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Earthly delights by Kerry Greenwood
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Earthly delights (edition 2004)

by Kerry Greenwood

Series: Corinna Chapman (1)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
5773441,836 (3.68)33
Baking is an alchemical process for Corinna Chapman. At four am she starts work at Earthly Delights, her bakery in Calico Alley. But one morning Corinna receives a threatening note saying 'The wages of sin is death' and finds a syringe in her cat's paw. A blue-faced junkie has collapsed in the dark alley and a mysterious man with beautiful eyes appears with a plan for Corinna and her bread. Then it is Goths, dead drug addicts, witchcraft, a homeless boy and a missing girl and it seems she will never get those muffins cooked in time. With flair, chutzpah and a talent for kneading, Corinna Chapman will find out who exactly is threatening her life and bake some beautiful bread.… (more)
Member:melwil
Title:Earthly delights
Authors:Kerry Greenwood
Info:Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Uuwin, 2004. 277 p. ; 20 cm.
Collections:Your library
Rating:
Tags:crime, australian, bakery

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Earthly Delights by Kerry Greenwood

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» See also 33 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 34 (next | show all)
Reading this series again. Light, frothy and lovely. ( )
  Zehava42 | Jan 23, 2024 |
Earthly Delights - K.Greenwood
Audio performance by Louise Siversen
3 stars

I’ve enjoyed Greenwood’s Phryne Fisher series so I thought I’d try one from this contemporary series. Corinna Chapman owns her own bakery in the low income end of Melbourne. Her shop is part of a vintage apartment building with a quirky set of neighbors. She is divorced but has the companionship of her interesting cats. It’s a fun set up for a cozy mystery.

There are two mysteries woven into this story. All of the women in the immediate neighborhood are receiving an escalating level of insulting threats with increasingly dangerous vandalism. And in a neighborhood plagued with the homeless and addicted, someone is killing the addicts.

There were lots of good things about this mystery. It has the strong feminist slant of the Phryne Fisher series. There’s plenty of humor. I liked Corinna’s practicality and her warmhearted generosity. There was even a burgeoning romance to add a zing. I loved the way Corinna handled her teenage helpers and assisted the homeless boy who showed a talent for muffins. I was less enthused about the sexual content involved with the arrest of the murderer. I’ll probably read the next book in the series, but I won’t continue if the sexual content continues to be so dark. ( )
  msjudy | Dec 10, 2023 |
3 ½ stars
This was a pleasant surprise, it was my first Australian cozy mystery. It was considerably edgier than the American cozy mysteries I’m more accustomed to. Whats similar a cast of quirky characters, a successful main character who could be more wealthy if she hadn’t ditched her accountant job for that of baker. What’s different junkies, dominatrices, alcoholic, a main character who actually has sex, goths.

At about the halfway point in the book I thought that I’d figured out the harasser, certain that it was her ex-husband James. Never guessing that it was Mr Pemberthy who harassed all the women to coverup the fact that he was trying to kill his wife.

I’ll be reading more of this series.


Cozies Reading Challenge ( )
  kevn57 | Dec 8, 2021 |
First of a series of very nice mysteries, with baking, set in present-day Australia. Corinna has to figure out who is terrorizing the women in her eccentric apartment building, and whether it's related to the deaths of young heroine addicts. ( )
  kcollett | Nov 25, 2021 |



This was my first Kerry Greenwood book and it caught me completely by surprise - consider me a convert. I knew the story was the start of a series about an amateur sleuth in Melbourne and I thought, OK, it's Australia but a cosy mystery with a baker as the main character? I know how this goes. How wrong I was.

'Earthly Delights' was fresh and different. How many cosy mysteries start with having to give CPR to a blue-in-the-face and apparently dead junkie that our heroine finds at 5.00 am in the alley behind her bakery?

This is a cosy mystery - no graphic violence or sex, no gratuitous cruelty, no existential angst - but it's also firmly rooted in the world we all live in rather than some mythical village where everyone is nicer than us and our neighbours, except for the murderer who's faking it and the red herrings, who aren't.

I liked the main character, Corinna Chapman. She was pragmatic and focused but was also kind, open-minded and clever. She's a used-to-be who has built a life she loves. She used to be married to a feckless man she divorced. She used to be an accountant but found that her real passion was baking. She owns and runs a bakery in Calico Alley, a fiction little street in the heart of Melbourne. She loves the rhythm of her life: rising early to bake, making things worth eating and sell her wares, mostly to restaurants and hotels but also from her shop. She's passionate about baking but she'll also make what people want to buy, including 'healthy' bread that's had all the good bit taken out and tastes like nothing but penance.

