Still Murder

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

LanguageEnglish
GenreCrime novel
PublisherPenguin Books
Still Murder
AuthorFinola Moorhead
LanguageEnglish
GenreCrime novel
PublisherPenguin Books
Publication date
1990
Publication placeAustralia
Media typePrint
Pages423 pp.
Awards1991 Victorian Premier's Prize for Fiction, winner
ISBN9781760875091

Still Murder is a 1990 novel by the Australian author Finola Moorhead.[1]

It was the winner of the 1991 Victorian Premier's Prize for Fiction.[2]

After a corpse is found by Sister Mary Ignatia under a marijuana crop in a public park, the case is taken over by Detective Senior Constable Margot Gorman. As the investigation progresses it becomes clear that this crime is part of a chain of such violent events that began with the rape of a young woman in Vietnam.

Critical reception

Reviewing the novel in The Age Kate Ahearne found that "what really sets Moorhead's novel apart is the way she has understood the age-old formula of corpse and killer, clues and motive, mystery and mystery-solver, not simply as a wheelbarrow for a set of thoughts on the nature of life, but as a metaphor for it."[3]

Gillian Whitlock in Southerly noted that the novel did not follow normal convetnions for this genre: "Still Murder proceeds not to resolution and the identification of the deviant individual, but to a diffusion of guilt and responsibility," and that "Moorhead goes much further in constructing a feminist reading position for her novel than authors of other contemporary feminist versions of the detective fiction."[4]

Publishing history

After the novel's initial publication by Penguin Books in 1990,[1] it was reprinted by the same company in 1991,[5] and then by Spinfex Press in Australia in 2002.[6]

Awards

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI