Speaking from Among the Bones: A Flavia de Luce Novel
Speaking from Among the Bones: A Flavia de Luce Novel book cover

Speaking from Among the Bones: A Flavia de Luce Novel

Paperback – December 31, 2013

Price
$18.00
Format
Paperback
Pages
416
Publisher
Bantam
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0385344043
Dimensions
5.2 x 0.9 x 8 inches
Weight
10.2 ounces

Description

Acclaim for Speaking from Among the Bones “[Alan] Bradley scores another success. . . . This series is a grown-up version of Nancy Drew, the Hardy Boys and all those mysteries you fell in love with as a child.” — The San Diego Union-Tribune “The precocious and irrepressible Flavia . . . continues to delight.” — Publishers Weekly (starred review) “Fiendishly brilliant . . . Bradley has created an utterly charming cast of characters . . . as quirky as any British mystery fan could hope for.” —Bookreporter “Delightful and entertaining.” — San Jose Mercury News Acclaim for Alan Bradley’s Flavia de Luce novels “Every Flavia de Luce novel is a reason to celebrate.” — USA Today “Delightful.” —The Boston Globe , on The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie “Utterly beguiling.” — People (four stars), on The Weed That Strings the Hangman’s Bag “Irresistibly appealing.” —The New York Times Book Review , on A Red Herring Without Mustard Alan Bradley is the New York Times bestselling author of many short stories, children’s stories, newspaper columns, and the memoir The Shoebox Bible . His first Flavia de Luce novel, The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie, received the Crime Writers’ Association Debut Dagger Award, the Dilys Award, the Arthur Ellis Award, the Agatha Award, the Macavity Award, and the Barry Award, and was nominated for the Anthony Award. His other Flavia de Luce novels are The Weed That Strings the Hangman’s Bag, A Red Herring Without Mustard , I Am Half-Sick of Shadows , Speaking from Among the Bones, The Dead in Their Vaulted Arches, As Chimney Sweepers Come to Dust, Thrice the Brinded Cat Hath Mew’d, and The Grave’s a Fine and Private Place, as well as the ebook short story “The Curious Case of the Copper Corpse.” Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. •ONE•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. The face wore a grimace of surprise, as if the man had died in the middle of a scream. His teeth, each clearly divided from its neighbor by a black line, were bared in a horrible, silent scream.I couldn’t take my eyes off the thing.The woman who proudly held the gaping head at arm’s length by its curly blue-xadblack hair was wearing a scarlet dress—xadalmost, but not quite, the color of the dead man’s blood.To one side, a servant with downcast eyes held the platter upon which she had carried the head into the room. Seated on a wooden throne, a matron in a saffron dress leaned forward in square-xadjawed pleasure, her hands clenched into fists on the arms of her chair as she took a good look at the grisly trophy. Her name was Herodias, and she was the wife of the king.The younger woman, the one clutching the head, was—at least, according to the historian Flavius Josephus—named Salome. She was the stepdaughter of the king, whose name was Herod, and Herodias was her mother.The detached head, of course, belonged to John the Baptist.I remembered hearing the whole sordid story not more than a month ago when Father read aloud the Second Lesson from the back of the great carved wooden eagle which served as the lectern at St. Tancred’s.On that winter morning I had gazed up, transfixed, just as I was gazing now, at the stained-xadglass window in which this fascinating scene was depicted.Later, during his sermon, the vicar had explained that in Old Testament times, our blood was thought to contain our lives.Of course!Blood!Why hadn’t I thought of it before?“Feely,” I said, tugging at her sleeve, “I have to go home.”My sister ignored me. She peered closely at the music book as, in the dusky shadows of the fading light, her fingers flew like white birds over the keys of the organ.Mendelssohn’s Wie gross ist des Allmächt’gen Güte.“u200a‘How great are the works of the Almighty,’u200a” she told me it meant.Easter was now less than a week away and Feely was trying to whip the piece into shape for her official debut as organist of St. Tancred’s. The flighty Mr. Collicutt, who had held the post only since last summer, had vanished suddenly from our village without explanation and Feely had been asked to step into his shoes.St. Tancred’s went through organists like a python goes through white mice. Years ago, there had been Mr. Taggart, then Mr. Denning. It was now Mr. Collicutt’s kick at the cat.“Feely,” I said. “It’s important. There’s something I have to do.”Feely jabbed one of the ivory coupling buttons with her thumb and the organ gave out a roar. I loved this part of the piece: the point where it leaps in an instant from sounding like a quiet sea at sunset to the snarl of a jungle animal.When it comes to organ music, loud is good—xadat least to my way of thinking.I tucked my knees up under my chin and huddled back into the corner of the choir stall. It was obvious that Feely was going to slog her way through to the end come hell or high water, and I would simply have to wait it out.I looked at my surroundings but there wasn’t much to see. In the feeble glow of the single bulb above the music rack, Feely and I might as well have been castaways on a tiny raft of light in a sea of darkness.By twisting my neck and tilting my head back like a hanged man, I could just make out the head of Saint Tancred, which was carved in English oak at the end of a hammer beam in the roof of the nave. In the weird evening light, he had the look of a man with his nose pressed flat against a window, peering in from the cold to a cozy room with a cheery fire burning on the hearth.I gave him a respectful bob of my head, even though I knew he couldn’t see me since his bones were moldering away in the crypt below. But better safe than sorry.Above my head, on the far side of the chancel, John the Baptist and his murderers had now faded out almost completely. Twilight came quickly in these cloudy days of March and, viewed from inside the church, the windows of St. Tancred’s could change from a rich tapestry of glorious colors to a muddy blackness in less time than it would take you to rattle off one of the longer psalms.To tell the truth, I’d have rather been at home in my chemical laboratory than sitting here in the near-xaddarkness of a drafty old church, but Father had insisted.Even though Feely was six years older than me, Father refused to let her go alone to the church for her almost nightly rehearsals and choir practices.