The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie (A Flavia de Luce Mystery, #1)
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The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie (Flavia de Luce #1)

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3.76 of 5 stars 3.76  ·  rating details  ·  29,849 ratings  ·  6,578 reviews
Summer 1950 in the 300-year old decaying grand mansion of Buckshaw England, Flavia de Luce cleverly escapes from bondage in an attic cupboard, then we learn she is a precocious 11. Her knowledge of trivia is astounding and true, such as Buckland who ate a king's heart. The skilled chemist has a passion for poison, like her decade-vanished (mysteriously) mother Harriet. In...more

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David
This book will not be published in the US until mid-2009.

I absolutely loved Sweetness. The narrator-protagonist is one of the cleverest, liveliest, most entertaining characters I have had the pleasure to meet in many a year. I laughed aloud many times and couldn't wait to get back to reading this gem. Flavia is the 11-year-old daughter of a widower in England in the 50s. She loves science and mystery, despises her haughty clueless sisters, and is plotting to poison them and get away with it. Whe...more
Hannah
Hannah rated it 2 of 5 stars false  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Hannah by: Tatiana G.
Shelves: 2010-reads, mysteries
I really wanted to like this more then I ended up doing. The story started off slowly, then picked up steam with a murder to solve and some interesting backstory on stamps. What hindered my enjoyment of the book, the story and the murder mystery was, unfortunately, the main character and detective: Flavia duLuce.

To say that young Flavia is precocious is an understatement. She has to be one of the most intelligent, well spoken, criminal minds since Sherlock Holmes. Problem is, she's only 11 years...more
Felicia
This book probably deserves 4 stars, but to me, as far as how much I enjoyed it, 5 stars baby!

Having just read Steig Larssen's "Girl with the Dragon Tattoo" I hadn't expected to stumble on a heroine as quickly that I'd love as much. But Flavia fits the bill!

This is a historical mystery, set in England in the late 40's/ (51 maybe?) Anyway, Flavia is 11 going on 40. She's a genius, perhaps a mad one, who knows. She is drawn into a wonderful mystery that I don't want to spoil, but her tenacity and...more
Trin
A historical mystery, set in England, narrated by a precocious 11-year-old girl. I feel like I should have loved this, but mostly it just bored me. Flavia’s narration, designed to show off how brilliant she is, lacked the necessary wit and charm, and her investigation into a couple of murders and some missing stamps was full of weird leaps of logic and sideways-step conclusions. I never felt involved or like any part of the story was real or mattered.
Tatiana
Tatiana rated it 4 of 5 stars false  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: fans of non-violent mysteries
Flavia de Luce is an 11-year old amateur sleuth, a future chemist and poison enthusiast. She lives with her widowed father and two older sisters at Buckshaw - a decaying English country-side mansion. Flavia's days are occupied with chemical experiments and schemes of spiking her evil older sister Ophelia's lipstick with poison ivy. That is until one fateful day a dead bird with a postage stamp stuck to its beak is found on the doorstep of Buckshaw. Even more, soon after Flavia finds a dead man i...more
Brenda
Brenda rated it 4 of 5 stars false
Clever plot, unusual subject (stamp collecting), interesting setting and time, and amusing characters flesh out this funny little mystery. Flavia is a smart and snarky little detective whose passion is poison. I look forward to more Flavia.
Lisa Vegan
Lisa Vegan rated it 5 of 5 stars false  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: readers who enjoy quirky and unusual mysteries
Delightful!

I loved this quirky book.

The amateur sleuth and chemistry enthusiast Flavia de Luce is a very unusual 11 year old, but I’ve known many 11 year olds unusual in their own ways, so Flavia worked for me just fine. She’s completely over the top, yet somehow believable, at least within the narrative. She’s a fabulous character and a brilliant creation.

