October 13, 2019
The Weed That Strings the Hangman’s Bag by Alan Bradley
After solving her first case, 11 year old Flavia de Luce is sure
that her career as an amateur sleuth is over.
Then a well-known puppeteer is electrocuted in the middle of a
performance at the church hall, and Flavia finds herself once again in the
thick of it. The death of a local child five
years earlier and a patch of marijuana plants are also somehow involved in the
investigation. Meanwhile, Flavia’s widowed stamp-collecting
father continues to have financial problems threatening the family home, and
his sister Felicity comes from Hampstead to try to sort them out.
I wasn’t sure I liked Flavia in the first book in the series, The
Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie, but she grew on me. As a kid, Flavia can go snoop in all kinds of
places and ask questions that adults are too polite to ask. Her knowledge of chemistry comes into play
more than once in the story.
One of the things I dislike about the series is that it takes at
least 1/3 of the book to get to the mystery - there is a lot of time spent on setting up the scene.
However, I do enjoy Flavia’s eccentric family and quirky neighbors. Aunt Felicity in particular surprises Flavia in this book by telling her that she looks and acts exactly like her late mother Harriet, and to pursue
her dreams (Flavia always thought Felicity was an old stick in the mud).
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