
Narrator: Eleanor Caudill
Series: Scottish Bookshop Mystery #10
Published by Tantor Media on April 1. 2025
Source: Purchased
Genres: Cozy Mystery
Length: 7 hrs 18 mins
Pages: 304
Format: Audiobook
Purchase at Bookshop.org or Audible
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When Delaney wins a special Hidden Door Festival invitation to artist Ryory Bennigan's studio, she isn’t sure quite what to expect. What she finds is an elusive fellow obsessed with the Picts—complete with his own versions of their blue tattoos and vibrant red hair—recreating the stones they left behind. She also meets a visiting paleontologist, Dr. Adam Pace, from the University of Kansas attempting to sell an artifact that might just explain what the Picts' language really sounded like.
Or at least that’s what he claimed the artifact was for. Before the deal can close and Ryory can get a closer look at it, Dr. Pace is found dead.
With the police dragging their feet in the investigation, Delaney takes it upon herself to dig into Dr. Pace's past. Her research goes murky as she quickly discovers Pace’s shady background—selling fake dinosaur bones and running into some 3D-printing trouble back in Kansas. Could his past have come back to bite him in Edinburgh? And what does his questionable background mean for the mysterious Pictish artifact he was trying to sell to Ryory? Delaney will have to dust off her magnifying glass to uncover the truth behind this case… or risk becoming a pile of bones herself.
I love Delaney and the crew at The Cracked Spine and this series always leaves me wanting to visit Edinburgh. And I love Delaney and her quirky friends/co-workers. It’s also nice that she’s happily married to someone who is not a cop. This time around a visiting professor who is attempting to sell a Pictish artifact is killed.
We get some good background on the Picts and, randomly, dinosaurs, which was fun. This series always does a nice job weaving history with the current mystery, The whodunnit was a little too obvious and, while the 3D printing aspect added a contemporary touch, i just can’t believe it would dupe anyone. There’s no way 3D printed artifacts/ fossils would hold up to even a cursory look, so why bother with the printing part at all? Why not just bluff that you have them?
I did enjoy the story, even if it wasn’t quite as good as some of the others. It’s one of my favorite series.
Reading this book contributed to these challenges: