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A Room Full of Bones [Paperback]

Elly Griffiths
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
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Book Description

Feb 21 2012
Combine a splash of Alan Bradley with a pinch of Kathy Reichs and you have a gripping new Ruth Galloway Mystery -- a good-hearted mystery series with a dark edge.
 
Set in Norfolk, England, A Room Full of Bones embroils, once again, our brainy heroine in a crime tinged by occult forces. On Halloween night, the Smith Museum in King's Lynn is preparing for an unusual event -- the opening of a coffin containing the bones of a medieval bishop. But when forensic archaelogist Ruth Galloway arrives to supervise, she finds the curator, Neil Topham, dead beside the coffin. Topham's death seems to be related to other uncanny incidents, including the arcane and suspect methods of a group called the Elginists, which aims to repatriate the museum's extensive collection of Aborigine skulls; the untimely demise of the museum's owner, Lord Smith; and the sudden illness of DCI Harry Nelson, who Ruth's friend Cathbad believes is lost in The Dreaming -- a hallucinogenic state central to some Indigenous Australian beliefs. Tensions build as Nelson's life hangs in the balance. Something must be done to set matters right and lift Nelson out of the clutches of death, but will Ruth be able to muster herself out of a state of guilt and foreboding in order to do what she does best?

Frequently Bought Together

A Room Full of Bones + The Crossing Places: A Ruth Galloway Mystery + The House at Sea's End
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  • The Crossing Places: A Ruth Galloway Mystery CDN$ 13.71

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Review

Praise for other Ruth Galloway Mysteries:
 
"Bone-chilling stuff..."
—Times (U.K.)
 
"A heady brew of classical lore and psychopathic revelations ... the setting is enticingly atmospheric: very flat Norfolk may be, but it also has mysterious fogs and waterways that lead to a gripping chase, excellently interwoven with the Latin quotations and carbon-dating.... I closed the book...feeling the satisfaction that a really intelligent murder story can give."
—The Independent
 
"In this gripping series the central characters... have the allure of old friends, and it's great to find that the third title is just as enthralling as it's predecessors...."
—The Guardian
 
"Gripping. . . . [Ruth Galloway] is solitary and plump and smart and self-assured, and very, very likeable."
Margaret Cannon, Globe and Mail

About the Author

ELLY GRIFFITH's Ruth Galloway novels are inspired by the work of her husband, who gave up a job in finance to train as an archaeologist, and by her aunt, who lives on the Norfolk coast and who filled her niece's head with the myths and legends of that area. Griffiths and her husband now have two children (twins) and live near Brighton.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars I love this series Mar 12 2012
By Luanne Ollivier #1 HALL OF FAME TOP 10 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
A Room Full of Bones is the newly released fourth book in Elly Griffith's Ruth Galloway series.

Ruth is a forensic archaeologist in England. She's been called in to a local museum to oversee the opening of a coffin that purportedly holds the bones of a medieval bishop. But when she arrives earlier than planned, she finds the curator dead and the body still warm. She calls for help and it arrives in the person of DCI Harry Nelson and his sidekick Clough.

We were left with a bit of a cliffhanger in the last pages of the third book, The House at Sea's End. You see, Harry is married, but he is the father of Ruth's one year old daughter Kate. Their (non) relationship has been just as intriguing as the plots that Griffiths comes up with.

Other favourite characters are back as well. Cathbad rivals Ruth for my affection. Cathbad is a self proclaimed Druid, who always seems to appear without warning, just when one of his friends might need help. I was happy to see him have a larger piece of the plot in this book. Detective Sergeant Judy Johnson is also given a larger role in both her professional and personal story lines. Again, another character I quite like. Really, all of the supporting characters are just as interesting. Their personalities are all quite diverse and I feel like I've come to know them.

Griffith's descriptions of the Norfolk marshes always capture me. Ruth's little cottage at the edge of the salt marsh sounds wonderful.

A Room Full of Bones involves a good deal of police work, but the line between cold, hard facts and otherworldly situations, elements and solutions blurred in this latest book- especially with Cathbad's input. It was a thought provoking plot line drawing from a very real issue.

Aboriginal bones, dead Bishops, animal rights, drug runners, curses, horse racing and more are teamed up with some of the most interesting and engaging characters around. Griffiths has done it again - hooked me with a great read that I finished too quickly and left me waiting for the next in this engaging series. Definitely recommended.
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4.0 out of 5 stars A Room Full of Bones Dec 28 2012
By Gloria Feit TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
Dr. Ruth Galloway, the 41-year-old Head of Forensic Archaeology at the University of North Norfolk, returns in this new novel by Elly Griffiths. As the book opens Kate, the baby born to Ruth a result of a one-night stand with Detective Inspector Harry Nelson in an earlier entry in the series, is about to celebrate her first birthday. The relationship between Ruth and Harry is now, however, nearly non-existent: To save his marriage, when his wife realized the truth, he had promised never to see Ruth, or Kate, again.

Nelson, head of the county’s Serious Crimes Squad of the King’s Lynn police, now 43 years old and known as many things (male chauvinist pig among them), loves his wife and their two daughters. Despite his intention to remain true to his promise, he encounters Ruth following the discovery of the dead body of the curator of the Smith Museum, where Ruth is to attend what was to be the opening of a coffin containing the remains, it was thought, of a 14th-century bishop.

The man was thought to be in good health, and there is no evidence of foul play. However, when another death occurs within a few days of the first, the police believe there may be more involved than meets the eye, or the medical examiner’s autopsy. There was quite a bit of controversy, it seems, about the museum’s ‘ownership’ of skulls and skeletal remains of Aboriginal Australians, with very strong feelings that they should be repatriated to their native land. There is also a legendary curse associated with anyone who comes in contact with them.

The book is replete with mysticism and lore. The characters created by the author in this series continue to fascinate, and there is much discussion of animal rights as well as the repatriation issue. Having loved the other books in the series, this reader at first thought the book moved at a slower pace than the earlier entries, but by the end, as the various plot lines are resolved, and the suspense quickens, those reservations dissolved, and the book is recommended.
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By Nicola Manning HALL OF FAME TOP 50 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
Reason for Reading: Next in the series.

I loved the fourth entry in the Ruth Galloway mystery series. Elly Griffiths has managed to combine the unrelated but unique topics of Australian Aborigines and horse racing to create a fascinating murder mystery which is directly related to the main character's profession of forensic archaeology. Griffiths keeps the reader on her toes, sending us down quite a few rabbit trails so we never know who to trust in this story with a wide pool of potential suspects, some very close to home for Ruth. Not the usual serial killer story, but still more than one body, which is how I like my crime books, I thoroughly relished this plot. There was a teeny bit of 'hocus-pocus' left unresolved, however, that I'd prefer not to have in a mystery, thus my 4 stars.

Ruth's private life takes leaps and bounds in this volume, moving along to another level. I really like how Grifiths is moving her main character's lives along in this series unlike some others out there where they languish in an unresolved relationship for seven books. No, Ruth and Nelson are both interesting characters whose lives are moving at the pace of real life people and they are just as entertaining as the mysteries in this series. I didn't quite fancy "The House at Sea's End" but this is on par with books 1 & 2. Looking forward to more from this series.
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