I smiled several times on almost every page, especially in the first part of the book. As with many mysteries, there was some quite scary (f...more
Misty
Flavia de Luce is not your average eleven year old. She lives in a decaying mansion. She has a passion for chemistry, especially poisons. And when she finds a man dying in her cucumber patch, it doesn't occur to her to be worried or scared. Instead, Flavia senses something delicious may come of it: adventure.
Thus Flavia sets out to find out just who the man is, and how he came to be dying in her cucumber patch. But what starts off as a fun, mysterious way to spend the summer of 1950 turns into s...more
Sparrow
Sparrow rated it 3 of 5 stars false  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Sparrow by: tracey coleman and Linda Harrison
Shelves: reviewed
This book is CSI to The Series of Unfortunate Events' McGyver. In my scale, a three-star rating is neutral, and that's a pretty accurate evaluation of how I feel about this story. At the risk of sounding disapproving, I'm going to make a couple of notes about why I didn't love the book. They're not things I really disliked about the book, though, just to be clear. I'm also really terrible about reading mystery stories, so, I’m disqualifying myself from evaluation. These are my general reactions,...more
Nadia
Finally! I'm done! The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie has been read and crossed off of my TBR list. And now I must ask you not to hate me, because truthfully, though I did enjoy aspects of the book, I did not love it. I found it to be rather predictable, long-winded and slightly dull at times. There were moments when I had to put the book down or just rush ahead in order to avoid a passage that went on about something or other that just didn't hold my interest. I can understand why this book...more
Janina
A wonderfully nostalgic mystery featuring a likable if slightly odd heroine set in a small and charming English village in the 1950s. If you like Sherlock Holmes and Agatha Christie, don’t mind a chemistry-obsessed main character sounding a little too old for her eleven years and want to solve a crime alongside her, I think this is for you. The mystery isn’t too hard to unravel, but the story behind it is interesting and I enjoyed putting the pieces of the puzzle together myself. Additionally, F...more
Margaret
Boy, I really wanted to like this book more - it has such promise! A brainy 11 year old sleuth(ess) who's into poisons and chemistry, plus the book starts out with her escaping from being tied up and thrown into a closet of her huge, stately English house - all very promising. I thought at first I was getting a 1950's British "Wednesday" (Addams). But things don't turn out that way. Flavia de Luce, the precocious main character (the book is told first person), just didn't ring consistently true...more
Meagan
I'm not usually one for mysteries because they're so much about the plot and not so much about the character, so it takes a good one to keep me interested.

Unfortunatley, this one did not. I found it terribly dry and borderline nodded off at several points. I guess I was hoping for more of a 'Mysterious case of the dog in the nighttime'. Instead it just seemed to almost trudge along at an alarmingly tottering pace.

I did find the main character, Flavia, fairly charming and I think if she were wri...more
Heather (DeathByBook)
This is a new favorite! I read it in two sittings and am ready to start agiain. Flavia de Luce is one of my top new detectives. I only wish I could have her over for tea to discuss the difficulty of living with older sisters and perhaps, poisons. I'm sure it has been said by many and I agree, that this book is an absolute delight.
Kasia S.
I cant' believe this is the author's first work, in short it's really amazing, I mean a gloriously adorable kaleidoscope of words and textures and emotions, pure bliss to read! Set in 1950's England, the mystery has a rustic feel to it but is very easy to read and enjoy. It's not often that the protagonist is an eleven year old little girl, who's as feisty and cunning as it gets. Flava de Luce has a love affair with chemistry. Glass flasks and potions are more fun than hanging out and doing kid...more
Nancy
A mystery about a precocious child, whom I would like to like, but suspect that she would not be enjoyable to be around. Flavia, when not tormenting her eldest sister, attempts to solve a murder in 1950 in Great Britain. I wanted to like this book, as much as the title appealed to me, but only finished out of a sense of duty, having bought the book based on the reviews rather than borrowing it. A good lesson, to remind me of the perils of random purchasing.

My quibbles, if anyone is so interested...more
Michael
Full review on my blog.
This is a pleasing little murder mystery by Alan Bradbury set in rural England during the early 1950s. You've got to love Flavia de Luce. She is something akin to an 11 year old female Sherlock Holmes before he honed his deductive skills. She's brilliant but still too full of her own cleverness to spot enough of her mistakes early enough to stay out of trouble. Her head is also full of a riot of information, jostling for attention so much that the important clues sometimes...more
Kathryn
"There are times, Miss de Luce... when you deserve a brass medal. And there are other times when you deserve to be sent to your room with bread and water." -- Inspector Hewitt to Flavia de Luce: budding sleuth, brilliant chemist, and diabolical eleven-year-old.

After very high hopes, I almost gave up on "The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie" after about seven chapters, finding little literary sweetness to induce in me a hunger to devour the remaining pages. Yet, the overwhelmingly positive revi...more
Megan Franks
Delightful. That's how I'd describe this book in one word. If you would have told me that the book is about a precocious, intelligent, chemistry-loving 11-year-old who investigates a murder mystery involving postage stamps, I would have given you a strange look and politely declined. But this book is surprising; it's one of those good reads that you look forward to picking up each night. I thoroughly enjoyed the character of Flavia and the mystery kept me guessing throughout. It wasn't until aft...more
Megt
Megt rated it 5 of 5 stars false  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: everyone
Recommended to Megt by: a book store
This book potrays the wondorous ingredients of a chemist's work as the plot unfolds to create what it would seem to be Flavia de Luce in the time of 1950 Buckshaw. The daring story of the sudden murder will keep you entranced to the very last word. I love this book for it's marelous way of taking me back in time to the life of young Flavia.
 Carol jinx~☆~
I must admit that I bought this book because of its cover. I know you can't judge a book by its cover...yeah whatever.
Anyway, I loved the character of Flavia De Luce and her knowledge of chemistry is enough to get her in a little bit of trouble. Starting out with a dead bird on the porch with a postage stamp on its beak and then a dead man in the cucumber patch, she remarks:

