Murder Most Unladylike: Difference between revisions
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'''''Murder Most Unladylike''''' is a 2014 children's [[mystery fiction|mystery]] novel by British-American author [[Robin Stevens (author)|Robin Stevens]]. It follows two schoolgirls in 1930s England solving their first murder mystery and is the first book in the 'Murder Most Unladylike' series. |
'''''Murder Most Unladylike''''' is a 2014 children's [[mystery fiction|mystery]] novel by British-American author [[Robin Stevens (author)|Robin Stevens]]. It follows two schoolgirls in 1930s England solving their first murder mystery and is the first book in the 'Murder Most Unladylike' series. |
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The story is written in the style of a casebook and follows two fictional boarding schoolgirl detectives, Daisy Wells and Hazel Wong, as they try to find the murderer of their science teacher. The book has been nominated for several awards, including the [[Carnegie Medal (literary award)|Carnegie Medal]]. In the US, the book was published under the name '''''Murder is Bad Manners'''''.<ref name="bad">{{cite web | last1=Stevens|first1=Robin | title=Murder is Bad Manners – meet my US cover! | url=https://robin-stevens.co.uk/murder-is-bad-manners-meet-my-us-cover/ | website=Robin Stevens Official Website | accessdate=16 January 2018 | ref=bad}}</ref> |
The story is written in the style of a casebook and follows two fictional boarding schoolgirl detectives, Daisy Wells and Hazel Wong, as they try to find the murderer of their science teacher. The book has been nominated for several awards, including the [[Carnegie Medal (literary award)|Carnegie Medal]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Murder Most Unladylike Accolades |url=https://robin-stevens.co.uk/books/murder-most-unladylike/ |access-date=25 October 2024 |website=Robin Stevens Official Website}}</ref> In the US, the book was published under the name '''''Murder is Bad Manners'''''.<ref name="bad">{{cite web | last1=Stevens|first1=Robin | title=Murder is Bad Manners – meet my US cover! | url=https://robin-stevens.co.uk/murder-is-bad-manners-meet-my-us-cover/ | website=Robin Stevens Official Website |date=27 June 2014 | accessdate=16 January 2018 | ref=bad}}</ref> |
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==Plot== |
==Plot== |
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{{Long plot|date=October 2024}} |
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The two principal characters, Hazel Wong and Daisy Wells are students at Deepdean School for Girls. They are the founding members of the Wells and Wong Detective Society and its only members for that case. Daisy is the president of the Detective Society and Hazel is its secretary and vice president. The book begins with Hazel recounting her discovery of the body of Miss Bell, the Science [[Schoolmistress|mistress]], in the gymnasium on Monday 29 October 1934. Both Hazel and Daisy stayed back in a classroom after societies, so that Daisy could finish the book she was reading, [[The Man in the Queue]]. While waiting, Hazel realises that she has left her pullover in the gymnasium, so she hurries to collect it. There, she stumbles upon the [[Cadaver|corpse]] of Miss Bell, who has seemingly fallen from the balcony. However, when Hazel returns with Daisy and the prefect Virginia Overton, the body is gone. Thus, only Daisy believes that Hazel saw Miss Bell's dead body, and they are both punished for lying. The absence of the body means that the Detective Society believe they have discovered their first [[murder]] case. |
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Daisy and Hazel begin their detective work at Prayers the next morning. The other students notice the absence of Miss Bell, and are suspicious as she is known for her punctuality. The excitement is furthered when Miss Griffin, the [[headmistress]], doesn't mention Miss Bell's absence following her sermon. |
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The two principal characters, Hazel Wong and Daisy Wells are students in Deepdean School for Girls. They are the founding members of their school's Detective Society and its only members. Daisy is the president of the detective society and Hazel is its secretary and vice president. Near the beginning of the book, Hazel stumbles upon the corpse of their Science teacher, Miss Bell, in the gymnasium, seemingly fallen from the balcony...but when Hazel returns with Daisy and one of the prefects, the body is gone. Thus, none of the characters believes that Hazel saw Miss Bell's dead body and believes that she was telling lies. |
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At bunbreak, Daisy discovers from talking to Henrietta Trilling (King Henry), who is the [[Head girl and head boy|Head Girl]], that Miss Bell resigned. She is told that their was a resignation letter on Miss Griffin's desk and that King Henry had been allowed to read it. This gives the detectives evidence that Miss Bell must've been murdered by someone who knew her handwriting well enough to forge such a letter, and with enough authority to place it on Miss Griffin's desk. |
