Fri 7 Jun 2013
Reviewed by LJ Roberts: ALAN BRADLEY – Speaking from Among the Bones.
Posted by Steve under Bibliographies, Lists & Checklists , Characters , Reviews[4] Comments
Reviews by L. J. Roberts
ALAN BRADLEY – Speaking from Among the Bones. Delacorte Press, hardcover, January 2013.
Genre: Amateur sleuth. Leading character: Flavia de Luce, 5th in series. Setting: England, 1950s.
First Sentence: Blood dripped from the neck of the severed head and fell in a drizzle of red raindrops, clotting into a ruby pool upon the black and white tiles.
Pre-teen Flavia de Luce is excited about the opening of the 500-year-old tomb of Saint Tancred and is determined to witness the event. However, the first body uncovered, is that of Mr. Collicutt, the church organist — dead, wearing a gas mask. With her skill at chemistry, detection and a little help, Flavia has yet another murder to solve.
From the beginning, it is clear that Flavia is a delightful, unusual protagonist. She is 14 and wonderfully irreverent. When discussing how to get a bat out of one of the church organ’s pipes, her suggestion is for her sister to “…play Bach’s Toccata and Fugue in D Minor? Full throttle. That out to fix the little sod.â€
One cannot help but love her. She is an outsider in her own family. She is brilliant, yet has her insecurities. Her sisters have told her she’s adopted so she collects samples of everyone’s blood to test for matching. Her best friends are Gladys, her bicycle which she anthropomorphizes; and Dogger, the shell-shocked soldier who was with her father during WWII and now works for the family. There is such a wonderful bond between Dogger and Flavia. She is daring, but not fearless.
It cannot be overlooked that an older man has created such a vibrant, and realistic, young character. In an interview, he talks about how children of that age are undervalued and too much overlooked, yet it’s a wonderful age as they are just on the cusp of adulthood.
The story is told in first person and Bradley has such a wonderful voice… “Whenever I’m a little blue I think about cyanide, whose color so perfectly reflects my mood.â€
The story is very much character-driven. The series started when Flavia was 11 years old; she is now 14 and we are starting to see her mature. However, those who come
into the series late needn’t worry. Bradley provides sufficient back story for each of the
characters for new readers to know who they are and the relationships between. He also introduces a fascinating new character in the shape of a flora archeologist with a Rolls Royce named Nancy.
Bradley has a wonderful eye for detail and period. He provides us with a real sense of post-war England, still in the stages of uncertainty about the future. He is also able to make chemistry fascinating.
Although character drives the story, the plot doesn’t at all suffer for it. We are taken down curious and shadowy paths. We, mistakenly, think we know where we are going, and we’re wrong. We’re given a delightful dessert filled with fascinating tidbits of information, suspense, resolution and a whopping cliffhanger — but not in a bad way — iced with humor and emotion.
Speaking from Among the Bones lags just a touch in the middle, but finishes with a roar. It is a wonderful book and now ranks among my favorites of the series.
Rating: VG Plus.
The Flavia de Luce series —
1. The Sweetness At the Bottom of the Pie (2009)
2. The Weed That Strings the Hangman’s Bag (2010)
3. A Red Herring Without Mustard (2011)
4. I Am Half Sick of Shadows (2011)
5. Speaking From Among the Bones (2013)
6. The Dead in Their Vaulted Arches (2014)
June 8th, 2013 at 3:42 am
Well, Steve, I’ ve read quite a bit ABOUT this series, triggered by your last and this review, and shall enter it, misgivings not withstanding.
I am not at all sure whether Bradley, as a Canadian never having left the country before receiving the Dagger for this book, has done his homework about post-war Labour-ridden Britain.
Rationing went on until 1954, as in France and the occupied countries, monstrous taxes led to the destruction of old family homes,and a general atmosphere that it didn’t pay to work, because Super Tax would eat it all away .
Is there an explanation why the girls aren’t in boarding school, but at home?
The Doc
June 8th, 2013 at 10:10 am
The old family home, in the book, has definitely been impacted by not having the funds to maintain it. And, while not specifically talked about, there is a real sense of the post-war shortages.
As for not going to boarding school, I would assume it was from not being able to afford it. However, it’s funny, I’ve always been so entranced by the books, it never occurred to me to question why there’s no mention of the girls going to school at all.
It’s the character of Flavia that brings me back every time. I believe there is only one more book in the series. While that saddens me, I agree with Bradley that it would be very hard to have Flavia as a late teen or an adult. Might be interesting though, too.
June 8th, 2013 at 10:46 am
So, a clear recommendation for the series from you, LJ .
The Doc
June 9th, 2013 at 6:11 am
I think we’re supposed to get that it’s an eccentric family where the father has his head in the clouds (or elsewhere) and the girls pretty much raise themselves.