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]

Synopsis

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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

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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

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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

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Still Murder by Finola Moorhead (Penguin)". National Library of Australia. Retrieved 11 April 2025.
  2. ^ a b "Case of crime paying dividends". The Age, 12 September 1991, p15. ProQuest 2521549387. Retrieved 11 April 2025.
  3. ^ ""Whodunnit merits more than a skim"". The Age, 23 March 1991, p162. ProQuest 2521487839. Retrieved 11 April 2025.
  4. ^ ""Deconstructing the Crime Novel"". Southerly, March 1991, pp149-151. ProQuest 1299439324. Retrieved 11 April 2025.
  5. ^ "Still Murder by Finola Moorhead". Austlit. Retrieved 11 April 2025.
  6. ^ "Still Murder by Finola Moorhead (Spinifex)". National Library of Australia. Retrieved 11 April 2025.