The incomparable Phryne Fisher returns to solve yet more complicated crimes.
Inheriting enough wealth to lead a life of luxury in Australia after her father, an English aristocrat, cast her off, free-spirited Phryne has been saved from boredom by her forays into private detection and a series of lovers. Her wildly diverse friends include police detectives; socialist dock workers Bert and Cec; Dot, her maid and companion; her adopted daughters, Jane and Ruth; and Tinker, a boy she's taken in as part of the household. In February 1929, she receives a missive from a Capt. Spencer asking for monetary help with the spa he runs for victims of shell shock. With Dot in tow, she drives to Daylesford, where all is not well. Several women have gone missing over a period of time, but it’s a shocking death, maybe accidental, maybe not, that involves her in a dangerous game. The Temperance Hotel is owned by Mr. Frederick McKenzie, but all the work there is done by his nieces, including the stunningly beautiful Annie, a magnet for men from miles around, like the caber tosser whose slip kills another of her admirers. Although bucolic settings are not Phryne’s natural habitat, she works her way through a series of thorny problems and hidden secrets to reveal the truth. At the same time, while they're in Melbourne, Tinker, Bert, and Cec find a classmate of Jane and Ruth's dead and set out to solve that crime.
Another round for a delightfully complex heroine whose social conscience infuses every case with extra appeal.