The Dead in Their Vaulted Arches: A Flavia de Luce Novel
The Dead in Their Vaulted Arches: A Flavia de Luce Novel book cover

The Dead in Their Vaulted Arches: A Flavia de Luce Novel

Paperback – December 30, 2014

Price
$14.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
352
Publisher
Bantam
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0385344067
Dimensions
5.19 x 0.79 x 7.96 inches
Weight
8 ounces

Description

Review Praise for The Dead in Their Vaulted Arches “Part Harriet the Spy, part Violet Baudelaire from Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events, Flavia is a pert and macabre pragmatist.” — The New York Times Book Review “[Alan] Bradley’s award winning Flavia de Luce series . . . has enchanted readers with the outrageous sleuthing career of its precocious leading lady. . . . This latest adventure contains all the winning elements of the previous books.” — Library Journal (starred review) “Bradley’s latest Flavia de Luce novel reaches a new level of perfection as it shows the emotional turmoil and growth of a girl who has always been older than her years and yet is still a child. The mystery is complex and very personal this time, reaching into the past Flavia never knew about. . . . These are astounding, magical books not to be missed.” — RT Book Reviews (Top Pick) “Excellent . . . Flavia retains her droll wit. . . . The solution to a murder is typically neat, and the conclusion sets up future books nicely.” — Publishers Weekly (starred review) “It’s hard to resist either the genre’s pre-eminent preteen sleuth or the hushed revelations about her family.” — Kirkus Reviews “Flavia . . . is as fetching as ever; her chatty musings and her combination of childish vulnerability and seemingly boundless self-confidence haven’t changed a bit.” — Booklist Acclaim for Alan Bradley’s beloved Flavia de Luce novels, winners of the Crime Writers’ Association Debut Dagger Award, Barry Award, Agatha Award, Macavity Award, Dilys Winn Award, and Arthur Ellis Award “If ever there were a sleuth who’s bold, brilliant, and, yes, adorable, it’s Flavia de Luce.” — USA Today “Irresistibly appealing.” —The New York Times Book Review , on A Red Herring Without Mustard “Original, charming, devilishly creative.” —Bookreporter , on I Am Half-Sick of Shadows “Delightful and entertaining.” — San Jose Mercury News , on Speaking from Among the Bones About the Author Alan Bradley is the New York Times bestselling author of many short stories, children’s stories, newspaper columns, and the memoir The Shoebox Bible . His first Flavia de Luce novel, The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie, received the Crime Writers’ Association Debut Dagger Award, the Dilys Award, the Arthur Ellis Award, the Agatha Award, the Macavity Award, and the Barry Award, and was nominated for the Anthony Award. His other Flavia de Luce novels are The Weed That Strings the Hangman’s Bag, A Red Herring Without Mustard , I Am Half-Sick of Shadows , Speaking from Among the Bones, The Dead in Their Vaulted Arches, As Chimney Sweepers Come to Dust, Thrice the Brinded Cat Hath Mew’d, and The Grave’s a Fine and Private Place, as well as the ebook short story “The Curious Case of the Copper Corpse.” Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. •One•To begin with, it was a perfect English morning: one of those dazzling days in early April when a new sun makes it seem suddenly like full-blown summer.Sunshine broke through the fat white dumplings of the clouds, sending shadows chasing one another playfully across the green fields and up into the gently rolling hills. Somewhere in the woods on the other side of the railway line, a nightingale was singing.“It’s like a colored plate from Wordsworth,” my sister Daphne said, almost to herself. “Far too picturesque.”Ophelia, my oldest sister, was a still, pale, silent shadow, lost in her own thoughts.At the appointed time, which happened to be ten o’clock, we were all of us gathered more or less together on the little railway platform at Buckshaw Halt. I think it was the first time in my life I had ever seen Daffy without a book in her hand.Father, who stood a bit apart from us, kept glancing every few minutes at his wristwatch and looking along the track, eyes squinting, watching for smoke in the distance.Directly behind him stood Dogger. How odd it was to see these two men—gentleman and servant—who had been through such ghastly times together, standing dressed in their Sunday best at an abandoned country railway station.Although Buckshaw Halt had once been used to bring both goods and guests to the great house, and although the rails remained, the station proper, with its weathered bricks, had been boarded up for donkey’s years.In the past few days, though, it had been hurriedly made ready for Harriet’s homecoming: swept out and tidied up, its broken windowpanes replaced, the tiny flower bed weeded and planted with a small riot of flowers.Father had been asked to go up to London and ride with her back to Buckshaw, but he had insisted on being at the little station at Buckshaw Halt to meet the train. It was, after all, he had explained to the vicar, the place and manner in which he had first met her all those many years ago when both of them were young.As we waited, I noticed that Father’s boots had been polished to a high-gloss perfection, from which I deduced that Dogger was currently in a much improved state. There were times when Dogger screamed and whimpered in the night, huddled in the corner of his tiny bedroom, visited by the ghosts of far-off prisons, tormented by the devils of the past. At all other times he was as competent as any human is capable of being, and I sent up thanks that this morning was one of them.Never had we needed him more.Here and there on the platform, small, tight knots of villagers, keeping a respectful distance, talked quietly to one another, preserving our privacy. More than a few of them stood huddled closely round Mrs. Mullet, our cook, and her husband, Alf, as if doing so made them, by some magic, part of the immediate household.As ten o’clock approached, everyone, as if at an arranged signal, fell suddenly quiet, and an unearthly hush settled upon the countryside. It was as though a bell jar had been lowered upon the land and all the world was holding its breath. Even the nightingale in the woods had abruptly ceased its song.The very air on the station platform was now electric, as it often becomes when a train is approaching but not yet in sight.People shifted uneasily from foot to foot, and the faint wind of our collective breathing made a soft sigh on the gentle English air.And then, finally, after what seemed like an eternal stillness, we saw in the distance the smoke from the engine.Nearer and nearer it came, bringing Harriet—bringing my mother—home.The breath seemed sucked from my lungs as the gleaming engine panted into the station and squealed to a stop at the edge of the platform.It was not a long train: not more than an engine and half a dozen carriages, and it sat resting for a few moments in the importance of its own swirling steam. There was an odd little lull.Then a guard stepped down from the rear carriage and blew three sharp blasts on a whistle.Doors opened, and the platform was suddenly swarming with men in uniform: military men with a dazzling array of full medals and clipped mustaches.They formed up quickly into two columns and stood stiffly at attention.A tall, tanned man I took to be their leader, his chest a wall of decorations and colored ribbons, marched smartly to where Father stood and brought his arm up in a sharp salute that left his hand vibrating like a tuning fork.Although he seemed in a daze, Father managed a nod.From the remaining carriages poured a horde of men in black suits and bowler hats carrying walking sticks and furled umbrellas. Among them were a handful of women in severe suits, hats, and gloves; a few, even, were in uniform. One of these, a fit but forbidding woman in RAF colors, looked such a Tartar and had so many stripes on her sleeve that she might have been an Air Vice-Marshal. This little station at Buckshaw Halt, I thought, in all of its long history, had never before been so packed with such an assortment of humanity.To my surprise, one of the suited women turned out to be Father’s sister, Aunt Felicity. She hugged Feely, hugged Daffy, hugged me, and then without a word took up her station beside Father.At an order, the two columns marched smartly towards the head of the train, as the large door in the luggage van slid open.It was difficult, in the bright daylight, to make out anything in the dim depths of the van’s interior. All I could see at first was what seemed to be a dozen white gloves dancing suspended in the darkness.And then gently, almost tenderly, a wooden box was handed out to the double column of waiting men, who shouldered it and stood motionless for a moment, like wooden soldiers staring straight ahead into the sunshine.I couldn’t take my eyes off the thing.It was a coffin which, once clear of the shadows of the luggage van, gleamed cruelly in the harsh sunlight.In it was Harriet. Harriet.My mother. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • NEW YORK TIMES
  • BESTSELLER
  • On a spring morning in 1951, eleven-year-old chemist and aspiring detective Flavia de Luce gathers with her family at the railway station, awaiting the return of her long-lost mother, Harriet. Yet upon the train’s arrival in the English village of Bishop’s Lacey, Flavia is approached by a tall stranger who whispers a cryptic message into her ear. Moments later, he is dead, mysteriously pushed under the train by someone in the crowd. Who was this man, what did his words mean, and why were they intended for Flavia? Back home at Buckshaw, the de Luces’ crumbling estate, Flavia puts her sleuthing skills to the test. Following a trail of clues sparked by the discovery of a reel of film stashed away in the attic, she unravels the deepest secrets of the de Luce clan, involving none other than Winston Churchill himself. Surrounded by family, friends, and a famous pathologist from the Home Office—and making spectacular use of Harriet’s beloved Gipsy Moth plane,
  • Blithe Spirit
  • —Flavia will do anything, even take to the skies, to land a killer.
  • Praise for
  • The Dead in Their Vaulted Arches
  • “Part Harriet the Spy, part Violet Baudelaire from Lemony Snicket’s
  • A Series of Unfortunate Events,
  • Flavia is a pert and macabre pragmatist.”
  • The New York Times Book Review
  • “[Alan] Bradley’s award winning Flavia de Luce series . . . has enchanted readers with the outrageous sleuthing career of its precocious leading lady. . . . This latest adventure contains all the winning elements of the previous books.”
  • Library Journal
  • (starred review)
  • “Bradley’s latest Flavia de Luce novel reaches a new level of perfection as it shows the emotional turmoil and growth of a girl who has always been older than her years and yet is still a child. The mystery is complex and very personal this time, reaching into the past Flavia never knew about. . . . These are astounding, magical books not to be missed.”
  • RT Book Reviews
  • (Top Pick)
  • “Excellent . . . Flavia retains her droll wit. . . . The solution to a murder is typically neat, and the conclusion sets up future books nicely.”
  • Publishers Weekly
  • (starred review)
  • “It’s hard to resist either the genre’s pre-eminent preteen sleuth or the hushed revelations about her family.”
  • Kirkus Reviews
  • “Flavia . . . is as fetching as ever; her chatty musings and her combination of childish vulnerability and seemingly boundless self-confidence haven’t changed a bit.”
  • Booklist

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(2K)
★★★★
25%
(854)
★★★
15%
(512)
★★
7%
(239)
-7%
(-239)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Flavia is at a turning point

This is the 6th book in the Flavia de Luce series and marks a big turning point for series. Flavia and her family are stunned by the return of Harriet, though not in a way that any of the family would have wished. As they wait for the train to arrive, Flavia is given a cryptic message by a man who then dies after being pushed in front of a train. The train is met by a number of dignitaries, including Winston Churchill, who has his own cryptic message for Flavia. She finds a series of old films that show her mother in her younger days, not initially realizing that the films hide important clues. As she learns more about her mother’s mission, Flavia searches to find a traitor hidden amongst them. There is a particularly moving scene as she tries to cheat death that was simply heartbreaking. Additionally, Flavia must deal with a precocious cousin and her family as each one of them prepares for the big changes ahead. Dogger remains a true companion as he helps Flavia and her family deal with one of the most difficult times of their lives.
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Classic Flavia

Originally reviewed at: http://www.shaelit.com/2014/01/review-the-dead-in-their-vaulted-arches-by-alan-bradley/

This book, to my relief, was classic Flavia, containing all the elements I yearned for save one.

1. THE BRITISHNESS

Flavia is as British as they come. Her family are well-established landowners whose roots go back generations. None other than Winston Churchill arrives to welcome her mother home. The entire story is steeped in squarely British notions regarding duty, proper behavior, and public expectations. With Flavia, we drink tea, hold wakes, meet RAF fighters, and uncover wartime secrets. It’s all very foreign to me and therefore fascinating. The atmosphere of 1950’s rural England was a hook from the first, and it didn’t fail to live up to its charm and mystique here.

2. THE CHEMISTRY

A Flavia book is not a Flavia book without detailed treatises on the use of chemicals in everyday life. Only Flavia can sling out offhanded remarks like:

METOL, it said on the label in Uncle Tar’s unmistakable spidery handwriting. Metol, of course, was nothing more than a fancy name for plain old Monomethylparaminophenol Sulfate.

Of course. Whether detailing the proper way to develop decades-old film using common, household items or musing over the not-so-intangible properties of the resurrection of the dead, Flavia manages to make chemistry sound beautiful and exotic, even if it remains incomprehensible to this reader.

3. HARRIET

In a way, Flavia’s dead mother Harriet has been an integral part of Flavia’s story from the first book. She touches everything in and around Buckshaw. Flavia blames her for her outsider status in the family, her father’s poor financial state, and her sisters’ hate. But she’s also responsible for Flavia’s wit, her looks, her spirit, and (as we find out here) so much more. This final chapter is as much Harriet’s as it is Flavia’s, as it starts with Harriet’s homecoming. She appears on every page – in her plane, in a roll of film, in the tears on Father de Luce’s face – and it is a relief to finally meet and understand the woman behind our girl.

4. THE PROSE

If I could, I would eat Mr. Bradley’s prose on a spoon like a tincture of syrup. The words fill my limbs and chest like a balm, soothing and entrancing me with every page. Rather than wait until the end of the review to list my favorite quote, here’s a few I noted as special favorites:

As ten o’clock approached, everyone, as if at an arranged signal, fell suddenly quiet and an unearthly hush settled upon the countryside. It was as though a bell jar had been lowered upon the land, and all the world was holding its breath.

----

There we stood, like stone chessmen: Father, the checkmated king, graceful, but fatally wounded in defeat; Aunt Felicity, the ancient queen, he black hat askew, humming some tuneless tune to herself; Feely and Daffy the rooks, two remote towers at the distant corners of our castle world.

And me: Flavia de Luce.

Pawn.

----

It was a typical de Luce solution: logical beyond question, and yet, at the same time, mad as a March hare.

----

As I have mentioned before, it has been my experience that a prolonged silence has the same effect as a W.C. plunger when it comes to unclogging a stuck conversation.

----

Was Harriet poor? Was she unsuspecting?

Not in the sense Dr. Darby meant those words, I was sure.

Was she a creature?

Well, that would depend upon the definition one chose to use. I had looked up the word in the Oxford English Dictionary not long ago while trying to work out if it would be sinful to destroy a fly in the name of Science.

“All things bright and beautiful,” we sang in church.

“All creatures great and small.

All things wise and wonderful

The Lord God made them all.“

The O.E.D. wasn’t much help. On the one hand, it said that “creature” meant anything created, animate or inanimate, while another definition stated that it referred to a living creature or animate being, as opposed to “man.”

The moral choice was left up to the individual.

“No,” I said.

5. Humor

There is, as you can glimpse in some of the above snippets of prose, much of the customary, dry Flavian humor present in this story, despite the rather somber storyline. It is a book filled with theological questions, human hurts, and abiding pain. But there is heart, too, and laughter, though these often mingle with the pain in the sweetest of ways. For instance, near the climax of the novel, there is a scene in the church that will more than likely make you laugh through your tears.

6. The characters

Nothing, of course, would be possible without the characters, starting with Flavia. Our girl is as fantastic as ever. She’ll make you laugh, cry, and scream with frustration all within the space of a few pages. It’s passages like those that make me almost understand her awful sisters, really. I also giggled when a new character arrives, a sort of terrible mini-Flavia who gives our heroine a taste of her own medicine. Flavia’s father, who has become more recognizably human with each book, never becomes the boisterously affectionate Americanized father some might wish him to be, but he does what he can when he can. And Dogger. Dear, sweet Dogger is there to the end, forever supporting and caring for this family he now calls his own.

My one and only disappointment is of the ending. While the mystery itself was sparsely supported and rushed in the end, I can’t say I’m surprised. This series’ strength has never been its technical acumen in murder plots but rather for its emotional intelligence. I did feel cheated, however, by the ending and the big explanation that came with it. It felt fantastical, unrealistic, and inconsistent with the rest of the story. I shrug it off for Flavia’s sake, but I wish something else had been dreamt up.

Points Added For: Everything listed above.

Points Subtracted For: That strange wrap-up.

Good For Fans Of: Old-fashioned mysteries, chemistry, precocious almost twelve-year-olds.

Notes For Parents: Language, two grisly deaths

Note: I received a review copy of this title from the publisher in exchange for an honest review.
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boring

unbelievable main character
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Strength in Mourning

Since I started the Flavia de Luce series last year, I knew the basic set up of the sixth entry, The Dead in Their Vaulted Arches, a long time ago. That didn’t stop me from being intrigued by the way the topic was introduced at the end of the last book, and I was looking forward to seeing how things paid off here. The result was the best book in the series to date.

“You’re mother has been found.” As this book opens, it’s been a week since Flavia’s father has made that shocking announcement. Flavia’s mother, Harriet, went missing in Tibet a decade ago and has been presumed dead, but no proof has ever been found. Now, her body is coming back on a special train into their village of Bishop’s Lacey.

There is a crowd on the platform when the train bringing Harriet’s body arrives, including not only friends from the village but people that Flavia doesn’t know. One of them comes up to Flavia and starts to give her an important but cryptic message to pass on to her father. A moment later, this stranger is dead, crushed under the wheels of the train as it is departing. Who was he? What did his strange message mean? Does it have anything to do with Harriet’s death?

I have complained in the past that the mystery often gets swallowed by other going ons in the book, and that certainly happens again here. There are pieces and clues to the mystery scattered throughout the book, so when Flavia does piece things together, it all makes sense. I will say one aspect of the climax seemed a bit abrupt to me, and I’m still wondering why the characters behaved in that manner, but it’s a minor issue for me.

Since the mystery takes a back seat, this book is really about the mourning that the characters go through. Since Flavia is our narrator, her conflicted emotions are the easiest to see. She never knew Harriet since her mother died when she was just a baby, yet she worries that she should be feeling something. Her father clearly still loves Harriet deeply, and Flavia’s sisters try to deal with the confirmation of the loss in their own ways. It makes for a fascinating read as each of the character’s reactions is genuine and perfect for them.

As a result, I don’t recommend jumping in here. To fully get the impact of this book, you need to know the characters. But if you take the time to get to know them, you’ll be very glad you did.

Just in case this is sounding like a dark book, it is and it isn’t. Flavia’s antics help keep things light, and she gets a new foil in this book that is entertaining. There was one scene that had me welling up with tears one minute and laughing out loud the next. The book walks a very fine line, letting us experience the character’s grief without overwhelming or depressing us.

There are some developments in several ongoing sub-plots. I called part of what happened here, but I was still shocked by the rest of it.

This novel does shift our understanding of the characters in a big way, filling in backstory on some of them. I actually bought what the author did in this respect based on some of the conversations and bits and pieces we’ve seen in earlier books. I’m quite curious to see what if anything is done with this in future books.

The mysteries continue to be weak here, so I can’t give the book my full endorsement, but fans of Flavia and her family will be enthralled by the character study that is The Dead in Their Vaulted Arches.
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Just read all the Flavia de Luce tales!

Love Flavia and the entire supporting cast. Alan Bradley crafts a fine mystery and creates completely lovable and quirky characters! Read everything he writes.
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Five Stars

Love these books by Alan Bradley featuring Flavia.
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I just love Flavia!

Fabulous...I just love Flavia!
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The backstory...

Not quite the typical Flavia story, but wonderful nonetheless. In this book, the 6th in the series, we learn the story of Flavia's mother, who went missing 10+ years ago. Although there are murders in this book, they don't play the central role in the plot as we have come to expect from Bradley. It's hard to describe this book without giving away too much. One thing for sure: you have to read the five earlier books before reading this one. It appears at the end that Flavia will be heading off to new adventures, but hopefully we'll still keep in touch with the rest of the characters back at Buckshaw, their family home.
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Five Stars

super story
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As with all of the Flavia de Luce series---absolutely marvelous ...

As with all of the Flavia de Luce series---absolutely marvelous.
1 people found this helpful