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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good series. Read them in order, though!, April 7, 2004
Four and a half, really. It's not quite perfect - there's one or two coincidences too many - but it's quite good.I started reading this series with this book, then had to go back and get the others, to get all of the context. It's a good series, but it definitely makes more sense read in order. In the first volume, Brian and Emma don't have a house yet, and Emma has just started working with Meg. Kamil and Marty meet in the first book. If you start with this (the third book), you have no idea of what all the references are to past trouble that they've seen together, and there are many such references. So do go ahead and get Site Unseen and Grave Consequences. A tiny nitpick is that Cameron's police seem to blur together; it's hard to tell the fairly intelligent cop in one volume from a different cop in the other. Not that it's a bad thing - it's a nice change of pace from other authors' series where all the police are buffoons all the time! The relationship between archaeologist Emma and her chemist husband Brian is well-described; it includes a realistic view of why many archaeologists, in real life, don't have successful marriages. (I hear from zoologists, too, that they have the same problems. They are both in professions that require a lot of field work, often in dangerous places. If one's spouse isn't disgruntled that one is away from home so often, then he or she is disgruntled that the other throws himself or herself into danger just for the sake of a find, all too often.) Emma is at a site fairly close to home, in this one; her student assistants are staying at her house, and she and they drive to the site each day. This has its advantages and its disadvantages for Brian. We get to hear a little bit more about mealtimes than I personally found interesting, but your tastes may vary (pardon the pun). There are relatively few bodies in this one, compared to the first in the series. There are the usual cast of eccentrics - the neighbors, the Bellamys, are stuck up and trying to get the dig shut down; there's someone far too concerned with whether his ancestry is perfect. There aren't any out and out nutsos such as Tichnor in the first book, which is fine with me - authors who depend on crazy people for motives all the time are lazy, I feel, so it's nice to have good old-fashioned greed instead. Emma's sister Bucky is visiting, and she joins in on the field work; she's a nice character, a veterinarian with some gaps in her social skills. We get some development in the relationship between the sisters, and learn a bit more about their family history. (As Emma has pointed out, their mother's personality may be why neither Emma nor Bucky is much of a people person, Emma preferring to work with dead people and Bucky preferring to work with animals. I can understand that!) As usual, you'll learn something about archaeology and something about architecture in New England, along with learning who dunnit!
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