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* OverprotectiveDad: although Hazel has solved several murders, her father will make sure to stop her from detecting. [[spoiler: He gives up by book 9.]]
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* Forbidden Love: There are several examples of this throughout the series.
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* Forbidden Love: ForbiddenLove: There are several examples of this throughout the series.
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* Hereditary Homosexuality: In Book 2, Stephen is revealed to be the boyfriend of Daisy’s brother Bertie.[[spoiler: The latter is later in a relationship with Harold Mukherjee after Stephen is arrested for the murder of Mr Curtis.]] Daisy herself is later revealed to also be gay. [[spoiler: Amina El Magrahbi becomes her girlfriend in Death Sets Sail.]]
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* Hereditary Homosexuality: HereditaryHomosexuality: In Book 2, Stephen is revealed to be the boyfriend of Daisy’s brother Bertie.[[spoiler: The latter is later in a relationship with Harold Mukherjee after Stephen is arrested for the murder of Mr Curtis.]] Daisy herself is later revealed to also be gay. [[spoiler: Amina El Magrahbi becomes her girlfriend in Death Sets Sail.]]
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* Forbidden Love: There are several examples of this throughout the series.
**Bertie did not disclose his relationship with Stephen, (later Harold) as men being gay was illegal during the 1930s.
**Something similar happens with [[spoiler: Margaret and Astrid in Jolly Foul Play,]] and [[spoiler: Simon in Death in the Spotlight.]]
**Women being gay was not illegal at this time, however, [[spoiler: Daisy and Amina still presumably kept their relationship a secret.]]
**Bertie did not disclose his relationship with Stephen, (later Harold) as men being gay was illegal during the 1930s.
**Something similar happens with [[spoiler: Margaret and Astrid in Jolly Foul Play,]] and [[spoiler: Simon in Death in the Spotlight.]]
**Women being gay was not illegal at this time, however, [[spoiler: Daisy and Amina still presumably kept their relationship a secret.]]
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* Hereditary Homosexuality: In Book 2, Stephen is revealed to be the boyfriend of Daisy’s brother Bertie.[[spoiler: The latter is later in a relationship with Harold Mukherjee after Stephen is arrested for the murder of Mr Curtis.]] Daisy herself is later revealed to also be gay. [[spoiler: Amina El Magrahbi becomes her girlfriend in Death Sets Sail.]]
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Murder Most Unladylike is a [[HistoricalDetectiveFiction historical detective]] [[MiddleGradeLiterature children's]] book series by Robin Stevens. It follows Hazel Wong and Daisy Wells as they detect nine murders from September of 1934 to December 1936, in their boarding school and all over the world. The nine books were released from 2014 to 2020 and are accompanied by several short stories that have been collected in two additional books. The first book of a {{Spinoff}} series following Hazel's younger sister May, called The Ministry of Unladylike Activity, was published in 2022.
The series's books are:
* 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)
--> spoilers up to Death in the Spotlight will not be hidden, including the identity of the murderers.
----
!! The series provides examples of:
* AffectionateNickname: Daisy affectionately calls Hazel ‘Watson’.
** Rebecca ‘Beanie’ Martineau is known almost solely by her nickname, and Kitty refers to her as ‘Beans’.
* AllGaysLoveTheater: Everything Daisy knows about theatre she has learnt from Bertie. And she herself loves acting more than anything.
* AlphaBitch: Daisy is loved by all of the teachers, almost worshipped by all of the younger girls, and even the Big Girls respect her. She gets more [[LovableAlphaBitch lovable]] as time progresses.
** [[spoiler: After Daisy and Hazel's travel to Hong Kong is book 6 and their time in London in book 7, her influence on the school has loosened and her place has been taken by newcomer Amina.]]
* AmateurSleuth: The entire Wells&Wong Detective Society and their rivals/friends The Junior Pinkertons. Also KidDetective [[spoiler: Although, by the end of book 9, both Daisy and Hazel are working for the Secret services, making them no longer amateurs.]]
** One of the passengers on board the Orient Express, although he's painfully bad at it.
* AlwaysMurder: the mini-mysteries are about much lesser crimes, but every single one of the main books is about a murder.
** Book 2 starts with the girls investigating Mr Curtis, but later delves into them investigating his death.
** Book 5 should be about two twins playing pranks on each other, but by the end, they have been both been murdered.
* AssholeVictim: Denis Curtis, in book 2, is an embezzling businessman who almost breaks up Lord and Lady Hastings’ marriage
* BadassTeacher: During all of her lessons during book 2 "Miss Alston" is able to capture the kids in a way few teachers can. That may have something to do with her being a secret service agent in disguise tough.
** reinforced by her lessons in book 7. Daisy and Hazel are learning very little about school, but a lot about [[MasterOfDisguise disguises]] and codebreaking.
* BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor: [[spoiler: in book 8, Daisy wishes to be working on a case, but it quickly backfires as the third murder in two years makes people think that the school should probably be closed.]]
* BigFancyHouse: Fallingford and the Wong Compound.
* ABirthdayNotABreak: At Daisy's birthday tea, Mr Curtis gets poisoned with arsenic. She was already investigating, but this doesn't help.
* BittersweetEnding: Frequently, they untangle a web of lies and scandals in their quest for the truth that lead to those connected to the events destroyed or significantly upset.
* BoardingSchool: Deepdean. Daisy and Hazel go there and three of the murders take place there.
* BrilliantButLazy: played with. Hazel and Daisy fake to be this to get by in the school and stay popular. Borders in DeliberateUnderPerformance
* BrokenPedestal: Daisy with her parents, and Hazel with hers
* [[spoiler: BuryYourGays]]:[[spoiler: Averted. Daisy manages to survive her fall, [[FakingTheDead she is just in hiding]].]]
* ClosedCircle: in book two the town flooded in and the police can’t come to the house.
* ADeadlyAffair: played with. Mr Curtis did have an affair with Stephen's mother as a way to steal all of their fortunes, and he does have an affair with Lady Hastings, but the affair isn't the motive, the stealing is.
* DeadlyPrank: What Michael Butler hoped the death of Chummy and Donald would look like.
* DirtyCop: Daisy thinks that every single policeman is a clodhopper
* DramaticIrony: often present when looking back over the series. For example, Hazel being frustrated when Jocelyn winks at herself and Alexander in First Class Murder – ‘I do hate it when grown-ups imagine romance where there isn’t any.’ – only to end up with him six books later.
* DrivesLikeCrazy: Everyone in Hong Kong, and Hazel likes it very much to the point of considering British driving boring.
* EntitledBastard: Daisy starts out this way in book one, thankfully she becomes [[LovableAlphaBitch nicer]] as the [[CharacterDevelopment story goes on]].
* [[spoiler: FakingTheDead]]:[[spoiler: After her fall in book 9, Daisy and her Uncle Felix decide it would be better if she faked her death and joined the secret services.]]
* ExtremelyShortTimespan: every investigation lasts one-week maximum, and the whole series covers little more than two years.
* EvilMatriarch: Countess Demidovsky, Alexander’s grandmother. Who, surprisingly, isn’t a murderer.
* FamilyDisunion: The Wells family (and guests) come all together for Daisy's fourteenth birthday. Bertie and Daisy find out their mother is cheating on their father, Aunt Saskia steals pretty much everything she can, Uncle Felix is trying to catch a criminal (the man his sister id cheating with), and then said criminal is killed by Bertie's (boy)friend. Yikes.
* {{Fauxreigner}}: It emerges at one point during the the first book that "Mam'zelle", the French mistress, is not really French at all but has been posing as a French woman with an exaggerated accent in order to get teaching work.
* FirstDayFromHell: the rest of the dorm decide to play a prank on newcomer Hazel, and they close her in a trunk. For three hours.
* FreudianExcuseIsNoExcuse: some of the killers.
** Stephen's whole family has been destroyed by Mr Curtis, doesn't stop him from being arrested or going on trial.
** [[spoiler: Mr Thompson-Bates was the first to try to kill her, doesn't excuse Mrs Tomphson-Bates for trying to poison him]]
** [[spoiler: Theodora Miller was not a [[AbusiveParents good mother]] but Heppy is going to be trial anyway for her murder]]
* FriendOnTheForce: Inspector Priestley, by actually believing them and letting them investigate, has become quite a friend to the Detective Society, to the point that Hazel thing of him as "theirs"
* GenreSavvy: Daisy loves reading murder mysteries, and that is what makes her want to investigate. Helpful when the killer has read the [[Literature/{{Murder On The Orient Express}} same book]] as her and planned to partially recreate it.
* GrewASpine: After their experience in Hong Kong, the relationship between Hazel and Daisy is more equal.
* HeterosexualLifePartners: The two main detectives are quite inseparable, to the point that in the two years the series span they don't spend one moment without the other, including when Hazel goes back to Hong Kong to mourn her grandfather. Daisy is not heterosexual though.
* GreatDetective: The Detective Society members are not even 16 years old and they solved at least one murder each. Daisy and Hazel have nine.
* HeldGaze: Frequently, Hazel and Alexander made eye contact and Hazel is rendered utterly helpless.
--> Alexander nudged me, and I jumped. 'Are you all right?' he whispered, and my world was suddenly narrowed to the three inches of air between our cheecks.
* HelloAgainOfficer: Inspector Priestley, who turns up on many of their cases. By Death In The Spotlight, Priestley is not at all surprised to see them. [[spoiler: In Top Marks For Murder, they orchestrate his presence on the scene, as he is no longer a Gloucestershire policeman by then.]]
* IWorkAlone: [[CharacterDevelopment In the early books]] Daisy refuses most of the times to let anyone else into the Detective Society, even though they would help them.
* InterpolSpecialAgent: Uncle Felix Mountfitchet, also known as M, and Lucy Livedon.
* KidHasAPoint: Daisy’s hatred of Mr Curtis turns out to be justified in more ways than one.
* LetHerGrowUpDear: Uncle Felix is very keen on keeping Daisy and Hazel from "dangerous things" be that murderers or boys. Aunt Lucy is of the opposite belief for both.
-->'the real problem is,' said Uncle Felix, screwing in his monocle thoughtfully,'which is more dangerous: men or murder? I can see the case for both, personally. What if we simply send you both to a nunnery?'
--> Aunt Lucy cleared her throat.
-->'I am being denied the nunnery,' said Uncle Felix. 'So. You may see the boys, I suppose, Hazel.'
* LoopholeAbuse: Daisy loves poking holes in her uncle’s rules.
* MasterOfDisguise: During her stay in London, Daisy learns to disguise herself, almost to perfection. Hazel can tell the old lady in front of her is Daisy only by the shoes.
* MinorCrimeRevealsMajorPlot: Frequently. In book 5, climbing is a crime itself, and important to the wider plot of the murders.
* MomentKiller: [[spoiler: Hazel does this to herself in book 9 numerous times to avoid Alexander confessing to her, at once point actually grabbing a book at random, pretending that it interests her and running out the room.]]
* MoodWhiplash: Hazel is often subjected to this by Daisy, who can fly from being upset to over-the-moon in the span of a second.
* [[TheJoyOfX Murder Most X]]: Murder Most Unladylike. Not only the first book is called that, but the series as a whole has been renamed this.
* MysteryMagnet: Daisy and Hazel, and this is often [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]].
* NeverSuicide: Verity didn't kill herself, she was killed by Miss Griffin, and that is the reason behind the murders that happen during book 1.
* NoPlaceForAWarrior: [[spoiler: After the four cases in six months earlier in the school year, Daisy and Hazel struggle to come back to schoolgirl like in book 8]]
* NotSoFakePropWeapon: the poison in the Rue Theatre's opening night performance of Romeo and Juliet is exactly that. Poison.
* OddFriendship: Daisy and Hazel fit this criteria, being that Daisy is an outgoing and conventionally attractive white-blonde girl with status who is revered and adored, while Hazel is rather more shy and considers herself unpretty, and is Chinese and often teased for this.
* OldDarkHouse: Fallingford, especially in book two when they are flooded in.
* OnlyInItForTheMoney: Hazel's mother in book 6. She only accepted to help kidnap Teddy because of the ransom, which would leave Hazel with no worries about her future.
* OohMeAccentsSlipping: in book one when "Mamzelle" must take the form register instead it's noted that she has somehow forgotten to roll her Rs. It is later revealed that Mamzelle [[{{Fauxreigner}} is not French]] at all and was posing as a French person in order to get teaching work.
* OppositesAttract: Daisy and Hazel can seem like opposites but they share very similar mindsets.
** Alexander and George also fit this criteria, Alexander being often messy and awkward, while George is neat as a pin and never has a hair out of place.
** At the end of book 5, it is revealed that Bertie Wells, who would rather drink and party than attend his lectures, has fallen for the serious and scholarly Harold Mukherjee.
* OutOfCharacterAlert: Daisy begins to act out-of-character in book 7, which alerts Hazel to what is later revealed to be Daisy’s crush on Martita Torrera.
* OverprotectiveDad: although Hazel has solved several murders, her father will make sure to stop her from detecting. [[spoiler: He gives up by book 9.]]
* Paparazzi – It is often referenced that the Fallingford case attracted a lot of attention to the Wells family, particularly Bertie Wells.
--> '''Uncle Felix:''' Outside are a pack of reporters, just waiting to get our pictures. And we don't need any more of that, not after the Trial last year. Tip your hats down on your head and cover your faces with your free arms.
--> '''Daisy:''' Why should I?
--> '''Uncle Felix:''' Bertie.
* ParentalFavoritism: Although Teddy is not June's biological son, kidnapping him to get a ransom to make sure your Hazel doesn't have to marry for money, definitely qualifies.
* PhoneyCall: [[spoiler: In Top Marks For Murder, Hazel pretends to be calling her family and instead rings Inspector Priestley with news of the murder.]]
* PoliceAreUseless: there might as well not be any, if the only thing they do is bother the Detective Society.
* PromotionToParent: has anyone seen Lord and Lady Hastings after book 2? Because every time the girls spend time with Daisy's family it's anyone but them, most often Uncle Felix.
** [[spoiler:When not even Uncle Felix can make it, it's Inspector Priestly that takes the role]]
* RankUp: Inspector Priestly, unfortunately, profits from the Fallingford case and is promoted to a London inspector – a fact which Daisy is furious about.
* SarcasmBlind: Inspector Priestly jokingly calls Daisy Madam Super and jokes often about their involvement in the case. Daisy does not understand it, ever.
-->'''Priestley:''' There's a line in my official report that reads, ''Acting on a tip-off from schoolgirl detectives Daisy Wells and Hazel Wong, I arrested Stephen Bampton and solved the case''
-->'''Daisy:''' Really?
-->'''Hazel:''' Not really. It's a joke
* SecretlySelfish: Although by solving cases they help people, it's clear that the detectives are in it mainly for the thrill of the enigma.
* SecurityCling: Both Daisy and Hazel and Alexander and George cling onto each other when either excited or faced with a horrific crime.
* SerialKiller: Miss Griffin from Murder Most Unladylike kills three people.
* ShoutOut – Plenty of references are made to Creator/AgathaChristie. Daisy even goes as far as reading Literature/MurderOnTheOrientExpress while on the very same train.
* {{Slave to PR}}: Pretty much everyone in book 4, especially the prefects.
* SmittenTeenageGirl: Daisy is sure Martita can't have done it in book 6, but that's her crush talking.
* SoapOperaDisease: [[spoiler: What does Beanie's mother suffer from? We don't know, but she's ill and unable to attend parent night. She's even sicker in book 9.]]
* SummationGathering: Although they are not always done by the Detective Society, they happen often.
* SympatheticMurderer: Several of the murderers in the series are initially likeable characters: book two's Stephen and book nine's [[spoiler: Heppy]] are good examples.
* TeensAreMonsters: The entirety of book 4 is built around that, from the teen killer and teen victim to the teen secret spreader.
** The book 2 killer, Stephen, was in his last year of high school.
* ThrillerOnTheExpress: Hazel's father takes them on a vacation on the Orient Express, the year later a [[Literature/{{Murder On The Orient Express}} famous book]] is published. What did you think was going to happen?
* TomboyAndGirlyGirl: Daisy and Hazel, to an extent.
* TwistedChristmas: Although the whole situation is done by Christmas day, book 5 takes place during the 1935 Christmas holidays. This includes mistletoe spiked drinks, an almost drowning and two murders.
** [[spoiler: Between a cult, a murder, May almost dying and Daisy faking her death, the 1936 Christmas Holidays are not any better.]]
* WeUsedToBeFriends: Minor example, but Kitty was friends with Clementine when they first got to Deedean, somehow.
* WhyWeCantHaveNiceThings: If you're a detective, don't ever go on vacation. People will die and your vacation will be ruined.
