The sweetness at the bottom of the pie
Record details
- ISBN: 9780307373250 (electronic bk.)
- ISBN: 0307373258 (electronic bk.)
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Physical Description:
remote
1 online resource (292 pages) - Publisher: [Toronto] : Doubleday Canada, [2009]
- Copyright: ©2009
Content descriptions
Source of Description Note: | Description based on print version record. |
Search for related items by subject
Subject: | Motherless families -- England -- Fiction Detectives -- England -- Fiction Sisters -- England -- Fiction Historical fiction Great Britain -- History -- Fiction |
Genre: | Mystery fiction. Electronic books. |
Other Formats and Editions
Electronic resources
- Random House, Inc.
Winner of the 2007 Crime Writersâ Association Debut Dagger
A delightfully dark English mystery, featuring precocious young sleuth Flavia de Luce and her eccentric family.
The summer of 1950 hasnât offered up anything out of the ordinary for eleven-year-old Flavia de Luce: bicycle explorations around the village, keeping tabs on her neighbours, relentless battles with her older sisters, Ophelia and Daphne, and brewing up poisonous concoctions while plotting revenge in their homeâs abandoned Victorian chemistry lab, which Flavia has claimed for her own.
But then a series of mysterious events gets Flaviaâs attention: A dead bird is found on the doormat, a postage stamp bizarrely pinned to its beak. A mysterious late-night visitor argues with her aloof father, Colonel de Luce, behind closed doors. And in the early morning Flavia finds a red-headed stranger lying in the cucumber patch and watches him take his dying breath. For Flavia, the summer begins in earnest when murder comes to Buckshaw: âI wish I could say I was afraid, but I wasnât. Quite the contrary. This was by far the most interesting thing that had ever happened to me in my entire life.â
Did the stranger die of poisoning? There was a piece missing from Mrs. Mulletâs custard pie, and none of the de Luces would have dared to eat the awful thing. Or could he have been killed by the familyâs loyal handyman, Dogger⦠or by the Colonel himself! At that moment, Flavia commits herself to solving the crime â even if it means keeping information from the village police, in order to protect her family. But then her father confesses to the crime, for the same reason, and itâs up to Flavia to free him of suspicion. Only she has the ingenuity to follow the clues that reveal the victimâs identity, and a conspiracy that reaches back into the de Lucesâ murky past.
A thoroughly entertaining romp of a novel, The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie is inventive and quick-witted, with tongue-in-cheek humour that transcends the macabre seriousness of its subject.