“A lot of strangers likely to be about these days,” he said, referring to the team of archaeologists who would soon be arriving in Bishop’s Lacey to dig up the bones of our patron saint.How I was to defend Feely against the attacks of these savage scholars, Father had not bothered to mention, but I knew there was more to it than that.In the recent past there had been a number of murders in Bishop’s Lacey: fascinating murders in which I had rendered my assistance to Inspector Hewitt of the Hinley Constabulary.In my mind, I ticked off the victims on my fingers: Horace Bonepenny, Rupert Porson, Brookie Harewood, Phyllis Wyvern. . . .One more corpse and I’d have a full hand.Each of them had come to a sticky end in our village, and I knew that Father was uneasy.“It isn’t right, Ophelia,” he said, “for a girl who’s—xadfor a girl your age to be rattling about alone in an old church at night.”“There’s nobody there but the dead.” Feely had laughed, perhaps a little too gaily. “And they don’t bother me. Not nearly so much as the living.”Behind Father’s back, my other sister, Daffy, had licked her wrist and wetted down her hair on both sides of an imaginary part in the middle of her head, like a cat washing its face. She was poking fun at Ned Cropper, the potboy at the Thirteen Drakes, who had the most awful crush on Feely and sometimes followed her about like a bad smell.Feely had scratched her ear to indicate she had understood Daffy’s miming. It was one of those silent signals that fly among sisters like semaphore messages from ship to ship, indecipherable to anyone who doesn’t know the code. Even if Father had seen the gesture, he would not have understood its meaning. Father’s codebook was in a far different language from ours.“Still,” Father had said, “if you’re coming or going after dark, you are to take Flavia with you. It won’t hurt her to learn a few hymns.”Learn a few hymns indeed! Just a couple of months ago when I was confined to bed during the Christmas holidays, Mrs. Mullet, in giggling whispers and hushed pledges of secrecy, had taught me a couple of new ones. I never tired of bellowing:“Hark the herald angels sing,Beecham’s Pills are just the thing.Peace on earth and mercy mild,Two for a man and one for a child!”Either that or:“We Three Kings of Leicester Square,Selling ladies’ underwear,So fantastic, no elastic,Only tuppence a pair.”—xaduntil Feely flung a copy of Hymns Ancient and Modern at my head. One thing I have learned about organists is that they have absolutely no sense of humor.“Feely,” I said, “I’m freezing.”I shivered and buttoned up my cardigan. It was bitterly cold in the church at night. The choir had left an hour ago, and without their warm bodies round me, shoulder to shoulder like singing sardines, it seemed even colder still.But Feely was submerged in Mendelssohn. I might as well have been talking to the moon.Suddenly the organ gave out a fluttering gasp, as if it had choked on something, and the music gargled to a stop.“Oh, fiddle,” Feely said. It was as close to swearing as she ever came—xadat least in church. My sister was a pious fraud.She stood up on the pedals and waddled her way off the organ bench, making a harsh mooing of bass notes. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY NPR •
  • NEW YORK TIMES
  • BESTSELLER
  • From award-winning author Alan Bradley comes the next cozy British mystery starring intrepid young sleuth Flavia de Luce, hailed by
  • USA Today
  • as “one of the most remarkable creations in recent literature.”
  • Eleven-year-old amateur detective and ardent chemist Flavia de Luce is used to digging up clues, whether they’re found among the potions in her laboratory or between the pages of her insufferable sisters’ diaries. What she is
  • not
  • accustomed to is digging up bodies. Upon the five-hundredth anniversary of St. Tancred’s death, the English hamlet of Bishop’s Lacey is busily preparing to open its patron saint’s tomb. Nobody is more excited to peek inside the crypt than Flavia, yet what she finds will halt the proceedings dead in their tracks: the body of Mr. Collicutt, the church organist, his face grotesquely and inexplicably masked. Who held a vendetta against Mr. Collicutt, and why would they hide him in such a sacred resting place? The irrepressible Flavia decides to find out. And what she unearths will prove there’s never such thing as an open-and-shut case.
  • Acclaim for
  • Speaking from Among the Bones
  • “[Alan] Bradley scores another success. . . . This series is a grown-up version of Nancy Drew, the Hardy Boys and all those mysteries you fell in love with as a child.”
  • The
  • San Diego Union-Tribune
  • “The precocious and irrepressible Flavia . . . continues to delight.”
  • Publishers Weekly
  • (starred review)
  • “Fiendishly brilliant . . . Bradley has created an utterly charming cast of characters . . . as quirky as any British mystery fan could hope for.”
  • —Bookreporter
  • “Delightful and entertaining.”
  • San Jose Mercury News
  • Acclaim for Alan Bradley’s beloved Flavia de Luce novels, winners of the Crime Writers’ Association Debut Dagger Award, Barry Award, Agatha Award, Macavity Award, Dilys Winn Award, and Arthur Ellis Award
  • “Every Flavia de Luce novel is a reason to celebrate.”
  • USA Today
  • “Delightful.”
  • —The Boston Globe
  • ,
  • on
  • The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie
  • “Utterly beguiling.”
  • People
  • (four stars), on
  • The Weed That Strings the Hangman’s Bag
  • “Irresistibly appealing.”
  • —The New York Times Book Review
  • ,
  • on
  • A Red Herring Without Mustard