* WhoMurderedTheAsshole: The victim from book two turns out to have been a cheater and scoundrel who had a string of people who wanted him dead for entirely understandable reasons.
** book four's Elizabeth was not nice, and not even her closest friends actually liked her: they only were near her because of the secrets she held.
* WillTheyOrWontThey: Hazel and Alexander.
The series's books are:
* 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)
--> spoilers up to Death in the Spotlight will not be hidden, including the identity of the murderers.
----
!! The series provides examples of:
* AffectionateNickname: Daisy affectionately calls Hazel ‘Watson’.
** Rebecca ‘Beanie’ Martineau is known almost solely by her nickname, and Kitty refers to her as ‘Beans’.
* AllGaysLoveTheater: Everything Daisy knows about theatre she has learnt from Bertie. And she herself loves acting more than anything.
* AlphaBitch: Daisy is loved by all of the teachers, almost worshipped by all of the younger girls, and even the Big Girls respect her. She gets more [[LovableAlphaBitch lovable]] as time progresses.
** [[spoiler: After Daisy and Hazel's travel to Hong Kong is book 6 and their time in London in book 7, her influence on the school has loosened and her place has been taken by newcomer Amina.]]
* AmateurSleuth: The entire Wells&Wong Detective Society and their rivals/friends The Junior Pinkertons. Also KidDetective [[spoiler: Although, by the end of book 9, both Daisy and Hazel are working for the Secret services, making them no longer amateurs.]]
** One of the passengers on board the Orient Express, although he's painfully bad at it.
* AlwaysMurder: the mini-mysteries are about much lesser crimes, but every single one of the main books is about a murder.
** Book 2 starts with the girls investigating Mr Curtis, but later delves into them investigating his death.
** Book 5 should be about two twins playing pranks on each other, but by the end, they have been both been murdered.
* AssholeVictim: Denis Curtis, in book 2, is an embezzling businessman who almost breaks up Lord and Lady Hastings’ marriage
* BadassTeacher: During all of her lessons during book 2 "Miss Alston" is able to capture the kids in a way few teachers can. That may have something to do with her being a secret service agent in disguise tough.
** reinforced by her lessons in book 7. Daisy and Hazel are learning very little about school, but a lot about [[MasterOfDisguise disguises]] and codebreaking.
* BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor: [[spoiler: in book 8, Daisy wishes to be working on a case, but it quickly backfires as the third murder in two years makes people think that the school should probably be closed.]]
* BigFancyHouse: Fallingford and the Wong Compound.
* ABirthdayNotABreak: At Daisy's birthday tea, Mr Curtis gets poisoned with arsenic. She was already investigating, but this doesn't help.
* BittersweetEnding: Frequently, they untangle a web of lies and scandals in their quest for the truth that lead to those connected to the events destroyed or significantly upset.
* BoardingSchool: Deepdean. Daisy and Hazel go there and three of the murders take place there.
* BrilliantButLazy: played with. Hazel and Daisy fake to be this to get by in the school and stay popular. Borders in DeliberateUnderPerformance
* BrokenPedestal: Daisy with her parents, and Hazel with hers
* [[spoiler: BuryYourGays]]:[[spoiler: Averted. Daisy manages to survive her fall, [[FakingTheDead she is just in hiding]].]]
* ClosedCircle: in book two the town flooded in and the police can’t come to the house.
* ADeadlyAffair: played with. Mr Curtis did have an affair with Stephen's mother as a way to steal all of their fortunes, and he does have an affair with Lady Hastings, but the affair isn't the motive, the stealing is.
* DeadlyPrank: What Michael Butler hoped the death of Chummy and Donald would look like.
* DirtyCop: Daisy thinks that every single policeman is a clodhopper
* DramaticIrony: often present when looking back over the series. For example, Hazel being frustrated when Jocelyn winks at herself and Alexander in First Class Murder – ‘I do hate it when grown-ups imagine romance where there isn’t any.’ – only to end up with him six books later.
* DrivesLikeCrazy: Everyone in Hong Kong, and Hazel likes it very much to the point of considering British driving boring.
* EntitledBastard: Daisy starts out this way in book one, thankfully she becomes [[LovableAlphaBitch nicer]] as the [[CharacterDevelopment story goes on]].
* [[spoiler: FakingTheDead]]:[[spoiler: After her fall in book 9, Daisy and her Uncle Felix decide it would be better if she faked her death and joined the secret services.]]
* ExtremelyShortTimespan: every investigation lasts one-week maximum, and the whole series covers little more than two years.
* EvilMatriarch: Countess Demidovsky, Alexander’s grandmother. Who, surprisingly, isn’t a murderer.
* FamilyDisunion: The Wells family (and guests) come all together for Daisy's fourteenth birthday. Bertie and Daisy find out their mother is cheating on their father, Aunt Saskia steals pretty much everything she can, Uncle Felix is trying to catch a criminal (the man his sister id cheating with), and then said criminal is killed by Bertie's (boy)friend. Yikes.
* {{Fauxreigner}}: It emerges at one point during the the first book that "Mam'zelle", the French mistress, is not really French at all but has been posing as a French woman with an exaggerated accent in order to get teaching work.
* FirstDayFromHell: the rest of the dorm decide to play a prank on newcomer Hazel, and they close her in a trunk. For three hours.
* FreudianExcuseIsNoExcuse: some of the killers.
** Stephen's whole family has been destroyed by Mr Curtis, doesn't stop him from being arrested or going on trial.
** [[spoiler: Mr Thompson-Bates was the first to try to kill her, doesn't excuse Mrs Tomphson-Bates for trying to poison him]]
** [[spoiler: Theodora Miller was not a [[AbusiveParents good mother]] but Heppy is going to be trial anyway for her murder]]
* FriendOnTheForce: Inspector Priestley, by actually believing them and letting them investigate, has become quite a friend to the Detective Society, to the point that Hazel thing of him as "theirs"
* GenreSavvy: Daisy loves reading murder mysteries, and that is what makes her want to investigate. Helpful when the killer has read the [[Literature/{{Murder On The Orient Express}} same book]] as her and planned to partially recreate it.
* GrewASpine: After their experience in Hong Kong, the relationship between Hazel and Daisy is more equal.
* HeterosexualLifePartners: The two main detectives are quite inseparable, to the point that in the two years the series span they don't spend one moment without the other, including when Hazel goes back to Hong Kong to mourn her grandfather. Daisy is not heterosexual though.
* GreatDetective: The Detective Society members are not even 16 years old and they solved at least one murder each. Daisy and Hazel have nine.
* HeldGaze: Frequently, Hazel and Alexander made eye contact and Hazel is rendered utterly helpless.
--> Alexander nudged me, and I jumped. 'Are you all right?' he whispered, and my world was suddenly narrowed to the three inches of air between our cheecks.
* HelloAgainOfficer: Inspector Priestley, who turns up on many of their cases. By Death In The Spotlight, Priestley is not at all surprised to see them. [[spoiler: In Top Marks For Murder, they orchestrate his presence on the scene, as he is no longer a Gloucestershire policeman by then.]]
* IWorkAlone: [[CharacterDevelopment In the early books]] Daisy refuses most of the times to let anyone else into the Detective Society, even though they would help them.
* InterpolSpecialAgent: Uncle Felix Mountfitchet, also known as M, and Lucy Livedon.
* KidHasAPoint: Daisy’s hatred of Mr Curtis turns out to be justified in more ways than one.
* LetHerGrowUpDear: Uncle Felix is very keen on keeping Daisy and Hazel from "dangerous things" be that murderers or boys. Aunt Lucy is of the opposite belief for both.
-->'the real problem is,' said Uncle Felix, screwing in his monocle thoughtfully,'which is more dangerous: men or murder? I can see the case for both, personally. What if we simply send you both to a nunnery?'
--> Aunt Lucy cleared her throat.
-->'I am being denied the nunnery,' said Uncle Felix. 'So. You may see the boys, I suppose, Hazel.'
* LoopholeAbuse: Daisy loves poking holes in her uncle’s rules.
* MasterOfDisguise: During her stay in London, Daisy learns to disguise herself, almost to perfection. Hazel can tell the old lady in front of her is Daisy only by the shoes.
* MinorCrimeRevealsMajorPlot: Frequently. In book 5, climbing is a crime itself, and important to the wider plot of the murders.
