For Dazzlerdream: Flavia de Luce and The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie
My screen name is Jordansdream, not Guest and a number sequence. Somehow I seem to be signed in as a guest.
Alan Bradley's novel The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie introduces Flavia de Luce, an eleven year-old girl detective in the spirit of Nancy Drew yet with more humor and eccentricity than Nancy possesses in the original novels. While Bradley's intended audience encompasses all readers of detective fiction, the story presents neither foul language nor the violence common to modern popular fiction. Parents of young adult readers have nothing to fear.
Alan Bradley's novel The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie introduces Flavia de Luce, an eleven year-old girl detective in the spirit of Nancy Drew yet with more humor and eccentricity than Nancy possesses in the original novels. While Bradley's intended audience encompasses all readers of detective fiction, the story presents neither foul language nor the violence common to modern popular fiction. Parents of young adult readers have nothing to fear.
Halfway through the latest in the series, Thrice the Brinded Cat Hath Mewed, I realized how much Flavia has in common with both Nancy Drew and Jane Darcy, Nancy for obvious reasons and Jane because Flavia lives in the Buckshaw, a stately house suffering from a decade or more of deferred maintenance and bursting with oddities behind every door; among these are a mouse infested Rolls Royce up on blocks in the stable and an unheated wing with a complete chemical laboratory. Imagine Pemberley falling to rack and ruin in 1950.
Here is a quote from the Guardian about The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie:
"Set in an English village in 1950, The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie reads like a cross between Dodie Smith's I Capture the Castle (posh family fallen on hard times, dead mother, disengaged father, crumbling pile) and the Addams family.... A strong plot, involving philately, ornithology and prestidigitation, and a wonderful supporting cast make this Canadian novelist's debut delightfully entertaining."
Edited to add: I just read that Bradley's novels are in development for television, hope the program does Flavia, family, friends, villains, and all manner of other weirdos justice.
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