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As the time since Miss Bell's disappearance extends, the [[Rumor|rumours]] of her whereabouts spread between the students become more outlandish. Many students suspect her of being involved with a [[crime ring]] or secret organisation. |
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Towards the end of the book, Hazel and Daisy come across an old notebook, which turns out to be the diary of another character Verity Abraham, the girl who was rumored in the story to have committed suicide by jumping off the Gym balcony the term before Hazel arrived . The diary serves as evidence that Miss Griffin, the headmistress has spoken to her a few weeks ago and informed her that she was Verity's true mother and that Mr. and Mrs. Abraham had adopted her. Miss Griffin had become an unmarried mother, which at the time was not considered normal and would have affected her chances of becoming headmistress. Verity forbids this fact, but Miss Griffin then provides her with evidence of her birth and the adoption, too. Then, she asks Verity to join her as her daughter, but Verity denies it and says Mr. and Mrs. Abraham are her parents. Afterwards, Verity had received a note from Miss Griffin, which was found in the diary. Then, after she met Miss Griffin, she disappeared, which was when Verity was said to have committed suicide. Following this, there is a note proving who the murderer is at the end, written by Miss Bell. Miss Griffin would have disposed of it if not for Miss Bell hiding it. |
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Daisy speaks to Jones about some windows broken in school and theorises that the damage could've been caused when the murderer moved Miss Bell's body. |
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As there are police at the scene, they hand the diary over, the policeman understands everything and holds a denouement (the final part of the book, unveiling the murderer) and they finally arrest the murderer. |
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On Thursday morning in Prayers, Miss Griffin finally confirms that Miss Bell resigned from her post as Science mistress, and scolds the girls for their [[gossip]] surrounding her absence. |
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At afternoon tea, Daisy spends it with fifth former, Alice Murgatroyd, which is unusual, as the students tend to remain with their own form. When she returns to where the third formers are sat, she tells her dormmates that she wants to have a midnight feast. Daisy suggests they use the [[Ouija|Ouija board]] they had from a previous term. During this, the counter spells out "HELP. MURDER.". Kitty asks who is telling them this, with the response being "MISS BELL". By the end of Prayers the following morning, the news of the [[séance]] has spread across the school, and all of the students are aware of the possibility that Miss Bell was murdered. |
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Daisy and Hazel use [[Syrup of ipecac|ipecac]] to become ill during the school day, allowing them to stay in the main school building overnight to investigate. Daisy shows Hazel an old passageway, where she believes Miss Bell's body was kept before it was removed from the school. In the passageway, they find an earring that must've been lost by the murderer. They then see the beams of other torches and realise they are not the only ones who are at school at night. |
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The next day, they investigate Miss Tennyson's car and find a blood stain in it, leading them to believe they have solved the case. They confront her and make her promise to go to the [[police]]. However, at Prayers on Monday, Miss Griffin announces that Miss Tennyson has died following an accident. Hazel believes it is [[suicide]], however Daisy thinks Miss Tennyson had an accomplice who had murdered her. They find out from a policeman that a note was found beside her corpse, saying she was sorry. He tells them that she was visited by a woman on the night she died, who was likely her killer. |
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From the evidence of the lost earring, the detectives realise that Miss Griffin was Miss Bell's murderer. While discussing this discovery, Hazel and Daisy come across an old diary of former student, Verity Abraham. She is said to have committed suicide by jumping off the Gym balcony before Hazel arrived at Deepdean. This diary contains evidence that Verity was Miss Griffin's illegitimate child, and that she had been pushed off the balcony. Miss Bell had discovered this evidence and had threatened to make it public, giving Miss Griffin a motive for murder. |
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When Miss Griffin realises that the detectives have discovered her crime, they hand the diary to the police and are sent to the San to be kept safe. Inspector Priestley holds a denouement where he reveals several teachers' secrets, as well as who the perpetrator was. |
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==Reception== |
==Reception== |
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In its review, ''[[The Oxford Times]]'' praised Stevens for her "sense of place ... attention to detail, in-depth characters, authentic documents of events and, most importantly, absorbing plot".<ref name="oxf">{{cite web |last1=Lee|first1=Jan| title=Review: Murder Most Unladylike by Robin Stevens| url=http://www.oxfordtimes.co.uk/news/13506654.Review__Murder_Most_Unladylike_by_Robin_Stevens/|website=[[The Oxford Times]]| |
