malnourished and poorly housed. Although dealing with sometimes uncomfortable topics, Greenwood keeps her touch light and deft, letting her readers feel as if they are exploring the inside story, while having fun with a clever mystery.As is often the case, Greenwood deals with real places (the Magdalen Laundries, for instance, were real, and not just in Australia) and real people, sprinkling her book with bon mots about social justice and political upheavals that help spark the storyline. Even though free-standing, each book in the series deepens the reader's understanding of the characters: Lin Chung, Phryne's longtime lover, and his protective cohorts who, while not interfering with her detecting, stay in the background to insure her safety; her police insider, John ("just call me Jack") Robinson, a detective-inspector who has learned to trust Phryne's instincts; and Dot's fiance, Hugh Collins, also a police officer. As her team works the co-mingled cases, and delves into the darker byways of Melbourne life, we are set to reminiscing about days when the bad guys were really bad, and the good guys (and gals) were gutsy, determined and unrelentingly curious. A worthy series whose quality of writing remains high, and the plots adroit and twisty.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I picked this up on a whim as it was recently released while I was on holiday in Australia and it looked like an Australian Daisy Dalrymple (1920s flapper detective, which it basically is). I hadn't read any of the previous 18 books in the series, and there's quite a lot for the uninitiated reader to pick up, what with Phryne's household and various acquaintances and their complex relationships that rely on previous adventures. Phryne herself is infuriating, she can do anything, everyone around her is in her thrall, and when she comes across problems or obstacles in her investigation she either waves a hand and declares "I'll pay" so it all gets sorted out, or she slips somebody a convenient coin/note. She has, by this point in the series, everything -- a wonderful house, with perfect servants, an exotic yet sensitive Chinese lover, perfectly behaved adopted children -- honestly, you want to hate her. She is incredibly rich somehow, and yet a socialist with very progressive views, who inexplicably loathes the middle classes. We also learn that she is brave, courageous, strong, a scarily violent lover (seriously, what was the covering her lover in cuts and scratches all about? It sounded terrifying), who hates injustice and can fix anything through sheer force of will. The author also persists in telling us which particular bubble bath scent she uses at every different opportunity.The plot was silly and a bit offensive (selling blonde girls to middle-Eastern brothels, as if it's somehow worse because they're blonde), with some hilarious exposition about how wonderful a women's commune would be, along the way. There were also far too many shoehorned feminist diatribes (too much even for me, and usually I'll lap it up!), and an anti-climactic ending. The only thing I will say in its favour is that I know these sorts of series usually start off better and can get into a bit of a rut, so probably the earlier books aren't that bad. I won't be trying any of them out though.

Book preview

Unnatural Habits - Kerry Greenwood

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