* MomentKiller: [[spoiler: Hazel does this to herself in book 9 numerous times to avoid Alexander confessing to her, at once point actually grabbing a book at random, pretending that it interests her and running out the room.]]
* MoodWhiplash: Hazel is often subjected to this by Daisy, who can fly from being upset to over-the-moon in the span of a second.
* [[TheJoyOfX Murder Most X]]: Murder Most Unladylike. Not only the first book is called that, but the series as a whole has been renamed this.
* MysteryMagnet: Daisy and Hazel, and this is often [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]].
* NeverSuicide: Verity didn't kill herself, she was killed by Miss Griffin, and that is the reason behind the murders that happen during book 1.
* NoPlaceForAWarrior: [[spoiler: After the four cases in six months earlier in the school year, Daisy and Hazel struggle to come back to schoolgirl like in book 8]]
* NotSoFakePropWeapon: the poison in the Rue Theatre's opening night performance of Romeo and Juliet is exactly that. Poison.
* OddFriendship: Daisy and Hazel fit this criteria, being that Daisy is an outgoing and conventionally attractive white-blonde girl with status who is revered and adored, while Hazel is rather more shy and considers herself unpretty, and is Chinese and often teased for this.
* OldDarkHouse: Fallingford, especially in book two when they are flooded in.
* OnlyInItForTheMoney: Hazel's mother in book 6. She only accepted to help kidnap Teddy because of the ransom, which would leave Hazel with no worries about her future.
* OohMeAccentsSlipping: in book one when "Mamzelle" must take the form register instead it's noted that she has somehow forgotten to roll her Rs. It is later revealed that Mamzelle [[{{Fauxreigner}} is not French]] at all and was posing as a French person in order to get teaching work.
* OppositesAttract: Daisy and Hazel can seem like opposites but they share very similar mindsets.
** Alexander and George also fit this criteria, Alexander being often messy and awkward, while George is neat as a pin and never has a hair out of place.
** At the end of book 5, it is revealed that Bertie Wells, who would rather drink and party than attend his lectures, has fallen for the serious and scholarly Harold Mukherjee.
* OutOfCharacterAlert: Daisy begins to act out-of-character in book 7, which alerts Hazel to what is later revealed to be Daisy’s crush on Martita Torrera.
* OverprotectiveDad: although Hazel has solved several murders, her father will make sure to stop her from detecting. [[spoiler: He gives up by book 9.]]
* Paparazzi – It is often referenced that the Fallingford case attracted a lot of attention to the Wells family, particularly Bertie Wells.
--> '''Uncle Felix:''' Outside are a pack of reporters, just waiting to get our pictures. And we don't need any more of that, not after the Trial last year. Tip your hats down on your head and cover your faces with your free arms.
--> '''Daisy:''' Why should I?
--> '''Uncle Felix:''' Bertie.
* ParentalFavoritism: Although Teddy is not June's biological son, kidnapping him to get a ransom to make sure your Hazel doesn't have to marry for money, definitely qualifies.
* PhoneyCall: [[spoiler: In Top Marks For Murder, Hazel pretends to be calling her family and instead rings Inspector Priestley with news of the murder.]]
* PoliceAreUseless: there might as well not be any, if the only thing they do is bother the Detective Society.
* PromotionToParent: has anyone seen Lord and Lady Hastings after book 2? Because every time the girls spend time with Daisy's family it's anyone but them, most often Uncle Felix.
** [[spoiler:When not even Uncle Felix can make it, it's Inspector Priestly that takes the role]]
* RankUp: Inspector Priestly, unfortunately, profits from the Fallingford case and is promoted to a London inspector – a fact which Daisy is furious about.
* SarcasmBlind: Inspector Priestly jokingly calls Daisy Madam Super and jokes often about their involvement in the case. Daisy does not understand it, ever.
-->'''Priestley:''' There's a line in my official report that reads, ''Acting on a tip-off from schoolgirl detectives Daisy Wells and Hazel Wong, I arrested Stephen Bampton and solved the case''
-->'''Daisy:''' Really?
-->'''Hazel:''' Not really. It's a joke
* SecretlySelfish: Although by solving cases they help people, it's clear that the detectives are in it mainly for the thrill of the enigma.
* SecurityCling: Both Daisy and Hazel and Alexander and George cling onto each other when either excited or faced with a horrific crime.
* SerialKiller: Miss Griffin from Murder Most Unladylike kills three people.
* ShoutOut – Plenty of references are made to Creator/AgathaChristie. Daisy even goes as far as reading Literature/MurderOnTheOrientExpress while on the very same train.
* {{Slave to PR}}: Pretty much everyone in book 4, especially the prefects.
* SmittenTeenageGirl: Daisy is sure Martita can't have done it in book 6, but that's her crush talking.
* SoapOperaDisease: [[spoiler: What does Beanie's mother suffer from? We don't know, but she's ill and unable to attend parent night. She's even sicker in book 9.]]
* SummationGathering: Although they are not always done by the Detective Society, they happen often.
* SympatheticMurderer: Several of the murderers in the series are initially likeable characters: book two's Stephen and book nine's [[spoiler: Heppy]] are good examples.
* TeensAreMonsters: The entirety of book 4 is built around that, from the teen killer and teen victim to the teen secret spreader.
** The book 2 killer, Stephen, was in his last year of high school.
* ThrillerOnTheExpress: Hazel's father takes them on a vacation on the Orient Express, the year later a [[Literature/{{Murder On The Orient Express}} famous book]] is published. What did you think was going to happen?
* TomboyAndGirlyGirl: Daisy and Hazel, to an extent.
* TwistedChristmas: Although the whole situation is done by Christmas day, book 5 takes place during the 1935 Christmas holidays. This includes mistletoe spiked drinks, an almost drowning and two murders.
** [[spoiler: Between a cult, a murder, May almost dying and Daisy faking her death, the 1936 Christmas Holidays are not any better.]]
* WeUsedToBeFriends: Minor example, but Kitty was friends with Clementine when they first got to Deedean, somehow.
* WhyWeCantHaveNiceThings: If you're a detective, don't ever go on vacation. People will die and your vacation will be ruined.
* WhoMurderedTheAsshole: The victim from book two turns out to have been a cheater and scoundrel who had a string of people who wanted him dead for entirely understandable reasons.
** book four's Elizabeth was not nice, and not even her closest friends actually liked her: they only were near her because of the secrets she held.
* WillTheyOrWontThey: Hazel and Alexander.
to:
Murder Most Unladylike is a [[HistoricalDetectiveFiction historical detective]] [[MiddleGradeLiterature children's]] book series by Robin Stevens. It follows Hazel Wong and Daisy Wells as they detect nine murders from September of 1934 to December 1936, in their boarding school and all over the world. The nine books were released from 2014 to 2020 and are accompanied by several short stories that have been collected in two additional books. The first book of a {{Spinoff}} series following Hazel's younger sister May, called [[Literature/{{The Ministry Of Unladylike Activity}} The Ministry of Of Unladylike Activity, Activity]], was published in 2022.
2022.
Theseries's series' books are:
are:
* Murder Most Unladylike(2014)
(2014)
* Arsenic For Tea(2015)
(2015)
* First Class Murder(2015)
(2015)
* Jolly Foul Play(2016)
(2016)
* Mistletoe and Murder(2016)
(2016)
* A Spoonful of Murder(2018)
(2018)
* Death in the Spotlight(2018)
(2018)
* Top Marks for Murder(2019)
(2019)
* Death Sets Sail(2020)
(2020)
--> spoilers up to Death in the Spotlight will not be hidden, including the identity of themurderers.
----
murderers.
----
!! The series provides examplesof:
of:
* AffectionateNickname: Daisy affectionately calls Hazel ‘Watson’.
** Rebecca ‘Beanie’ Martineau is known almost solely by her nickname, and Kitty refers to her as ‘Beans’.
** Rebecca ‘Beanie’ Martineau is known almost solely by her nickname, and Kitty refers to her as ‘Beans’.
* AllGaysLoveTheater: Everything Daisy knows about theatre she has learnt from Bertie. And she herself loves acting more than anything.
anything.
* AlphaBitch: Daisy is loved by allof the teachers, almost worshipped by all of the younger girls, and even the Big Girls respect her. She gets more [[LovableAlphaBitch lovable]] as time progresses.
progresses.
** [[spoiler: After Daisy and Hazel's travel to Hong Kong is book 6 and their time in London in book 7, her influence on the school has loosened and her place has been taken by newcomer Amina.]]