In its review, ''[[The Oxford Times]]'' praised Stevens for her "sense of place ... attention to detail, in-depth characters, authentic documents of events and, most importantly, absorbing plot".<ref name="oxf">{{cite web |last1=Lee|first1=Jan| title=Review: Murder Most Unladylike by Robin Stevens| url=http://www.oxfordtimes.co.uk/news/13506654.Review__Murder_Most_Unladylike_by_Robin_Stevens/|website=[[The Oxford Times]]|date=29 July 2015 | accessdate=16 January 2018|ref=oxf}}</ref> The website Crime Review called ''Murder Most Unladylike'' "an assured and capable debut",.<ref name="crev">{{cite web|last1=Wilson|first1=Linda|title=Murder Most Unladylike Review|url=http://crimereview.co.uk/page.php/review/1673|website=Crime Review|accessdate=16 January 2018|ref=crev}}</ref> Children's author Jo Cotterill called it "extremely well plotted", but criticized the pacing of the story.<ref name="cott">{{cite web| last1=Cotterill|first1=Jo|title=Murder Most Unladylike - review|url=https://jocotterill.com/2015/04/07/murder-most-unladylike-review/|website=Jo Cotterill Official Website|date=7 April 2015 |accessdate=16 January 2018|ref=cott}}</ref> The education website Teachwire said the book is "something that is simultaneously recognisable and totally original".<ref name="twire">{{cite web|title=Murder Most Unladylike|url=https://www.teachwire.net/school-books/murder-most-unladylike|website=Teachwire|accessdate=16 January 2018|ref=twire}}</ref> |
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It also won a 2015 [[Waterstones Children's Book Prize]] in the 5-12 Fiction category.<ref>{{cite web |last1=McAloon |first1=Jonathan |title=Picture book wins 2015 Waterstones Children's Book Prize |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/bookprizes/11497464/Picture-book-wins-2015-Waterstones-Childrens-Book-Prize.html |website=The Telegraph |accessdate=25 March 2019 |date=26 March 2015}}</ref> |
It also won a 2015 [[Waterstones Children's Book Prize]] in the 5-12 Fiction category.<ref>{{cite web |last1=McAloon |first1=Jonathan |title=Picture book wins 2015 Waterstones Children's Book Prize |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/bookprizes/11497464/Picture-book-wins-2015-Waterstones-Childrens-Book-Prize.html |website=The Telegraph |accessdate=25 March 2019 |date=26 March 2015}}</ref> |
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== Sequel and |
== Sequel and series == |
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A sequel, ''[[Arsenic For Tea]]'', was published seven months after ''Murder Most Unladylike''. Since the first ''Murder Most Unladylike'' book, there have been ten subsequent books, along with |
A sequel, ''[[Arsenic For Tea]]'', was published seven months after ''Murder Most Unladylike''. Since the first ''Murder Most Unladylike'' book, there have been ten subsequent books, along with six extra mini-books. In 2022, a new series, ''[[Ministry of Unladylike Activity]]'' was released, featuring characters related to those in the ''Murder Most Unladylike'' series. A casebook was also released with the tips and tricks on how to start your own detective society and much more, going by the name of Cream Buns and Crime. |
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* ''Murder |
* ''Murder Most Unladylike'' (2014) |
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* ''Arsenic For Tea'' (2015) |
* ''Arsenic For Tea'' (2015) |
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* ''First Class Murder'' (2015) |
* ''First Class Murder'' (2015) |
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* ''The Case Of The Missing Treasure'' (2019) |
* ''The Case Of The Missing Treasure'' (2019) |
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* ''The Case Of The Drowned Pearl'' (2020) |
* ''The Case Of The Drowned Pearl'' (2020) |
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* ''The Case Of |
* ''The Case Of Lavinia's Missing Tie'' (2016) |
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* ''Cream Buns and Crime''(2017) |
* ''Cream Buns and Crime'' (2017) |
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==References== |
==References== |
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[[Category:Novels set in boarding schools]] |
[[Category:Novels set in boarding schools]] |
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[[Category:2014 debut novels]] |
[[Category:2014 debut novels]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Young adult mystery fiction]] |
Latest revision as of 22:12, 15 December 2024
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2017) |
Author | Robin Stevens |
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Cover artist | Nina Tara[1] |
Language | English |
Genre | Mystery fiction, Children's fiction |
Publisher | Puffin Books |
Publication date | 5 June 2014 |
Publication place | United Kingdom |
Pages | 352 |
Followed by | Arsenic for Tea |
Murder Most Unladylike is a 2014 children's mystery novel by British-American author Robin Stevens. It follows two schoolgirls in 1930s England solving their first murder mystery and is the first book in the 'Murder Most Unladylike' series.
