The Bone Garden: A Novel
by Tess Gerritsen
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loved-it
Read in November, 2007
I just finished reading this book and it definitely was a page turner. I have never read Tess Gerritsen before, and knew nothing about her, but I'm glad I picked this book up.
This is the story about 1830 Boston and present day Boston, and how the lives of people in the past and present collide. In 1830 Boston, the city is rocked with a series of murders by a killer the press has called The West End Reaper. In present day, a woman discovers a body in her yard as she working the soil. This...more
This is the story about 1830 Boston and present day Boston, and how the lives of people in the past and present collide. In 1830 Boston, the city is rocked with a series of murders by a killer the press has called The West End Reaper. In present day, a woman discovers a body in her yard as she working the soil. This...more
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bookshelves:
1800s,
amateur_sleuth,
contemporary_post_1945,
female_author,
massachusetts,
mystery
Read in June, 2008
THE BONE GARDEN (Mys/Hist/Cont- Mass- 1830/Cont) – G+
Gerritsen, Tess – Standalone
Ballantine Books, 2007, US Hardcover – ISBN: 9780345497604
First Sentence: Dearest Margaret, I thank you for your kind condolences, so sincerely offered, for the loss of my darling Amelia.
Newly divorced, Julia Hamill is working on the garden of her new home in rural Massachusetts when she uncovers a skull a woman who Dr. Maura Isles determines was murdered. That revelation, and contact from the f...more
Gerritsen, Tess – Standalone
Ballantine Books, 2007, US Hardcover – ISBN: 9780345497604
First Sentence: Dearest Margaret, I thank you for your kind condolences, so sincerely offered, for the loss of my darling Amelia.
Newly divorced, Julia Hamill is working on the garden of her new home in rural Massachusetts when she uncovers a skull a woman who Dr. Maura Isles determines was murdered. That revelation, and contact from the f...more
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bookshelves:
historical-fiction,
trashythrillers
Read in October, 2007
it shows how little i know about early american history that i can't even figure out if the stuff she's writing about is true or made up or even possible. however, it does make me want to pick up a biography of oliver wendell holmes sr.
the mystery really unravels in the 1800s, in a series of flashback type things, that the present day jane and henry are discovering letters about.
i loved the fact that eliza pushed to have women in medical school, and meggie became the first woman to do i...more
the mystery really unravels in the 1800s, in a series of flashback type things, that the present day jane and henry are discovering letters about.
i loved the fact that eliza pushed to have women in medical school, and meggie became the first woman to do i...more
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Tess Gerritsen’s latest novel The Bone Garden takes us away from her popular Jane Rizzoli and Maura Isles series. Loyal readers of this series will be glad to know that Maura Isles does have a brief role in The Bone Garden.
When reading this book, it is not hard to tell that a lot of research went into it. The history of Boston is fascinating and Gerritsen does an excellent job detailing it. Boston in the 1800’s is a place I would not want to live. It sounds dull and depressing. The book ...more
When reading this book, it is not hard to tell that a lot of research went into it. The history of Boston is fascinating and Gerritsen does an excellent job detailing it. Boston in the 1800’s is a place I would not want to live. It sounds dull and depressing. The book ...more
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Read in September, 2007
Something a little different this time from Gerritsen.
Julia discovers a skeleton buried in the garden of the Boston house she's just moved into and the fractured bones suggest murder. Flashbacks to 1830 tell the story of medical student Norris, an outcast among his wealthier classmates, who meets Rose in a Boston maternity ward, where her sister recently died of childbirth fever. When several gutted bodies turn up in deserted alleyways, Rose and Norris are the only ones to catch a glimpse of t...more
Julia discovers a skeleton buried in the garden of the Boston house she's just moved into and the fractured bones suggest murder. Flashbacks to 1830 tell the story of medical student Norris, an outcast among his wealthier classmates, who meets Rose in a Boston maternity ward, where her sister recently died of childbirth fever. When several gutted bodies turn up in deserted alleyways, Rose and Norris are the only ones to catch a glimpse of t...more
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Read in April, 2008
BOCD, This is a very good stand-alone by a wonderfully talented author.