]]
* AmateurSleuth: The entire Wells&Wong Detective Society and their rivals/friends The Junior Pinkertons. Also KidDetective [[spoiler: Although, by the end of book 9, both Daisy and Hazel are working for the Secret services, making them no longer amateurs.]]
]]
** One of the passengers on board the Orient Express, although he's painfully bad atit.
it.
* AlwaysMurder: the mini-mysteries are about much lesser crimes, but every single one of the main books is about amurder.
murder.
** Book 2 starts with the girls investigating Mr Curtis, but later delves into them investigating hisdeath.
death.
** Book 5 should be about two twins playing pranks on each other, but by the end, they have been both beenmurdered.
murdered.
* AssholeVictim: Denis Curtis, in book 2, is an embezzling businessman who almost breaks up Lord and Lady Hastings’marriage
marriage
* BadassTeacher: During all of her lessons during book 2 "Miss Alston" is able to capture the kids in a way few teachers can. That may have something to do with her being a secret service agent in disguisetough.
tough.
** reinforced by her lessons in book 7. Daisy and Hazel are learning very little about school, but a lot about [[MasterOfDisguise disguises]] andcodebreaking.
codebreaking.
* BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor: [[spoiler: in book 8, Daisy wishes to be working on a case, but it quickly backfires as the third murder in two years makes people think that the school should probably be closed.]]
]]
* BigFancyHouse: Fallingford and the WongCompound.
Compound.
* ABirthdayNotABreak: At Daisy's birthday tea, Mr Curtis gets poisoned with arsenic. She was already investigating, but this doesn'thelp.
help.
* BittersweetEnding: Frequently, they untangle a web of lies and scandals in their quest for the truth thatlead leads to those connected to the events destroyed or significantly upset.
upset.
* BoardingSchool: Deepdean. Daisy and Hazel go there and three of the murders take placethere.
there.
* BrilliantButLazy: played with. Hazel and Daisy fake to be this to get by in the school and stay popular. Borders inDeliberateUnderPerformance
DeliberateUnderPerformance
* BrokenPedestal: Daisy with her parents, and Hazel withhers
* [[spoiler: BuryYourGays]]:[[spoiler: Averted. Daisy manages to survive her fall, [[FakingTheDead she is just in hiding]].]]
hers
* ClosedCircle: in book two the town floodedin in, and the police can’t come to the house.
house.
* ADeadlyAffair: played with. Mr Curtis did have an affair with Stephen's mother as a way to steal all of their fortunes, and he does have an affair with Lady Hastings, but the affair isn't the motive, the stealingis.
is.
* DeadlyPrank: What Michael Butler hoped the death of Chummy and Donald would looklike.
like.
* DirtyCop: Daisy thinks that every single policeman is aclodhopper
clodhopper
* DramaticIrony: often present when looking back over the series. For example, Hazel being frustrated when Jocelyn winks at herself and Alexander in First Class Murder – ‘I do hate it when grown-ups imagine romance where there isn’t any.’ – only to end up with him six bookslater.
later.
* DrivesLikeCrazy: Everyone in Hong Kong, and Hazel likes it very much to the point of considering British drivingboring.
boring.
* EntitledBastard: Daisy starts out this way in book one, thankfully she becomes [[LovableAlphaBitch nicer]] as the [[CharacterDevelopment story goeson]].
on]].
* [[spoiler: FakingTheDead]]:[[spoiler: After her fall in book 9, Daisy and her Uncle Felix decide it would be better if she faked her death and joined the secret services.]]
]]
* ExtremelyShortTimespan: every investigation lasts one-week maximum, and the whole series covers little more than twoyears.
years.
* EvilMatriarch: Countess Demidovsky, Alexander’s grandmother. Who, surprisingly, isn’t amurderer.
murderer.
* FamilyDisunion: The Wells family (and guests) come all together for Daisy's fourteenth birthday. Bertie and Daisy find out their mother is cheating on their father, Aunt Saskia steals pretty much everything she can, Uncle Felix is trying to catch a criminal (the man his sister id cheating with), and then said criminal is killed by Bertie's (boy)friend.Yikes.
Yikes.
* {{Fauxreigner}}: It emerges at one point duringthe the first book that "Mam'zelle", the French mistress, is not really French at all but has been posing as a French woman with an exaggerated accent in order to get teaching work.
work.
* FirstDayFromHell: the rest of the dorm decide to play a prank on newcomer Hazel, and they close her in a trunk. For threehours.
hours.
* FreudianExcuseIsNoExcuse: some of thekillers.
killers.
** Stephen's whole family has been destroyed by Mr Curtis, doesn't stop him from being arrested or going ontrial.
trial.
** [[spoiler: Mr Thompson-Bates was the first to try to kill her, doesn't excuse Mrs Tomphson-Bates for trying to poisonhim]]
him]]
** [[spoiler: Theodora Miller was not a [[AbusiveParents good mother]] but Heppy is going to be trial anyway for hermurder]]
murder]]
* FriendOnTheForce: Inspector Priestley, by actually believing them and letting them investigate, has become quite a friend to the Detective Society, to the point that Hazel thing of him as"theirs"
"theirs"
* GenreSavvy: Daisy loves reading murder mysteries, and that is what makes her want to investigate. Helpful when the killer has read the [[Literature/{{Murder On The Orient Express}} same book]] as her and planned to partially recreateit.
it.
* GrewASpine: After their experience in Hong Kong, the relationship between Hazel and Daisy is moreequal.
equal.
* HeterosexualLifePartners: The two main detectives are quite inseparable, to the point that in the two years the series span they don't spend one moment without the other, including when Hazel goes back to Hong Kong to mourn her grandfather. Daisy is not heterosexualthough.
though.
* GreatDetective: The Detective Society members are not even 16 yearsold old, and they solved at least one murder each. Daisy and Hazel have nine.
solved nine.
* HeldGaze: Frequently, Hazel and Alexander made eye contact and Hazel is rendered utterly helpless. \n
--> Alexander nudged me, and I jumped. 'Are you all right?' he whispered, and my world was suddenly narrowed to the three inches of air between ourcheecks.
cheeks.
* HelloAgainOfficer: Inspector Priestley, who turns up on many of their cases. By Death In The Spotlight, Priestley is not at all surprised to see them. [[spoiler: In Top Marks For Murder, they orchestrate his presence on the scene, as he is no longer a Gloucestershire policeman by then.]]
]]
* IWorkAlone: [[CharacterDevelopment In the early books]] Daisy refuses most of the times to let anyone else into the Detective Society, even though they would helpthem.
them.
* InterpolSpecialAgent: Uncle Felix Mountfitchet, also known as M, and LucyLivedon.
Livedon.
* KidHasAPoint: Daisy’s hatred of Mr Curtis turns out to be justified in more ways thanone.
one.
* LetHerGrowUpDear: Uncle Felix is very keen on keeping Daisy and Hazel from "dangerous things" be that murderers or boys. Aunt Lucy is of the opposite belief forboth.
both.
-->'the real problem is,' said Uncle Felix, screwing in his monoclethoughtfully,'which thoughtfully, 'which is more dangerous: men or murder? I can see the case for both, personally. What if we simply send you both to a nunnery?'
nunnery?'
--> Aunt Lucy cleared herthroat.
throat.
-->'I am being denied the nunnery,' said Uncle Felix. 'So. You may see the boys, I suppose, Hazel.'
'
* LoopholeAbuse: Daisy loves poking holes in her uncle’srules.
rules.
* MasterOfDisguise: During her stay in London, Daisy learns to disguise herself, almost to perfection. Hazel can tell the old lady in front of her is Daisy only by theshoes.
shoes.
* MinorCrimeRevealsMajorPlot: Frequently. In book 5, climbing is a crime itself, and important to the wider plot of themurders.
murders.
* MomentKiller: [[spoiler: Hazel does this to herself in book 9 numerous times to avoid Alexander confessing to her, at once point actually grabbing a book at random, pretending that it interests her and running out the room.]]
]]
* MoodWhiplash: Hazel is often subjected to this by Daisy, who can fly from being upset to over-the-moon in the span of asecond.
second.
* [[TheJoyOfX Murder Most X]]: Murder Most Unladylike. Not only the first book is called that, but the series as a whole has been renamedthis.
this.
* MysteryMagnet: Daisy and Hazel, and this is often [[LampshadeHanginglampshaded]].
lampshaded]].