Corinna gets on with her neighbours who run off-beat stores including an occult supply shop and a shop for fetish wear. She treats her staff, who are both out of work actors looking for roles in a soap, well while still imposing some discipline. She's willing to give a junkie a chance but has the good sense to keep a close eye on him and not expect too much.

One of the things that worked well about the book is that Corinna was not someone I'd expect to go looking for mysteries or to get involved in solving them. She isn't a closet Sherlock Holmes fan. She just wants to get on with her life. So the mysteries have to find her. There are two of them. One is that someone seems to be killing the junkies who hang out in her area, something she comes to know about from the junkie she rescues and from the tall, dark and not necessarily trustworthy soup kitchen guy who collects bread from her. The other is about threatening misogynistic notes being left for her and her neighbours.

As Corinna gets pulled into these mysteries, she builds some friendships, finds out more about her neighbours, has a mild romance and uses her analytical mind and pragmatic approach to sort everything out. She has some fun along the way. The whole story is peppered with humour, most of it based on close observations of people and the absurd things we all do.

Unusually for the first book in a series, the book ends with Corinna saying she never wants to get involved with solving mysteries again. She wants to bake and live her life. Which makes me wonder if this was initially intended as a stand-alone novel or if there was always a plan for a series? I think, given the time invested in creating the core ensemble cast, the series was always there but it's going to be about a baker being pulled into things, not about a wannabe PI. I like the sounds of that.













Kerry Greenwood is an Australian author and lawyer.

She is best known for her twenty historical detective novels centred on the character of Phryne Fisher.

She writes mysteries, science-fiction, historical fiction, children's stories, and plays.






( )
  MikeFinnFiction | Sep 17, 2021 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Kerry Greenwoodprimary authorall editionscalculated
Phillips, KarenCover designersecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Siverson, LouiseNarratorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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This book is for the remarkable Sarah-Jane Reeh.
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Four am. Who invented four am?
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The first thing anyone thinks about a fat woman is, disgusting creature, I bet she stuffs herself with Mars Bars before breakfast and eats her own weight in chocolate every day and we don't, generally. My mantra is that I am fat because I am fat and there is not a lot I can do about it. And I have the example of Gossamer and Kylie always before me. I could not get that thin if I starved for ten years, and that is a fact. We are famine survivors, we fat women, and ought to be valued for it. We must have been very useful when everyone else collapsed with starvation. We would have been able to sow the crop, feed the babies and keep the tribe alive until spring came. If you bree us out, what will you do when the bad times come? At the very least, you could always eat us. I reckon I'd feed a family of six for a month. Properly pickled, salted and cooked, of course.
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Baking is an alchemical process for Corinna Chapman. At four am she starts work at Earthly Delights, her bakery in Calico Alley. But one morning Corinna receives a threatening note saying 'The wages of sin is death' and finds a syringe in her cat's paw. A blue-faced junkie has collapsed in the dark alley and a mysterious man with beautiful eyes appears with a plan for Corinna and her bread. Then it is Goths, dead drug addicts, witchcraft, a homeless boy and a missing girl and it seems she will never get those muffins cooked in time. With flair, chutzpah and a talent for kneading, Corinna Chapman will find out who exactly is threatening her life and bake some beautiful bread.

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Publisher Marketing: Corinna Chapman was once a high profile accountant and banker. That is until she walked out on the money market and her dismissive and unpleasant husband James, threw aside her briefcase, and doffed her kitten heels forever. Now she is a baker working in her own business, Earthly Delights, in Flinders Lane, Melbourne, Australia. Corinna is living in an eccentric building on the Roman model called Insula, which has eight stories, sixteen apartments, and a lot of strange and interesting people. These include a retired professor of classics, Dionysius Monk; a Dutch gardener named Trudi; Mr. and Mrs. Pemberthy and their rotten little doggie, Traddles; a pair of disgustingly thin, would-be soapie stars Goss and Kylie; and a jobbing witch, Meroe of The Sibyls Cave. Corinna is quite content with her cat Horatio and her shop until a junkie falls half dead on her grate, a gorgeous sabra stalks along her alley and tells her that she is beautiful, and she starts receiving threatening letters accusing her of being a scarlet woman. Then it is Goths, lost girls, fraud, late nights, nerds, and beautiful slaves. Life for Corinna has suddenly become interesting. And she still needs to get her bread out in time for the morning rush.... Includes recipes.
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