Julia is trying to start life over as an ex, her self-esteem is pretty much shot, but she is willing to renovate a very old house. She finds a skull in the garden while digging out a flowerbed. This starts the flashbacks to mid-1800s and the story of Rose Connelly and her search for life in America. She finds herself in danger from an unknown serial killer loose on the streets of Boston, near the hospital where Rose's sist...more
Julia is trying to start life over as an ex, her self-esteem is pretty much shot, but she is willing to renovate a very old house. She finds a skull in the garden while digging out a flowerbed. This starts the flashbacks to mid-1800s and the story of Rose Connelly and her search for life in America. She finds herself in danger from an unknown serial killer loose on the streets of Boston, near the hospital where Rose's sist...more
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I was surprised at how much I liked this book as it has a historical drama aspect to it. The historical figure most prominent is Oliver Wendell Holmes but it really doesn't bog down much in trying to be overly detailed and accurate. It is primarily murder mystery that is being solved in the present and back in the early 19th century. The pace of the book is pretty quick and the author throws in a LOT of detail about the practice of medicine back in Holmes' time - it is amazing that anyone ever w...more
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bookshelves:
thriller
When Julia Hamill discovers a buried skeleton in the garden of the house that she has just moved into, she tries to uncover the story behind the bones. With her own research and the help of an elderly relative of the former owner, she discovers a connection between these bones and that of a Boston serial killer from the 1830s known as the West End Reaper.
This is a stand-alone thriller and not part of the author's series featuring Maura Isles and Jane Rizzoli. Two stories in one with the pa...more
This is a stand-alone thriller and not part of the author's series featuring Maura Isles and Jane Rizzoli. Two stories in one with the pa...more
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Read in April, 2008
This book was beautifully written and literally sucked me into the novel as if I was the main character Rose Connelley. The story is about a recently divorced woman who purchases a new home and while tending to her new garden she unintentionally stumbles upon some bones. After deliberation by the local police it is determined that bones are very old.....This discovery is the basis of the book where the reader is brought back to the 1880s to a world new to the medical world. I would recommend not...more
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Read in November, 2007
When I saw that Tess Gerritsen had a new book out and that I could get it online for a fraction of the list price, I bought it without even reading a little blurb about it. Bad move. This book is only tied to Gerritsen's series by a tiny, nearly non-existent thread. Dr. Maura Isles makes a brief guest appearance, and Jane Rizzoli isn't even mentioned. In fact, most of the book takes place in the 1800s. I learned some interesting stuff about the practice of medicine in the 19th century, but ov...more
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Read in June, 2008
I've been a long time fan of Gerritsen, and this book was bit of a departure from her usual writing style and type. I don't know that I'd like a lot of this from her, but this time it was enjoyable. A recently divorced woman is a new homeowner, trying to plant a garden when she runs across a stubborn rock. Only the rock isn't a rock, it's a 120 year old skeleton. The story then flips between the 1880s and present day as the mystery unfolds through a series of letters from a prominent Boston ...more
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bookshelves:
mystery
Read in December, 2007
Julia Hamill buys a house and finds a skeleton buried in the yard. The mystery of the identity of the skeleton is told in stories alternating the present with life in the 1830s.
I listened to the CD version of this story, and I was confused with the shifts between the past and the present. It was difficult to distinguish between the characters and I almost wished for a multi-cast version.
It's hard to say how successful it was to use the time shifts to tell the story. While I appreciate th...more
I listened to the CD version of this story, and I was confused with the shifts between the past and the present. It was difficult to distinguish between the characters and I almost wished for a multi-cast version.