* NeverSuicide: Verity didn't kill herself, she was killed by Miss Griffin, and that is the reason behind the murders that happen during book1.
1.
* NoPlaceForAWarrior: [[spoiler: After the four cases in six months earlier in the school year, Daisy and Hazel struggle to come back to schoolgirl like in book8]]
8]]
* NotSoFakePropWeapon: the poison in the Rue Theatre's opening night performance of Romeo and Juliet is exactly that.Poison.
Poison.
* OddFriendship: Daisy and Hazel fit this criteria, being that Daisy is an outgoing and conventionally attractive white-blonde girl with status who is revered and adored, while Hazel is rather more shy and considers herself unpretty, and is Chinese and often teased forthis.
this.
* OldDarkHouse: Fallingford, especially in book two when they are floodedin.
in.
* OnlyInItForTheMoney: Hazel's mother in book 6. She only accepted to help kidnap Teddy because of the ransom, which would leave Hazel with no worries about herfuture.
future.
* OohMeAccentsSlipping: in book one when "Mamzelle" must take the form register instead it's noted that she has somehow forgotten to roll her Rs. It is later revealed that Mamzelle [[{{Fauxreigner}} is not French]] at all and was posing as a French person in order to get teachingwork.
work.
* OppositesAttract: Daisy and Hazel can seem like opposites but they share very similar mindsets. \n
** Alexander and George also fit this criteria, Alexander being often messy and awkward, while George is neat as a pin and never has a hair out of place.
** At the end of book 5, it is revealed that Bertie Wells, who would rather drink and party than attend his lectures, has fallen for the serious and scholarly Harold Mukherjee.
** At the end of book 5, it is revealed that Bertie Wells, who would rather drink and party than attend his lectures, has fallen for the serious and scholarly Harold Mukherjee.
* OutOfCharacterAlert: Daisy begins to act out-of-character in book 7, which alerts Hazel to what is later revealed to be Daisy’s crush on Martita Torrera.
Torrera.
* OverprotectiveDad: although Hazel has solved several murders, her father will make sure to stop her from detecting. [[spoiler: He gives up by book 9.]]
]]
*Paparazzi – {{Paparazzi}}: It is often referenced that the Fallingford case attracted a lot of attention to the Wells family, particularly Bertie Wells.
Wells.
--> '''Uncle Felix:''' Outside are a pack of reporters, just waiting to get our pictures. And we don't need any more of that, not after the Trial last year. Tip your hats down on your head and cover your faces with your freearms.
arms.
--> '''Daisy:''' Why shouldI?
I?
--> '''Uncle Felix:'''Bertie.
Bertie.
* ParentalFavoritism: Although Teddy is not June's biological son, kidnapping him to get a ransom to make sure your Hazel doesn't have to marry for money, definitelyqualifies.
qualifies.
* PhoneyCall: [[spoiler: In Top Marks For Murder, Hazel pretends to be calling her family and instead rings Inspector Priestley with news of the murder.]]
]]
* PoliceAreUseless: there might as well not be any, if the only thing they do is bother the DetectiveSociety.
Society.
* PromotionToParent: has anyone seen Lord and Lady Hastings after book 2? Because every time the girls spend time with Daisy's family it's anyone but them, most often UncleFelix.
Felix.
** [[spoiler:When not even Uncle Felix can make it, it's Inspector Priestly that takes therole]]
role]]
* RankUp: Inspector Priestly, unfortunately, profits from the Fallingford case and is promoted to a London inspector – a fact which Daisy is furiousabout.
about.
* SarcasmBlind: Inspector Priestly jokingly calls Daisy Madam Super and jokes often about their involvement in the case. Daisy does not understand it,ever.
ever.
-->'''Priestley:''' There's a line in my official report that reads, ''Acting on a tip-off from schoolgirl detectives Daisy Wells and Hazel Wong, I arrested Stephen Bampton and solved thecase''
case''
-->'''Daisy:'''Really?
Really?
-->'''Hazel:''' Not really. It's ajoke
joke
* SecretlySelfish: Although by solving cases they help people, it's clear that the detectives are in it mainly for the thrill of theenigma.
enigma.
* SecurityCling: Both Daisy and Hazel and Alexander and George cling onto each other when either excited or faced with a horrificcrime.
crime.
* SerialKiller: Miss Griffin from Murder Most Unladylike kills threepeople.
people.
* ShoutOut – Plenty of references are made to Creator/AgathaChristie. Daisy even goes as far as reading Literature/MurderOnTheOrientExpress while on the very sametrain.
train.
* {{Slave to PR}}: Pretty much everyone in book 4, especially theprefects.
prefects.
* SmittenTeenageGirl: Daisy is sure Martita can't have done it in book 6, but that's her crushtalking.
talking.
* SoapOperaDisease: [[spoiler: What does Beanie's mother suffer from? We don't know, but she's ill and unable to attend parent night. She's even sicker in book 9.]]
]]
* SummationGathering: Although they are not always done by the Detective Society, they happenoften.
often.
* SympatheticMurderer: Several of the murderers in the series are initially likeable characters: book two's Stephen and book nine's [[spoiler: Heppy]] are goodexamples.
examples.
* TeensAreMonsters: The entirety of book 4 is built around that, from the teen killer and teen victim to the teen secretspreader.
spreader.
** The book 2 killer, Stephen, was in his last year of highschool.
school.
* ThrillerOnTheExpress: Hazel's father takes them on a vacation on the Orient Express, the year later a [[Literature/{{Murder On The Orient Express}} famous book]] is published. What did you think was going tohappen?
happen?
* TomboyAndGirlyGirl: Daisy and Hazel, to anextent.
extent.
* TwistedChristmas: Although the whole situation is done by Christmas day, book 5 takes place during the 1935 Christmas holidays. This includes mistletoe spiked drinks, an almost drowning and twomurders.
murders.
** [[spoiler: Between a cult, a murder, May almost dying and Daisy faking her death, the 1936 Christmas Holidays are not any better.]]
]]
* WeUsedToBeFriends: Minor example, but Kitty was friends with Clementine when they first got to Deedean,somehow.
somehow.
* WhyWeCantHaveNiceThings: If you're a detective, don't ever go on vacation. People will die and your vacation will beruined.
ruined.
* WhoMurderedTheAsshole: The victim from book two turns out to have been a cheater and scoundrel who had a string of people who wanted him dead for entirely understandablereasons.
reasons.
** book four's Elizabeth was not nice, and not even her closest friends actually liked her: they only were near her because of the secrets sheheld.
held.
* WillTheyOrWontThey: Hazel andAlexander.
Alexander.
The
* Murder Most Unladylike
* Arsenic For Tea
* First Class Murder
* Jolly Foul Play
* Mistletoe and Murder
* A Spoonful of Murder
* Death in the Spotlight
* Top Marks for Murder
* Death Sets Sail
--> spoilers up to Death in the Spotlight will not be hidden, including the identity of the
----
----
!! The series provides examples
* AffectionateNickname: Daisy affectionately calls Hazel ‘Watson’.
** Rebecca ‘Beanie’ Martineau is known almost solely by her nickname, and Kitty refers to her as ‘Beans’.
* AlphaBitch: Daisy is loved by all
** [[spoiler: After Daisy and Hazel's travel to Hong Kong is book 6 and their time in London in book 7, her influence on the school has loosened and her place has been taken by newcomer Amina.
* AmateurSleuth: The entire Wells&Wong Detective Society and their rivals/friends The Junior Pinkertons. Also KidDetective [[spoiler: Although, by the end of book 9, both Daisy and Hazel are working for the Secret services, making them no longer amateurs.
** One of the passengers on board the Orient Express, although he's painfully bad at
* AlwaysMurder: the mini-mysteries are about much lesser crimes, but every single one of the main books is about a
** Book 2 starts with the girls investigating Mr Curtis, but later delves into them investigating his
** Book 5 should be about two twins playing pranks on each other, but by the end, they have been both been
* AssholeVictim: Denis Curtis, in book 2, is an embezzling businessman who almost breaks up Lord and Lady Hastings’
* BadassTeacher: During all of her lessons during book 2 "Miss Alston" is able to capture the kids in a way few teachers can. That may have something to do with her being a secret service agent in disguise
** reinforced by her lessons in book 7. Daisy and Hazel are learning very little about school, but a lot about [[MasterOfDisguise disguises]] and
* BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor: [[spoiler: in book 8, Daisy wishes to be working on a case, but it quickly backfires as the third murder in two years makes people think that the school should probably be closed.
