Ratings33
Average rating3.8
When the tomb of St. Tancred is opened at a village church in Bishop's Lacey, its shocking contents lead to another case for Flavia de Luce, where greed, pride and murder result in old secrets coming to light, along with a forgotten flower that hasn't been seen for half a thousand years.
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11 primary books12 released booksFlavia de Luce is a 12-book series with 11 primary works first released in 2009 with contributions by Alan Bradley.
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Again I love these books. They are so much fun. I am a little put off by a cliff hanger at the end. I MUST get the next book.
What's to be said about this book that I haven't said about the others? Flavia's her typical charming, precocious, incorrigible self. Perhaps a bit more clever than we've seen her before, definitely with less a sense of self-preservation than we've seen previously. Her sisters are a bit, more human? Or maybe Flavia's portraying them more honestly/more sympathetically. The financial pressures her father's under are more and more pressing, causing everyone to be a bit more realistic, it seems.
Still, that doesn't deter Flavia from doing her thing when a body is discovered. It's everything you want in a Flavia de Luce novel – very, very smart conclusion to this mystery.
“Was sorrow, in the end, a private thing? A closed container? Something that, like a bucket of water, could be borne only on a single pair of shoulders?”
The village of Bishop's Lacey is preparing to open the tomb of it's patron saint, St. Tancred, on the five-hundredth anniversary of the saints death. Flavia de Luce is excited to take a peak inside, as she does love a dead body. However, when the body of the church's organist, Mr. Collicut, is found inside, the town is thrown into a tizzy. Who would want to kill an organist, and why hide him in the saint's tomb? Flavia decides to investigate and what she learns is a surprise to everyone.
This book proved to be more complex in plot that previous installments, with more oddball characters, more seemingly unrelated clues, and more plot twists. However, in the last third of the novel, the story came together and clues that were seemingly throwaways or misleading came together in spectacular fashion. This book also deepened the ever present financial situation the de Luce family is embroiled in, as well as worked in some emotional developments in Flavia's relationship with her older sisters Daphne and Ophelia. And, while I didn't need the push, the jaw-dropping cliffhanger Bradley included in the novel's final page has guaranteed that I'll be gobbling up book six in the series as soon as it hits the shelves.
Am I the only one who wanted to strangle Flavia's father? He loved Harriet so much that he would rather part with her house then with one very valuable book, because they have signed it together? Aaaargh.