The story is written in the style of a casebook and follows two fictional boarding schoolgirl detectives, Daisy Wells and Hazel Wong, as they try to find the murderer of their science teacher. The book has been nominated for several awards, including the Carnegie Medal.[2] In the US, the book was published under the name Murder is Bad Manners.[3]
Plot
[edit]This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. (October 2024) |
The two principal characters, Hazel Wong and Daisy Wells are students at Deepdean School for Girls. They are the founding members of the Wells and Wong Detective Society and its only members for that case. Daisy is the president of the Detective Society and Hazel is its secretary and vice president. The book begins with Hazel recounting her discovery of the body of Miss Bell, the Science mistress, in the gymnasium on Monday 29 October 1934. Both Hazel and Daisy stayed back in a classroom after societies, so that Daisy could finish the book she was reading, The Man in the Queue. While waiting, Hazel realises that she has left her pullover in the gymnasium, so she hurries to collect it. There, she stumbles upon the corpse of Miss Bell, who has seemingly fallen from the balcony. However, when Hazel returns with Daisy and the prefect Virginia Overton, the body is gone. Thus, only Daisy believes that Hazel saw Miss Bell's dead body, and they are both punished for lying. The absence of the body means that the Detective Society believe they have discovered their first murder case.
Daisy and Hazel begin their detective work at Prayers the next morning. The other students notice the absence of Miss Bell, and are suspicious as she is known for her punctuality. The excitement is furthered when Miss Griffin, the headmistress, doesn't mention Miss Bell's absence following her sermon.
At bunbreak, Daisy discovers from talking to Henrietta Trilling (King Henry), who is the Head Girl, that Miss Bell resigned. She is told that their was a resignation letter on Miss Griffin's desk and that King Henry had been allowed to read it. This gives the detectives evidence that Miss Bell must've been murdered by someone who knew her handwriting well enough to forge such a letter, and with enough authority to place it on Miss Griffin's desk.
As the time since Miss Bell's disappearance extends, the rumours of her whereabouts spread between the students become more outlandish. Many students suspect her of being involved with a crime ring or secret organisation.
Daisy speaks to Jones about some windows broken in school and theorises that the damage could've been caused when the murderer moved Miss Bell's body.
On Thursday morning in Prayers, Miss Griffin finally confirms that Miss Bell resigned from her post as Science mistress, and scolds the girls for their gossip surrounding her absence.
At afternoon tea, Daisy spends it with fifth former, Alice Murgatroyd, which is unusual, as the students tend to remain with their own form. When she returns to where the third formers are sat, she tells her dormmates that she wants to have a midnight feast. Daisy suggests they use the Ouija board they had from a previous term. During this, the counter spells out "HELP. MURDER.". Kitty asks who is telling them this, with the response being "MISS BELL". By the end of Prayers the following morning, the news of the séance has spread across the school, and all of the students are aware of the possibility that Miss Bell was murdered.
