Book 3 Review
The book The
Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie by Alan Bradley is set in the Buckshaw
mansion in the 1950s in England. A little eleven-year old, chemisty-obessesed
girl named Flavia de Luce is the narrator. A dead bird is found on her doorstep
with a postage stamp pinned to its beak. That same night, she finds a man lying
in the cucumber patch and watches him as he says his last word, “Vale”. The reader follows her on her
quest to find the murderer.
This
book is enjoyable because of the unique characters that it contains. Flavia is
the most intriguing to me. In a recent interview with Alan Bradley, he said,
“Flavia understands chemistry better than she understands life in her own
household. That idealism has great interest for me. Flavia is completely blind
to family relationships. Her experience of life is zero. She sees things but
doesn’t understand them.” Flavia relies on chemistry whenever she is
frustrated. Even when she got a cold, she concocted her own medicine with eucalyptus
leaves and chicken broth, calling it “chicken fizz”. Flavia is always seeking
out adventure. She loves the fact that a murder needs to be solved, and she
doesn’t care what measures have to be taken. Flavia also tends to make fun of
her two sisters, Ophelia and Daphne, quite a lot. She thinks Ophelia is
obsessed with herself too much, because she is always looking in the mirror.
Flavia then decides to put poison ivy in her lipstick to make her break out.
The reader can obviously relate to Flavia because of her curious hobbies and
revenge on siblings.
The
book is a story that evokes emotion from the reader. It lets them relate
themselves to a quirky eleven-year-old girl, and use their imagination to solve
the mystery. It also lets the reader struggle a bit with moral issues
intertwined within the plot. If Dogger, the gardener, murdered Horace Bonepenny
it would perfectly acceptable because he occasionally has episodes where he
can’t remember anything. The reader also trusts Dogger because he is extremely
trustworthy and loyal to the de Luce family. Then we have the issue of Flavia’s
father being the potential suspect. Readers are torn at this point because they
know that he had good reasons to get back at Horace, with him potentially
killing his favorite schoolmaster and getting away with it because most people
believed it was suicide. The novel really does a great job at getting inside of
the minds of readers.
The
writing style is pretty simple and sometimes seems plain if someone was just
flipping through the book, but when reading, it feels organized and smooth,
with flowing vocabulary. He uses lots of similes, “Whenever I heat this music
it makes me think of running so fast that my legs can barely keep up with
themselves as I swoop from side to side, mewing into the wind, like a rapturous
seagull. Most of his style comes out through Flavia’s humorous jokes and view
on the world around her. “And don’t puff out your cheeks like that: It makes
you look like a petulant pear”. Flavia’s humor is what keeps the reader
interested throughout the novel because she provides the most interesting
commentary. Even when she was kidnapped, gagged and tied up, she said she
thought the situation was amusing. Bradley shows that children are usually the
bravest and most positive people on the planet.
I
would give this book an overall 4.5 stars because of the entertaining
perspective, interesting characters, hidden themes, and smooth writing style.
This book was as spunky, strange, and unpredictable.
Book Cover:
Photo of Alan Bradley:
Alan Bradley interview on abebooks.com:
http://www.abebooks.com/books/authors-corner/alan-bradley.shtml
Book Trailer:
Good commentary on Flavia. I also like how paragraph 3 shows the way the plot works--good insight and analysis!
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