* BigFancyHouse: Fallingford and the Wong
* ABirthdayNotABreak: At Daisy's birthday tea, Mr Curtis gets poisoned with arsenic. She was already investigating, but this doesn't
* BittersweetEnding: Frequently, they untangle a web of lies and scandals in their quest for the truth that
* BoardingSchool: Deepdean. Daisy and Hazel go there and three of the murders take place
* BrilliantButLazy: played with. Hazel and Daisy fake to be this to get by in the school and stay popular. Borders in
* BrokenPedestal: Daisy with her parents, and Hazel with
* [[spoiler: BuryYourGays]]:[[spoiler: Averted. Daisy manages to survive her fall, [[FakingTheDead she is just in hiding]].]]
* ClosedCircle: in book two the town flooded
* ADeadlyAffair: played with. Mr Curtis did have an affair with Stephen's mother as a way to steal all of their fortunes, and he does have an affair with Lady Hastings, but the affair isn't the motive, the stealing
* DeadlyPrank: What Michael Butler hoped the death of Chummy and Donald would look
* DirtyCop: Daisy thinks that every single policeman is a
* DramaticIrony: often present when looking back over the series. For example, Hazel being frustrated when Jocelyn winks at herself and Alexander in First Class Murder – ‘I do hate it when grown-ups imagine romance where there isn’t any.’ – only to end up with him six books
* DrivesLikeCrazy: Everyone in Hong Kong, and Hazel likes it very much to the point of considering British driving
* EntitledBastard: Daisy starts out this way in book one, thankfully she becomes [[LovableAlphaBitch nicer]] as the [[CharacterDevelopment story goes
* [[spoiler: FakingTheDead]]:[[spoiler: After her fall in book 9, Daisy and her Uncle Felix decide it would be better if she faked her death and joined the secret services.
* ExtremelyShortTimespan: every investigation lasts one-week maximum, and the whole series covers little more than two
* EvilMatriarch: Countess Demidovsky, Alexander’s grandmother. Who, surprisingly, isn’t a
* FamilyDisunion: The Wells family (and guests) come all together for Daisy's fourteenth birthday. Bertie and Daisy find out their mother is cheating on their father, Aunt Saskia steals pretty much everything she can, Uncle Felix is trying to catch a criminal (the man his sister id cheating with), and then said criminal is killed by Bertie's (boy)friend.
* {{Fauxreigner}}: It emerges at one point during
* FirstDayFromHell: the rest of the dorm decide to play a prank on newcomer Hazel, and they close her in a trunk. For three
* FreudianExcuseIsNoExcuse: some of the
** Stephen's whole family has been destroyed by Mr Curtis, doesn't stop him from being arrested or going on
** [[spoiler: Mr Thompson-Bates was the first to try to kill her, doesn't excuse Mrs Tomphson-Bates for trying to poison
** [[spoiler: Theodora Miller was not a [[AbusiveParents good mother]] but Heppy is going to be trial anyway for her
* FriendOnTheForce: Inspector Priestley, by actually believing them and letting them investigate, has become quite a friend to the Detective Society, to the point that Hazel thing of him as
* GenreSavvy: Daisy loves reading murder mysteries, and that is what makes her want to investigate. Helpful when the killer has read the [[Literature/{{Murder On The Orient Express}} same book]] as her and planned to partially recreate
* GrewASpine: After their experience in Hong Kong, the relationship between Hazel and Daisy is more
* HeterosexualLifePartners: The two main detectives are quite inseparable, to the point that in the two years the series span they don't spend one moment without the other, including when Hazel goes back to Hong Kong to mourn her grandfather. Daisy is not heterosexual
* GreatDetective: The Detective Society members are not even 16 years
* HeldGaze: Frequently, Hazel and Alexander made eye contact and Hazel is rendered utterly helpless.
--> Alexander nudged me, and I jumped. 'Are you all right?' he whispered, and my world was suddenly narrowed to the three inches of air between our
* HelloAgainOfficer: Inspector Priestley, who turns up on many of their cases. By Death In The Spotlight, Priestley is not at all surprised to see them. [[spoiler: In Top Marks For Murder, they orchestrate his presence on the scene, as he is no longer a Gloucestershire policeman by then.
* IWorkAlone: [[CharacterDevelopment In the early books]] Daisy refuses most of the times to let anyone else into the Detective Society, even though they would help
* InterpolSpecialAgent: Uncle Felix Mountfitchet, also known as M, and Lucy
* KidHasAPoint: Daisy’s hatred of Mr Curtis turns out to be justified in more ways than
* LetHerGrowUpDear: Uncle Felix is very keen on keeping Daisy and Hazel from "dangerous things" be that murderers or boys. Aunt Lucy is of the opposite belief for
-->'the real problem is,' said Uncle Felix, screwing in his monocle
--> Aunt Lucy cleared her
-->'I am being denied the nunnery,' said Uncle Felix. 'So. You may see the boys, I suppose, Hazel.
* LoopholeAbuse: Daisy loves poking holes in her uncle’s
* MasterOfDisguise: During her stay in London, Daisy learns to disguise herself, almost to perfection. Hazel can tell the old lady in front of her is Daisy only by the
* MinorCrimeRevealsMajorPlot: Frequently. In book 5, climbing is a crime itself, and important to the wider plot of the
* MomentKiller: [[spoiler: Hazel does this to herself in book 9 numerous times to avoid Alexander confessing to her, at once point actually grabbing a book at random, pretending that it interests her and running out the room.
* MoodWhiplash: Hazel is often subjected to this by Daisy, who can fly from being upset to over-the-moon in the span of a
* [[TheJoyOfX Murder Most X]]: Murder Most Unladylike. Not only the first book is called that, but the series as a whole has been renamed
* MysteryMagnet: Daisy and Hazel, and this is often [[LampshadeHanging
* NeverSuicide: Verity didn't kill herself, she was killed by Miss Griffin, and that is the reason behind the murders that happen during book
* NoPlaceForAWarrior: [[spoiler: After the four cases in six months earlier in the school year, Daisy and Hazel struggle to come back to schoolgirl like in book
* NotSoFakePropWeapon: the poison in the Rue Theatre's opening night performance of Romeo and Juliet is exactly that.
* OddFriendship: Daisy and Hazel fit this criteria, being that Daisy is an outgoing and conventionally attractive white-blonde girl with status who is revered and adored, while Hazel is rather more shy and considers herself unpretty, and is Chinese and often teased for
* OldDarkHouse: Fallingford, especially in book two when they are flooded
* OnlyInItForTheMoney: Hazel's mother in book 6. She only accepted to help kidnap Teddy because of the ransom, which would leave Hazel with no worries about her
* OohMeAccentsSlipping: in book one when "Mamzelle" must take the form register instead it's noted that she has somehow forgotten to roll her Rs. It is later revealed that Mamzelle [[{{Fauxreigner}} is not French]] at all and was posing as a French person in order to get teaching
* OppositesAttract: Daisy and Hazel can seem like opposites but they share very similar mindsets.
** Alexander and George also fit this criteria, Alexander being often messy and awkward, while George is neat as a pin and never has a hair out of place.
** At the end of book 5, it is revealed that Bertie Wells, who would rather drink and party than attend his lectures, has fallen for the serious and scholarly Harold Mukherjee.
* OverprotectiveDad: although Hazel has solved several murders, her father will make sure to stop her from detecting. [[spoiler: He gives up by book 9.
*
--> '''Uncle Felix:''' Outside are a pack of reporters, just waiting to get our pictures. And we don't need any more of that, not after the Trial last year. Tip your hats down on your head and cover your faces with your free
--> '''Daisy:''' Why should
--> '''Uncle Felix:'''
* ParentalFavoritism: Although Teddy is not June's biological son, kidnapping him to get a ransom to make sure your Hazel doesn't have to marry for money, definitely
* PhoneyCall: [[spoiler: In Top Marks For Murder, Hazel pretends to be calling her family and instead rings Inspector Priestley with news of the murder.
