"Exciting and a great reading experience for historical armchair travelers"
Unable to please her father and fit into 1928 English
society Phryne Fisher makes her home in Melbourne,
Australia with her two adopted daughters and her faithful
friend Dot. Her sister Eliza is banished from England and
sent by her father to live with Phryne, but acts snooty
and above it all. To get her out of the house, she takes
her entire family and her Chinese lover Lin Chung to the
Luna Park amusement park. While she is riding the ghost train, she touches what she
thinks is a paper made ghost only to learn it is a
mummified body almost eighty years old. While Lin Chung
tries to find the 400 ounces of gold that was stolen from
his family in 1858, Phryne inquires into the identity of
the corpse. Someone is trying to stop her investigation
by sending her harmless letter bombs with warning notes
inside. Her search takes her to Castlemaine, the former
gold camp when Lin Chung and her await the answers to the
mummy with a bullet hole in his head, but danger by some
very ruthless individuals also is there. Everybody who reads a Phryne Fisher mystery will adore the
heroine, a free spirited individualist who lives life by
her own rules. Both the protagonist and her lover have
their own individual mysteries to solve involving family
honor. Readers quickly get caught up in the who-done-it
because it is exciting and a great reading experience for
historical armchair travelers. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted August 16, 2004
|