Nicky's Reviews > A Morbid Taste for Bones
A Morbid Taste for Bones (Chronicles of Brother Cadfael #1)
by
by

Nicky's review
bookshelves: mystery, crime, historical-fiction-alternatehistory
Jun 17, 2020
bookshelves: mystery, crime, historical-fiction-alternatehistory
Read 4 times. Last read February 7, 2020.
It’s been ages since I first read this book, but the series has always stuck in my mind � not least because it is the only series that both my parents have ever recommended to me. So after someone mentioned reading them on Pillowfort, I ended up grabbing the ebooks via the library (though none of the libraries I’m a member of has the full series, ugh) and settling down to a reread of the first one. I think I’ve read the second one too, but that might be where I stopped.
In any case, the Brother Cadfael books are mysterious whose main character is a Benedictine monk with a rather colourful past. Content now in the cloister, Cadfael nonetheless manages to get himself taken along to Wales on a small matter of stealing a local saint for the greater glory of the monastery. He’s Welsh, so he’s useful as an interpreter � and he understands the people and the passions stirred up by the Benedictine delegation. He has faith, but a cynical eye, and he doesn’t for a moment accept that gentle Saint Winifred is behind the dastardly murder of a local landowner.
It’s a fun little mystery; the characters are mostly more types than fully drawn people, but with a touch of Cadfael’s cynical view of them to enliven things. The genuinely pious but deeply ambitious Prior is well-done; we don’t see into his heart directly, but his actions and words lay him bare. Likewise, there’s something rather touching about Peredur and his thwarted passion for Sioned.
I do enjoy the setting in Wales, and the us-vs-them mentality that’s so quickly sketched out. It’s carefully dealt with, despite the temptation to put them at each others� throats; there’s respect and a will to work together, alongside the misunderstandings and stiff-necked pride.
It all wraps up nicely � very nicely and conveniently, but in a way that’s enjoyable because it’s poetic justice � and Cadfael settles back into the status quo, napping through meetings and tending to his garden. Until the next mystery, that is.
In any case, the Brother Cadfael books are mysterious whose main character is a Benedictine monk with a rather colourful past. Content now in the cloister, Cadfael nonetheless manages to get himself taken along to Wales on a small matter of stealing a local saint for the greater glory of the monastery. He’s Welsh, so he’s useful as an interpreter � and he understands the people and the passions stirred up by the Benedictine delegation. He has faith, but a cynical eye, and he doesn’t for a moment accept that gentle Saint Winifred is behind the dastardly murder of a local landowner.
It’s a fun little mystery; the characters are mostly more types than fully drawn people, but with a touch of Cadfael’s cynical view of them to enliven things. The genuinely pious but deeply ambitious Prior is well-done; we don’t see into his heart directly, but his actions and words lay him bare. Likewise, there’s something rather touching about Peredur and his thwarted passion for Sioned.
I do enjoy the setting in Wales, and the us-vs-them mentality that’s so quickly sketched out. It’s carefully dealt with, despite the temptation to put them at each others� throats; there’s respect and a will to work together, alongside the misunderstandings and stiff-necked pride.
It all wraps up nicely � very nicely and conveniently, but in a way that’s enjoyable because it’s poetic justice � and Cadfael settles back into the status quo, napping through meetings and tending to his garden. Until the next mystery, that is.
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Reading Progress
Finished Reading
August 2, 2010
– Shelved
(Mass Market Paperback Edition)
Started Reading
(Mass Market Paperback Edition)
August 3, 2010
–
Finished Reading
(Mass Market Paperback Edition)
November 1, 2012
–
Started Reading
(Paperback Edition)
November 1, 2012
– Shelved
(Paperback Edition)
November 1, 2012
–
Finished Reading
(Paperback Edition)
Started Reading
February 7, 2020
–
Finished Reading
June 17, 2020
– Shelved