* PoliceAreUseless: there might as well not be any, if the only thing they do is bother the Detective
* PromotionToParent: has anyone seen Lord and Lady Hastings after book 2? Because every time the girls spend time with Daisy's family it's anyone but them, most often Uncle
** [[spoiler:When not even Uncle Felix can make it, it's Inspector Priestly that takes the
* RankUp: Inspector Priestly, unfortunately, profits from the Fallingford case and is promoted to a London inspector – a fact which Daisy is furious
* SarcasmBlind: Inspector Priestly jokingly calls Daisy Madam Super and jokes often about their involvement in the case. Daisy does not understand it,
-->'''Priestley:''' There's a line in my official report that reads, ''Acting on a tip-off from schoolgirl detectives Daisy Wells and Hazel Wong, I arrested Stephen Bampton and solved the
-->'''Daisy:'''
-->'''Hazel:''' Not really. It's a
* SecretlySelfish: Although by solving cases they help people, it's clear that the detectives are in it mainly for the thrill of the
* SecurityCling: Both Daisy and Hazel and Alexander and George cling onto each other when either excited or faced with a horrific
* SerialKiller: Miss Griffin from Murder Most Unladylike kills three
* ShoutOut – Plenty of references are made to Creator/AgathaChristie. Daisy even goes as far as reading Literature/MurderOnTheOrientExpress while on the very same
* {{Slave to PR}}: Pretty much everyone in book 4, especially the
* SmittenTeenageGirl: Daisy is sure Martita can't have done it in book 6, but that's her crush
* SoapOperaDisease: [[spoiler: What does Beanie's mother suffer from? We don't know, but she's ill and unable to attend parent night. She's even sicker in book 9.
* SummationGathering: Although they are not always done by the Detective Society, they happen
* SympatheticMurderer: Several of the murderers in the series are initially likeable characters: book two's Stephen and book nine's [[spoiler: Heppy]] are good
* TeensAreMonsters: The entirety of book 4 is built around that, from the teen killer and teen victim to the teen secret
** The book 2 killer, Stephen, was in his last year of high
* ThrillerOnTheExpress: Hazel's father takes them on a vacation on the Orient Express, the year later a [[Literature/{{Murder On The Orient Express}} famous book]] is published. What did you think was going to
* TomboyAndGirlyGirl: Daisy and Hazel, to an
* TwistedChristmas: Although the whole situation is done by Christmas day, book 5 takes place during the 1935 Christmas holidays. This includes mistletoe spiked drinks, an almost drowning and two
** [[spoiler: Between a cult, a murder, May almost dying and Daisy faking her death, the 1936 Christmas Holidays are not any better.
* WeUsedToBeFriends: Minor example, but Kitty was friends with Clementine when they first got to Deedean,
* WhyWeCantHaveNiceThings: If you're a detective, don't ever go on vacation. People will die and your vacation will be
* WhoMurderedTheAsshole: The victim from book two turns out to have been a cheater and scoundrel who had a string of people who wanted him dead for entirely understandable
** book four's Elizabeth was not nice, and not even her closest friends actually liked her: they only were near her because of the secrets she
* WillTheyOrWontThey: Hazel and
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Murder Most Unladylike is a [[HistoricalDetectiveFiction historical detective]] [[MiddleGradeLiterature children's]] book series by Robin Stevens. It follows Hazel Wong and Daisy Wells as they detect nine murders from September of 1934 to December 1936, in their boarding school and all over the world. The nine books were released from 2014 to 2020 and are accompanied by several short stories that have been collected in two additional books. A {{Spinoff}} is planned for 2022 that will follow Hazel's little sister May in her own adventures.
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Murder Most Unladylike is a [[HistoricalDetectiveFiction historical detective]] [[MiddleGradeLiterature children's]] book series by Robin Stevens. It follows Hazel Wong and Daisy Wells as they detect nine murders from September of 1934 to December 1936, in their boarding school and all over the world. The nine books were released from 2014 to 2020 and are accompanied by several short stories that have been collected in two additional books. A The first book of a {{Spinoff}} is planned for 2022 that will follow series following Hazel's little younger sister May May, called The Ministry of Unladylike Activity, was published in her own adventures.
2022.
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* {{Fauxreigner}}: It emerges at one point during the story that "Mam'zelle", the French mistress, is not really French at all but has been posing as a French woman with an exaggerated accent in order to get teaching work.
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* {{Fauxreigner}}: It emerges at one point during the story the first book that "Mam'zelle", the French mistress, is not really French at all but has been posing as a French woman with an exaggerated accent in order to get teaching work.
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** [[spoiler: After Daisy and Hazel's travel to Hong Kong is book 6 and their time in London in book 7, her influence on the school has loosened and her place has been taken by newcomer Amina.]]
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** [[spoiler: After Daisy and Hazel's travel to Hong Kong is book 6 and their time in London in book 7, her influence on the school has loosened and her place has been taken by newcomer Amina.]]
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* BeCarefulWhatYouWhishFor: [[spoiler: in book 8, Daisy wishes to be working on a case, but it quickly backfires as the third murder in two years makes people think that the school should probably be closed.]]
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* BeCarefulWhatYouWhishFor: BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor: [[spoiler: in book 8, Daisy wishes to be working on a case, but it quickly backfires as the third murder in two years makes people think that the school should probably be closed.]]
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* BeCarefulWhatYouWhishFor: [[spoiler: in book 8, Daisy wishes to be working on a case, but it quickly backfires as the third murder in two years makes people think that the school should probably be closed.]]
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* LetHerGrowUpDear: Uncle Felix is very keen on keeping Daisy and Hazel from "dangerous things" be that murderers or boys. Aunt Lucy is of the opposite belief for both.
-->'the real problem is,' said Uncle Felix, screwing in his monocle thoughtfully,'which is more dangerous: men or murder? I can see the case for both, personally. What if we simply send you both to a nunnery?'
--> Aunt Lucy cleared her throat.
-->'I am being denied the nunnery,' said Uncle Felix. 'So. You may see the boys, I suppose, Hazel.'
-->'the real problem is,' said Uncle Felix, screwing in his monocle thoughtfully,'which is more dangerous: men or murder? I can see the case for both, personally. What if we simply send you both to a nunnery?'
--> Aunt Lucy cleared her throat.
-->'I am being denied the nunnery,' said Uncle Felix. 'So. You may see the boys, I suppose, Hazel.'
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** [[spoiler: Mrs Thompson-Bates was the first to try to kill her, doesn't excuse Mrs Tomphson-Bates for trying to poison him]]
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** [[spoiler: Mrs Mr Thompson-Bates was the first to try to kill her, doesn't excuse Mrs Tomphson-Bates for trying to poison him]]
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* HelloAgainOfficer: Inspector Priestley, who turns up on many of their cases. By Death In The Spotlight, Priestley is not at all surprised to see them. [[spoilers: In Top Marks For Murder, they orchestrate his presence on the scene, as he is no longer a Gloucestershire policeman by then.]]
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* HelloAgainOfficer: Inspector Priestley, who turns up on many of their cases. By Death In The Spotlight, Priestley is not at all surprised to see them. [[spoilers: [[spoiler: In Top Marks For Murder, they orchestrate his presence on the scene, as he is no longer a Gloucestershire policeman by then.]]
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* TeensAreMonsters: The entirety of book 5 is built around that, from the teen killer and teen victim to the teen secret spreader.
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* TeensAreMonsters: The entirety of book 5 4 is built around that, from the teen killer and teen victim to the teen secret spreader.
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** book five's Elizabeth was not nice, and not even her closest friends actually liked her: they only were near her because of the secrets she held.
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** book five's four's Elizabeth was not nice, and not even her closest friends actually liked her: they only were near her because of the secrets she held.
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* {{Fauxreigner}}: It emerges at one point during the story that "Mam'zelle", the French mistress, is not really French at all but has been posing as a French woman with an exaggerated accent in order to get teaching work.
* [[TheJoyOfX Murder Most X]]: Murder Most Unladylike. Not only the first book is called that, but the series as a whole has been renamed this.
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* OohMeAccentsSlipping: in book one when "Mamzelle" must take the form register instead it's noted that she has somehow forgotten to roll her Rs. It is later revealed that Mamzelle [[{{Fauxregnier}} is not French]] at all and was posing as a French person in order to get teaching work.
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* OohMeAccentsSlipping: in book one when "Mamzelle" must take the form register instead it's noted that she has somehow forgotten to roll her Rs. It is later revealed that Mamzelle [[{{Fauxregnier}} [[{{Fauxreigner}} is not French]] at all and was posing as a French person in order to get teaching work.
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* OohMeAccentsSlipping: in book one when "Mamzelle" must take the form register instead it's noted that she has somehow forgotten to roll her Rs. It is later revealed that Mamzelle [[{{Fauxregnier}} is not French]] at all and was posing as a French person in order to get teaching work.