Dreaming of the Bones
β Scribed by Deborah Crombie
- Publisher
- Avon;Clipper Audio, [Distributed by] OneClick Digital
- Year
- 1997;2012
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 220 KB
- Edition
- Unabridged
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN
- 1417574941
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
It is the call Scotland Yard Superintendent Duncan Kincaid never expectedβand one he certainly doesn't want. Victoria, his ex-wife, who walked out without an explanation more than a decade ago, asks him to look into the suicide of local poet, Lydia Brookeβa case that's been officially closed for five years. The troubled young writer's death, Victoria claims, might well have been murder.
No one is more surprised than Kincaid himself when he agrees to investigateβnot even his partner and lover, Sergeant Gemma James. But it's a second death that raises the stakes and plunges Kincaid and James into a labyrinth of dark lies and lethal secrets that stretches all the way back through the twentieth centuryβa death that most assuredly is murder, one that has altered Duncan Kincaid's world forever.
Amazon.com Review
"Deborah Crombie might be the most British of American mystery novelists," said an astute reviewer in reference to Mourn Not Your Dead , the fourth book in her excellent series about Duncan Kincaid, an inoffensively upper-class Scotland Yard superintendent, and Sergeant Gemma James, his rougher-edged partner and lover. In addition to her finely tuned ear for the subtler nuances of Britspeak, Crombie--a resident of Richardson, Texas--achieves a rare and therefore enviable balance between the details of her characters' private lives and the plot of each particular book. That delicate balance is especially welcome in Dreaming of the Bones , when Kincaid's former wife, Dr. Victoria McClellan, threatens his personal and professional equanimity. A Cambridge don, Vic has been writing a biography of poet Lydia Brooke, who claimed kinship to the distinguished World War I bard Rupert Brooke, and whose suicide five years before is now beginning to appear suspiciously like murder.
Review
"Fascinating...Multilayered."
--The New York Times Book Review
"A story of death, obsession and secrets."
--Houston Chronicle
"An elegant, literary mystery...outstanding."
--Mystery Lovers Bookshop News
"Deborah Crombie at her best...This is a story of great depth and understanding."
--Mystery News
"Dreaming of the Bones will make you cry and catch your breath in surprise."
--Chicago Tribune
"Poignant."
--The Orlando Sentinel
"Haunting...The best book in an already accomplished series."
--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
A New York Times Notable Book of the Year
Nominated for the Edgar and the Agatha awards for The Year's Best Novel
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
In this third St Boan mystery, Ned is summoned once again by his Aunt Lal to help the famous but cantankerous poet, Sir Thomas Menhenitt. In confronting the poet's problems, Ned rescues Sir Tom's granddaughter, Jonquil from a bizarre and highly dangerous situation.
Sequel to *A New Beginning* Proof that a small but powerful group of humans have developed a chemical compound that controls werewolves from shifting as well as preventing them from reproducing throws the shifter community into turmoil. For the past couple of years, Jax has remained in a loveles
**A thrilling, inventive follow-up to _The Desert of Souls_ by Howard Andrew Jones, a "rare master of the storyteller's art" (Greenmanreview.com)** As a snowfall blankets 8th century Mosul, a Persian noblewoman arrives at the home of the scholar Dabir and his friend the swordsman Captain Asim. N