It's hard to say how successful it was to use the time shifts to tell the story. While I appreciate th...more
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Read in November, 2007
recommends it for:
everyone
This is a very interesting book for those who like a little history. It's about a women who is resently devorced and buys her very first home on her own. It may not be much to look at but the house had possibilities. Well when she desides to work in the garden she comes across a body that turns out to be 100 years old. Well this is where the history comes in because the story goes back and forth from the present all the way back to the early 1800's.
This is a very touching story and just to ...more
This is a very touching story and just to ...more
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Read in April, 2008
A page-turner historical fiction/whodunit with some fascinating (and gruesome) glimpses of early 1800s medical school training in the US. Written by a physician - a quick read that will make you grateful you live now instead of then! One of the characters is Oliver Wendell Holmes, not the Supreme Court judge, but his father, who, in 1843, introduced a new practice to American medicine in an attempt to control "childbed fever"...suggesting that physicians wash their hands between patien
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bookshelves:
historical-fiction
Read in December, 2007
This was a love story set in 1830's Boston that came about in the middle of a killing spree by the West End Reaper. Oliver Wendell Holmes features prominently as the friend of the hero, Norris. Entertaining story, but it flashes back between present day and the 1830's which I found kind of annoying. The story (told through letters found in current day) would have been better if it was less encumbered by the flash forwards which really did not add to the novel, they were distracting. A good wh...more
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popfiction
Read in October, 2007
This book was slow going early on, but picked up around page 75. I really liked the historical story that was intertwined with the present -- Rose, Norris, O.W.H. and Dr. Grenville were all meaningful characters, as were others.
I also liked the present day "mystery" and how Gerritsen used "the past" to solve this mystery. I especially loved Henry! He's a riot -- I can just picture him and his contankerous (sp?) self as he insists that it is already too late to "start...more
I also liked the present day "mystery" and how Gerritsen used "the past" to solve this mystery. I especially loved Henry! He's a riot -- I can just picture him and his contankerous (sp?) self as he insists that it is already too late to "start...more
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I just picked this book up at the library because I wanted a book to read and didn't have much time to look. It was sitting on the newly acquired book shelf. This is a wonderful book with well developed characters and story line. Once I started reading it I had a hard time putting it down. When I first picked it up I wasn't sure what to expect from the title. However, it is a combination of history, romance and self-discovery.
I highly recommend this book.
I highly recommend this book.
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Read in January, 2007
I have read other books by Tess Gerritsen.
In the past I would rate her books a B minus.
I almost was going to wait for paperback to buy this book.
She went all out of this book. CSI and history combined.
I love the history and combining with modern science.
It is a great read and it is obvious she spent alot of
thought writing. Unlike many writers who write the
first book and others are not as good. This writer is
at the top of her writing.
In the past I would rate her books a B minus.
I almost was going to wait for paperback to buy this book.
She went all out of this book. CSI and history combined.
I love the history and combining with modern science.
It is a great read and it is obvious she spent alot of
thought writing. Unlike many writers who write the
first book and others are not as good. This writer is
at the top of her writing.
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Read in January, 2008
Not my favorite Gerritsen as I was reading it. Bounces between present day and 1830 Boston, which I did enjoy. The glimpse of medical practice and medical schools in 19th century Boston was intriguing. At times, I felt as though I'd accidently grabbed an historical romance novel and became bored. However, she didn't stay in that mode long before the action/suspense was restored. The ending was quite well done and redeemed the earlier frustrations.
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Read in August, 2008
I really like all of Tess Gerristen's books, but so far, I think THIS is my favorite. I didn't even think I liked books with a historical fiction angle...I suppose I do, because this well over half HF.
The Boston Globe review says that Tess always puts her medical training to ghoulish use...and that may be true, but she also brings great characters and emotion to her books as well.
It just came out in paperback so...go get it ya'll!
The Boston Globe review says that Tess always puts her medical training to ghoulish use...and that may be true, but she also brings great characters and emotion to her books as well.
It just came out in paperback so...go get it ya'll!
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