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A Bone to Pick (Aurora Teagarden Mysteries, Book 2) Paperback – December 1, 1993
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- Print length252 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherWorldwide Library
- Publication dateDecember 1, 1993
- Dimensions4.25 x 0.5 x 6.5 inches
- ISBN-100373261365
- ISBN-13978-0373261369
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Product details
- Publisher : Worldwide Library (December 1, 1993)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 252 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0373261365
- ISBN-13 : 978-0373261369
- Item Weight : 9.6 ounces
- Dimensions : 4.25 x 0.5 x 6.5 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #8,170,740 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #96,556 in Women Sleuths (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Charlaine Harris was born in Tunica, Mississippi, and raised in the Mississippi River Delta area in the middle of a cotton field. Though her early works consisted largely of poems about ghosts and, later, teenage angst, she wrote plays when she attended Rhodes College in Memphis, Tennessee and started writing novels a few years later.
After publishing two stand-alone mysteries, Harris launched a light-hearted mystery series 'starring' Georgia librarian Aurora Teagarden. The first of the eight books, Real Murders, was shortlisted for Best Novel in the 1990 Agatha Awards. In 1996, she released the first of the much darker Shakespeare mysteries, featuring the amateur sleuth Lily Bard, a karate student who makes her living cleaning houses.
Charlaine Harris then wrote the first of her Southern vampire mysteries starring Sookie Stackhouse, the quirky, telepathic waitress who works in a bar in the fictional Northern Louisiana town of Bon Temps. Dead Until Dark won the Anthony Award for Best Paperback Mystery. It also won Harris a whole new fan club of devoted readers and pushed her into the bestseller lists. The Sookie Stackhouse series, in which Sookie has to deal with vampires, werecreatures and other supernatural folk - not to mention her own complicated love life - was also instrumental in creating the urban fantasy genre.
Sookie Stackhouse also enchanted Alan Ball, creator of the smash TV show Six Feet Under, who took an option and wrote and directed the pilot episode for True Blood himself. It was an instant hit when it premiered in the US, and that success was repeated when it was first aired in Britain last year. The second season of TRUE BLOOD will start this spring.
Harris's newest series features Harper Connelly, a young woman who, after being struck by lightning, finds herself able to locate the bodies of the dead and to determine the cause of their death. There are four Harper titles (Grave Sight, Grave Surprise, An Ice Cold Grave and Grave Secret).
Charlaine Harris is a member of the Mystery Writers of America and the American Crime Writers League. She is a member of the board of Sisters in Crime, and alternates with Joan Hess as president of the Arkansas Mystery Writers Alliance. She is married, the mother of three, and lives in a small town in Southern Arkansas. When she is not writing her own books, she reads omnivorously!
Here are the Sookie Stackhouse True Blood novels in series order:
Dead Until Dark: Sookie Stackhouse 1
Living Dead In Dallas: Sookie Stackhouse 2
Club Dead: Sookie Stackhouse 3
Dead To The World: Sookie Stackhouse 4
Dead As A Doornail: Sookie Stackhouse 5
Definitely Dead: Sookie Stackhouse 6
All Together Dead: Sookie Stackhouse 7
From Dead To Worse: Sookie Stackhouse 8
Dead And Gone: Sookie Stackhouse 9
Dead In The Family: Sookie Stackhouse 10
A Touch Of Dead (a Sookie Stackhouse short story collection_
Here are the Harper Connelly novels in series order:
Grave Sight: Harper Connelly 1
Grave Surprise: Harper Connelly 2
An Ice Cold Grave: Harper Connelly 3
Grave Secret: Harper Connelly 4
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This is the second installment in the Aurora Teagarden mystery series (Real Murders is #1) and it is a pleasant, fast read. I read it in a couple of hours and enjoyed it, but it isn't anything that is very memorable. The mystery is rather lacking because we don't know who the skull belongs to, but Roe doesn't really go out and try to figure out who it belongs to - the answer just kind of falls in her lap at the end of the story. Charlaine Harris does introduce some interesting new characters, however, and she keeps up with a few of the old ones from Real Murders so it was nice to see time passing in the small town. I would have liked to see a bit more of a plot regarding the mystery side of this "mystery", but this book is more of a fiction novel with a little bit of a mystery on the side. Still an enjoyable read, but I must say that the Lily Bard series (Shakespeare's Landlord, Shakespeare's Champion, etc.) is far superior than the Aurora Teagarden series.
from the tv show which is a good thing I thought that there should have been some more details on Jane past I would definitely recommend the book because it is a good read if you are into adult timing literature.
At the very end something happens that identifies the murderer, but there were no clues at all during the whole story that leads up to the discovery.
What saves this from getting a two star review is the writing. Harris is engaging and economical; the town, in this case the neighborhood, is interesting in its simplicity. I can't take points off for being too chick lit for me, as that would seem unfair.
Roe unexpectedly inherits a house from fellow former member of The Real Murders Club, Jane Engle, along with some cash and (unplanned and by default) her cat. She thinks about moving into the house but it's too small for her book collection and Jane's (I'm sure many of know that consideration) but she does spend enough time to search for whatever the burglar who preceded her was looking for. In this case a skull, henceforth referred to as The Skull.
In the midst of that Roe's ex moves in across the street with his very pregnant new wife and co-worker, Lynn, and Roe starts a relationship with the Episcopal minister who resided over Jane's funeral. The lawyer handling Jane's estate, Bubba, is acting lie a suspect of something or other and the small neighborhood is home to three disappearances in recent years, any one of which could be the former owner of The Skull. The plot unfolds inside a week.
The bone I have with this is that mystery is unfairly contrived and resolved. There really weren't any clues pointing to the solution, a more thorough search that had been put off at the beginning revealed the original crime and concealment, and Roe's reluctance to give The Skull immediately to the police was (a) unconvincing and (b) contrived to draw out the plot.
As a mystery this was not at all as enjoyable or well constructed as Real Murders, but it wasn't a bad diversion and being such a short novel I viewed as a bridge between her first and third fleshing out the character of Roe (which we definitely get here) and the town.
Also what is saving this series so far is that Harris has created a character who is neither perfect nor annoying. In other cozy mystery series currently being put out it seems the number one complaint of reviewers is that main character is unlikeable. Certainly not the case here.
Two & a half stars and I'm going to read the next one.
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