Sabine Lohmann (International) assertion Sabine Lohmann i(A58505 works by)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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2 3 y separately published work icon Murder on a Midsummer Night Kerry Greenwood , ( trans. Regina Rawlinson et. al. )agent with title Mord in Der Mittsommernacht ) Berlin : Insel Verlag , 2021 Z1544084 2008 single work novel crime mystery The fabulous Phryne - she of the Lulu bob, Cupid's Bow lips and a pearl-handled pistol in her garter - is back! The 1920s most elegant and irrepressible sleuth returns for her seventeenth adventure. Melbourne, 1929. The year starts off for glamorous private investigator Phryne Fisher with a rather trying heat wave and more mysteries than you could prod a parasol at. Simultaneously investigating the apparent suicide death of a man on St Kilda beach and trying to find a lost, illegimate child who could be heir to a wealthy old woman's fortune, Phryne needs all her wits about her, particularly when she has to tangle with a group of thoroughly unpleasant Bright Young Things. But Phryne Fisher is a force of nature, and takes in her elegant stride what might make others quail, including terrifying seances, ghosts, Kif smokers, the threat of human sacrifices, dubious spirit guides and maps to buried pirate treasure. (Source: LibrariesAustralia)
3 48 y separately published work icon Milk and Honey : A Novel Elizabeth Jolley , ( trans. Sabine Lohmann with title Milch und Honig : Roman ) Munich : Goldmann , 1990 Z385380 1984 single work novel

'A self-absorbed young musician comes as a pupil-boarder to the house of an 'old European' family. Gradually his life is taken over and consumed, seemingly, by dark, mysterious forces within as much as outside himself. Milk and Honey is a strangely haunting novel. While much of what we have come to expect and admire in Elizabeth Jolley's work is powerfully present — vivid and diverse characters, pathos, humour and acute perceptions of people and their situations — it is in many ways quite unlike anything she has previously written. A work of gothic proportions, Milk and Honey is an astonishing tapestry of character and incident that surprises and yet never fails to convince.'

(Source: Booktopia)

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