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Nicky's Reviews > A Morbid Taste for Bones

A Morbid Taste for Bones by Ellis Peters
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really liked it
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.
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Reading Progress

Finished Reading
August 2, 2010 – Shelved (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

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