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Skeleton Dance

por Aaron Elkins

Series: Gideon Oliver (10)

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
366669,963 (3.67)12
The French police call on the Skeleton Detective when a dog digs up some human bones: "Terrific" --Publishers Weekly   Les‑Eyzies‑de‑Tayac is known for three things: pâté de fois gras, truffles, and prehistoric remains. The little village, in fact, is the headquarters of the prestigious Institute de Préhistoire, which studies the abundant local fossils. But when a pet dog emerges from a nearby cave carrying parts of a human skeleton--by no means a fossilized one--Chief Inspector Lucien Anatole Joly puts in a call to his old friend, Gideon Oliver, the famed "Skeleton Detective."   Once Gideon arrives, murder piles on murder, puzzle on puzzle, and twist follows twist in a series of unexpected events that threaten to tear the once sober, dignified Institut apart. It takes a bizarre and startling forensic breakthrough by Gideon to bring to an end a trail of deception thirty‑five thousand years in the making. Skeleton Dance is the 10th book in the Gideon Oliver Mysteries, but you may enjoy reading the series in any order.  … (más)
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» Ver también 12 menciones

Mostrando 1-5 de 6 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
Elkins has done a great job as usual, this time set in France again.
Apparently I have the hardcover and the ebook. ( )
  chibitika | Sep 3, 2022 |
"Les Eyzies-de-Tayac is known for three things: pate de foie gras, truffles, and ancient bones. This small French village is home to the largest concentration of prehistoric fossils in Europe and headquarters of the prestigious Institut de Prehistoire, which studies them. So when the local police inspector, Lucien Anatole Joly, finds reason to suspect foul play, he places a call to his old friend Gideon Oliver, the famed 'Skeleton Detective,' ...

"Once Gideon arrives, murder piles on murder, puzzle on puzzle, and electrifying surprise on surprise, in a series of unexpected events that threaten to tear the once sober, dignified institute apart. It takes a bizarre and startling forensic breakthrough by Gideon to bring an end to a trail of deception almost forty thousand years in the making."
~~front flap

This is a wonderful mystery, set in the Dordogne, a regular mecca for archaeologists and anthropologists -- full of cave paintings and Middle Pleistocene habitation sites in rock shelters. It's reported to be a beautiful area, and of course the many caves with prehistoric rock art (Roc-aux-Sorciers, Lascaux, La Chaire à Calvin, Abri du Poisson, Cap Blanc, Rouffignac [Cave of the Hundred Mammoths], Font de Gaume, Pech Merle, etc.) and the numerous archaeological sites are a once in a lifetime experience. (Of course you can tell that I would give anything to be able to go there ...)

Gideon becomes embroiled in a more modern mystery, analyzing the bones of a recent murder by request of Inspector Joly. The plot continues to twist and thicken, of course, and the murderer is finally identified, and it's a lovely tour through the region's cafes and hotels and landscape for Gideon and Julie in the meanwhile. Well worth reading if you're a mystery fan. ( )
  Aspenhugger | Apr 24, 2019 |
Gideon and Julie travel to France and help solve both a murder and a mystery ... the latter being a hoax designed to prove that Neanderthals were actually closer to humans than apes. Good read. ( )
  debs913 | Apr 2, 2016 |
Perfectly pleasant mystery with paleoanthropology overtones. ( )
  MikeRhode | Feb 21, 2014 |
Less forensic detail than I’m used to but it was still interesting. The bones were really badly beaten up but somehow Gideon was able to get some useful clues out of them. Not enough to make the things easy to solve though. It was one of the other scientists of course and the bones in the cave were Ely’s bones. He didn’t fly off in his plane and crash into the sea. That was a ruse.
  Bookmarque | Jun 12, 2009 |
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Once, the thing in the cave had been a man, but that had been long ago.
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The French police call on the Skeleton Detective when a dog digs up some human bones: "Terrific" --Publishers Weekly   Les‑Eyzies‑de‑Tayac is known for three things: pâté de fois gras, truffles, and prehistoric remains. The little village, in fact, is the headquarters of the prestigious Institute de Préhistoire, which studies the abundant local fossils. But when a pet dog emerges from a nearby cave carrying parts of a human skeleton--by no means a fossilized one--Chief Inspector Lucien Anatole Joly puts in a call to his old friend, Gideon Oliver, the famed "Skeleton Detective."   Once Gideon arrives, murder piles on murder, puzzle on puzzle, and twist follows twist in a series of unexpected events that threaten to tear the once sober, dignified Institut apart. It takes a bizarre and startling forensic breakthrough by Gideon to bring to an end a trail of deception thirty‑five thousand years in the making. Skeleton Dance is the 10th book in the Gideon Oliver Mysteries, but you may enjoy reading the series in any order.  

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