Daisy and Hazel use ipecac to become ill during the school day, allowing them to stay in the main school building overnight to investigate. Daisy shows Hazel an old passageway, where she believes Miss Bell's body was kept before it was removed from the school. In the passageway, they find an earring that must've been lost by the murderer. They then see the beams of other torches and realise they are not the only ones who are at school at night.
The next day, they investigate Miss Tennyson's car and find a blood stain in it, leading them to believe they have solved the case. They confront her and make her promise to go to the police. However, at Prayers on Monday, Miss Griffin announces that Miss Tennyson has died following an accident. Hazel believes it is suicide, however Daisy thinks Miss Tennyson had an accomplice who had murdered her. They find out from a policeman that a note was found beside her corpse, saying she was sorry. He tells them that she was visited by a woman on the night she died, who was likely her killer.
From the evidence of the lost earring, the detectives realise that Miss Griffin was Miss Bell's murderer. While discussing this discovery, Hazel and Daisy come across an old diary of former student, Verity Abraham. She is said to have committed suicide by jumping off the Gym balcony before Hazel arrived at Deepdean. This diary contains evidence that Verity was Miss Griffin's illegitimate child, and that she had been pushed off the balcony. Miss Bell had discovered this evidence and had threatened to make it public, giving Miss Griffin a motive for murder.
When Miss Griffin realises that the detectives have discovered her crime, they hand the diary to the police and are sent to the San to be kept safe. Inspector Priestley holds a denouement where he reveals several teachers' secrets, as well as who the perpetrator was.
Reception
[edit]In its review, The Oxford Times praised Stevens for her "sense of place ... attention to detail, in-depth characters, authentic documents of events and, most importantly, absorbing plot".[4] The website Crime Review called Murder Most Unladylike "an assured and capable debut",.[5] Children's author Jo Cotterill called it "extremely well plotted", but criticized the pacing of the story.[6] The education website Teachwire said the book is "something that is simultaneously recognisable and totally original".[7]
It also won a 2015 Waterstones Children's Book Prize in the 5-12 Fiction category.[8]
Sequel and series
[edit]A sequel, Arsenic For Tea, was published seven months after Murder Most Unladylike. Since the first Murder Most Unladylike book, there have been ten subsequent books, along with six extra mini-books. In 2022, a new series, Ministry of Unladylike Activity was released, featuring characters related to those in the Murder Most Unladylike series. A casebook was also released with the tips and tricks on how to start your own detective society and much more, going by the name of Cream Buns and Crime.
- Murder Most Unladylike (2014)
- Arsenic For Tea (2015)
- First Class Murder (2015)
- Jolly Foul Play (2016)
- Mistletoe and Murder (2016)
- A Spoonful of Murder (2018)
- Death in the Spotlight (2018)
- Top Marks for Murder (2019)
- Death Sets Sail (2020)
- Once Upon A Crime (2021)
Extras:
- The Case Of The Deepdean Vampire (2016)
- The Case Of The Blue Violet (2016)
- The Case Of The Missing Treasure (2019)
- The Case Of The Drowned Pearl (2020)
- The Case Of Lavinia's Missing Tie (2016)
- Cream Buns and Crime (2017)
References
[edit]- ^ "Murder Most Unladylike|The Bookseller". www.robinstevens.co.uk. Retrieved 2 December 2017.
- ^ "Murder Most Unladylike Accolades". Robin Stevens Official Website. Retrieved 25 October 2024.
- ^ Stevens, Robin (27 June 2014). "Murder is Bad Manners – meet my US cover!". Robin Stevens Official Website. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
- ^ Lee, Jan (29 July 2015). "Review: Murder Most Unladylike by Robin Stevens". The Oxford Times. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
- ^ Wilson, Linda. "Murder Most Unladylike Review". Crime Review. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
- ^ Cotterill, Jo (7 April 2015). "Murder Most Unladylike - review". Jo Cotterill Official Website. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
- ^ "Murder Most Unladylike". Teachwire. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
- ^ McAloon, Jonathan (26 March 2015). "Picture book wins 2015 Waterstones Children's Book Prize". The Telegraph. Retrieved 25 March 2019.