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(1.5K)
★★★★
25%
(616)
★★★
15%
(369)
★★
7%
(172)
-7%
(-172)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Flavia investigates a tomb and impersonates a ghost

The 5th book in the Flavia de Luce series has Flavia becoming involved with the 500th anniversary of St. Tancred, with the commemoration opening his tomb under the church. She manages to weasel her way into the opening of the tomb, where to everyone's surprise, they find the body of the church's missing organist in a gas mask. Flavia cannot resist a good murder mystery and begins her own investigation. This leads her to a ghost legend, a secret tunnel, and a missing jewel. While Flavia is busily working on the case, her home situation is changing drastically, with an engagement, and the potential sale of her family home. She also finds out more about her mother from some unexpected sources. Flavia befriends a flora-archeologist who helps to investigate the case, and Flavia uses chemistry to solve a few puzzles along the way. The book ends in a dramatic fashion, leaving the reader anxious for the next installment.
5 people found this helpful
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Superb Series

As Amazon has gotten to know me over the years I often wonder why it recommends to me some of the books it does, and have sometimes been quite disappointed by quite a few of their selections. I read a hefty amount of mysteries and "cozies" as a sort of candy for my brain. It all started with Agatha Christie and Georgette Heyer, and has now led me to Alan Bradley, whose Flavia de Luce may rival even the great Poirot as my favorite mystery sleuth of all time.
You would think books centering around a preteen in 1950s England who is obsessed with poisons, death, and murder would be strange to find enjoyable, but there is no doubting it. Bradley is brilliant. Each Flavia novel I have read has taken me no longer than 1 or 2 days to read because I simply can't put them down. They have everything you could want in a mystery including Flavia, who just makes me laugh out loud sometimes.
I hope Bradley continues his novels, so that in time my children can read them in the same way I read Christie (who they will also be reading if I have anything to say about it). I would hate this series to end after anything less than 50 books! I want to see Flavia grow up, and see how Bradley handles that!
Well done!
5 people found this helpful
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Love it!

I have read every book (6) of this series, so far. I love this series and am eagerly awaiting the next book. This series is delightful!
2 people found this helpful
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More Esmerelda, Please!

As the church prepares to open the tomb of St. Tancred, in preparation for the parish’s 500th anniversary, they find the body of the former organist in the crypt. Flavia manages to place herself at every discovery and outwits Inspector Hewitt in solving the murder. What’s been lost since the first and third installment is the sisterly torment of Flavia that brought out her quirky personality. As with the previous novel, this is not on a par with Sweetness or Red Herring. Bradley steps up his storytelling, but the new character, Esmerelda the chicken, should have been given a bigger part.
1 people found this helpful
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Each book gets better and better!

Each Flavia de Luce mystery gets better and better. What's not to love about this precocious, pre-adolescent who adores chemistry and sleuthing? Alan Bradley's writing is at the same time smart, funny, and poignant. He has an uncanny way of getting into the head of an 11-year-old girl and making her narratives utterly believable. Speaking from Among the Bones may be my favorite thus far!
1 people found this helpful
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wonderful books

love them all, Flavia is great.

will we find out in a future book what happened to the diamond? Cliffhanger, how will Flavia's life change now that she has that information
1 people found this helpful
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Five Stars

Just as promised.
1 people found this helpful
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FLAVIA THE BRAVE RETURNS!

Anything with Flavia involved, I would adore!!! If there was a cookbook on how to bake only using the chemical make-up, I would have to have it!!!
HOORAY FOR FLAVIA!!!
1 people found this helpful
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Five Stars

I liked the humor and the mystery, plus the unique main character.
1 people found this helpful
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always the best work from this author

simply wonderful!
1 people found this helpful