The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie

CWA Dagger awards, 2007

Buy Now:

Audiobook Downloadable / ISBN-13: 9781409113447

Price: £14.99

ON SALE: 4th February 2010

Genre: Classic Crime / Crime & Mystery / Historical Mysteries

Disclosure: If you buy products using the retailer buttons above, we may earn a commission from the retailers you visit.

For very nearly eleven-year-old Flavia de Luce, the discovery of a dead snipe on the doorstep of Buckshaw, the crumbling de Luce country seat, was a marvellous mystery – especially since this particular snipe had a rather rare stamp neatly impaled on its beak. Even more astonishing was the effect of the dead bird on her stamp-collector father, who appeared to be genuinely frightened.

Soon Flavia discovers something even more shocking in the cucumber patch, and it’s clear that the snipe was a bird of very ill omen indeed. As the police descend on Buckshaw, Flavia decides it is up to her to piece together the clues and solve the puzzle. Who was the man she heard her father arguing with? What was the snipe doing in England at all? Who or what is the Ulster Avenger? And, most peculiar of all, who took a slice of Mrs Mullet’s unspeakable custard pie that had been cooling by the window…?

Read by Emilia Fox

(p) 2010 Orion Publishing Group

Reviews

Delightfully entertaining
Guardian
At once precocious and endearing, Flavia is a marvellous character. Quirkily appealing, this is definitely a crime novel with a difference
Choice
A clever, witty and totally gripping read with lots of surprises
Essentials
Engaging, entertaining, bright and breezy; and above all, great fun!
Good Book Guide
Hilarious, eccentric and mischievous
Deadly Pleasures
Flavia is enchanting
New York Times
A breath of fresh air to the world of period-piece sleuthing
Independent
Certain to become a national treasure
Daily Mail
Flavia is mercilessly addictive
Daily Telegraph
Praise for the cosy crime Flavia de Luce Mysteries - perfect for fans of Agatha Christie and Midsomer Murders: The Flavia de Luce novels are now a cult favourite
Mail on Sunday
It's like entering the lost world of the Mitford sisters where the girls are allowed to run completely wild
Crime Squad