Kerry Isabelle GreenwoodOAM (born 1954[1]) is an Australian author and lawyer. She has written many plays and books, most notably a string of historical detective novels centred on the character of Phryne Fisher, which was adapted as the popular television series Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries. She writes mysteries, science-fiction, historical fiction, children's stories, and plays. Greenwood earned the Australian women's crime fiction Davitt Award in 2002 for her young adult novel The Three-Pronged Dagger.
She began writing books at sixteen, but remained unpublished. In 1988 she entered one of her eight novels for the Vogel prize; although not successful, one of the judges offered her a contract for two detective novels.[2]
Spinouts (with Michael Pryor and Catherine Randle)
The Bold and The Brave (2000)
Stormbringer
The Broken Wheel,Whaleroad,Cave Rats and Feral are prequels to the Stormbringer trilogy. Characters in Stormbringer refer to events in those books, but are otherwise independent.
Whaleroad,Cave Rats and Feral published in one volume in 2002
Alien Invasions (2000) (with Shannah Jay and Lucy Sussex, edited by Paul Collins and Meredith Costain)
A Different Sort of Real: The Diary of Charlotte McKenzie, Melbourne 1918-1919 (2001), also titled The Deadly Flu as printed in 2012, and Contagion: My Australian Story, Scholastic Australia, 2020.[20]
The Three-Pronged Dagger (2002)
Danger Do Not Enter (2003)
The Long Walk (2004)
Journey to Eureka (2005)
Out of the Black Land (2010)
Collections
Recipes for Crime (1995) (with Jenny Pausacker)[21]
On Murder 2: True Crime Writing in Australia (2002)
Tamam Shud: The Somerton Man Mystery (2012)
TV and film
The Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries television series was filmed in and around Melbourne in 2011 and premiered on ABC1 on 24 February 2012. A second series was commissioned in August 2012 and filming began in February 2013 and aired starting 6 September 2013.[22] A third series was commissioned in June 2014 and began airing on 8 May 2015.
The TV series was redone by HBO Asia in 2020 as Miss S, set in Shanghai in the 1930s instead of Melbourne in the 1920s.[23] The show was filmed in Mandarin, Miss Phryne Fisher was renamed as Su Wenli, Inspector Robinson was renamed as Luo Qiuheng, and Dorothy 'Dot' Williams was renamed as Xiao Tao Zi.[24]
Aurealis Award for Excellence in Australian Speculative Fiction, Young Adult Division, Best Novel, 1996: joint winner for The Broken Wheel
Children's Book Council of Australia Book of the Year Award, Book of the Year: Younger Readers, 2002: honour book for A Different Sort of Real : The Diary of Charlotte McKenzie, Melbourne 1918–1919
Davitt Award, Best Young Fiction Book, 2002: winner for The Three-Pronged Dagger
Davitt Award, Best Young Fiction Book, 2003: nominated for The Wandering Icon
Davitt Award, Best Adult Novel, 2003: nominated for Murder in Montparnasse : A Phryne Fisher Mystery
Ned Kelly Award for Crime Writing, Lifetime Contribution, 2003
Ned Kelly Award for Crime Writing, Best Novel, 2005: shortlisted for Heavenly Pleasures : A Corinna Chapman Novel
Ned Kelly Award for Crime Writing, Best Novel, 2005: shortlisted for Queen of the Flowers : A Phryne Fisher Mystery