"I wish I could say I was afraid, but I wasn’t. Quite the contrary. This was by far the most interesting thing that had eve...more
Kathryn
To think I started this once and thought I didn't like it. This is a delightful book. Flavia is 11 and really smart. She is quite the chemist and loves to concoct poisons...such a fun little girl. She named her bicycle Gladys, how cute is that? She is as smart as a whip and understands people better than I think I ever will. I'm not a lover of mysteries, and the mystery part was a very small detail in this wonderful book. It was much more about all the characters. Read it, I know you will love i...more
Carol
Flavia de Luce tells her story which opens with her having been gagged and locked inside a dark closet by her sisters, Ophelia and Daphne. Daphne is thirteen and Ophelia is seventeen and Flavia is only eleven. Flavia is a fascinating character. She spends hours in her chem. lab on the top floor of the east wing of the family mansion, Buckshaw. Flavia specializes in poisonous chemical combinations. She taught herself the considerable chemistry knowledge she has by starting with Intro. to Chemist...more
Kinga
Right in the beginning I have to confess: I bow with pleasure to the steady critical success of this book. It is a fine quality and totally enjoyable summer (beach) reading, no doubt.

At first glance it is a traditional whodunnit with a twist: an exceptionally bright (and exceptionally wordy) 11-year-old girl is our tour guide, or the detective if you like. The story moves around some famous and very valuable stamps, stamp collecting, respectful and shady stamp collectors and so forth. Let's leav...more
Djrmel
A historical fiction cozy with a child sleuth who doesn't have any special powers beyond her own intellect - now that's an original idea for a book! Bradley does quite a good job of balancing his genre's, never letting the story of how life was changing for the landed gentry in post WWII England over shadow the convoluted whodunit (complete with requisite appearances of a cat and tea kettles). Like most cozies, the mystery isn't all that challenging to figure out, so missteps and red herrings ar...more
Shirley
http://www.flaviadeluce.com/view-auth...
I love Flavia and will definitely read Alan's next book (on my Kindle).
The clues were so deftly given and then explained. So nice to have the threads tied up nicely when a book ends.
Dianne
Charming and delightful introduction to Flavia de Luce, 11-year-old chemistry-loving supersleuth. Nancy Drew in England, with the additional fun of Flavia's addiction to things scientific. A rollicking fun read.
Penelope
Penelope rated it 5 of 5 stars false
Shelves: crime
A thoroughly wonderful novel with one of the most engaging heroines I've come across. Each page is a joy to read and the mystery is certainly not child's play. A divine beginning to new series.
Aubrey  Tate
I can sum this book up in one word: FUN! But I can't leave you at just one word.

Without Flavia this would not have been quite the book it is. Alan Bradley created a really unique character with her! She's probably one of my favorite characters now. Flavia reminds me of Lisbeth from The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. Granted, they are COMPLETELY different characters but when they are present they make the books great. I would have loved to have been as inquisitive and intelligent as Flavia as a yo...more
Amy
Fabulous! Flavia De Luce is the most precious detective ever! Also, I love a book with a dead bird on the cover; maks my day.
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Special chat with...: Flavia de Luce TV series 7 11 May 15, 2012 02:26pm  
Q&A with Alan...: Flavia de Luce TV series 3 10 May 15, 2012 05:45am  
ELEVEN READERS CL...: Rationale for "The Sweetness of the Bottom of the Pie" 3 5 May 14, 2012 07:07pm  
Flavia de Luce TV series 2 35 May 13, 2012 07:40am  
Let's Read Someth...: ***SPOILER*** Discussion of Sweetness at Bottom of the Pie 14 7 Apr 09, 2012 08:36am  
Isaacson, not Iss...: vocab 4 2 Feb 29, 2012 10:02pm  
The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie (Flavia de Luce, #1)
The Sweetness At The Bottom Of The Pie: A Flavia De Luce Mystery (Paperback)
The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie (A Flavia de Luce Mystery, #1)
The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie (A Flavia de Luce Mystery, #1)
The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie (A Flavia de Luce Mystery, #1)

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Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the GoodReads database with this name. See this thread for more information.

With an education in electronic engineering, Alan worked at numerous radio and television stations in Ontario, and at Ryerson Polytechnical Institute (now Ryerson University) in Toronto, before becoming Director of Television Engineering in the media centre at the Universit...more
More about Alan Bradley...
The Weed That Strings the Hangman's Bag (Flavia de Luce, #2) A Red Herring Without Mustard (Flavia de Luce, #3) I Am Half Sick Of Shadows (Flavia De Luce, #4) Flavia de Luce 3-Book Bundle: The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie, The Weed That Strings the Hangman's Bag, A Red Herring Without Mustard The Shoebox Bible

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