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Eliot Pattison

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Eliot Pattison

Goodreads Author


Born
in Philadelphia, The United States
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Member Since
April 2011


Edgar Award winning Eliot Pattison has been described as a "writer of faraway mysteries," a label which is particularly apt for someone whose travel and interests span a million miles of global trekking, visiting every continent but Antarctica.

An international lawyer by training, Pattison first combined his deep concerns for the people of Tibet with his interest in fiction writing in The Skull Mantra, which launched the popular Inspector Shan series.

The series has been translated into over twenty languages around the world. Both The Skull Mantra and Water Touching Stone were selected by Amazon.com for its annual list of ten best new mysteries. Water Touching Stone was selected by Booksense as the number one mystery of all time for readers
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Happy Thanksgiving

We often hear that Thanksgiving is a uniquely American holiday, inspired by the Pilgrims and formally enacted by Abraham Lincoln, but I have never thought of it in national terms. Harvest festivals have been celebrated for centuries, probably millennia. This is the tradition that I think of when the turkey is served, a celebration of gratitude that binds us not only to the blessings of the earth b

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Published on November 26, 2024 11:06
Average rating: 4.05 · 15,637 ratings · 1,762 reviews · 34 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Skull Mantra (Inspector...

3.91 avg rating — 4,735 ratings — published 1999 — 50 editions
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Bone Rattler (Duncan McCall...

3.70 avg rating — 2,244 ratings — published 2007 — 25 editions
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Water Touching Stone (Inspe...

4.21 avg rating — 1,431 ratings — published 2001 — 30 editions
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Bone Mountain (Inspector Sh...

4.29 avg rating — 1,043 ratings — published 2002 — 27 editions
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Beautiful Ghosts (Inspector...

4.27 avg rating — 854 ratings — published 2004 — 25 editions
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Prayer of the Dragon (Inspe...

4.21 avg rating — 807 ratings — published 2007 — 23 editions
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The Lord of Death (Inspecto...

4.28 avg rating — 670 ratings — published 2009 — 23 editions
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Mandarin Gate (Inspector Sh...

4.33 avg rating — 573 ratings — published 2012 — 12 editions
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Eye of the Raven (Duncan Mc...

4.02 avg rating — 615 ratings — published 2009 — 21 editions
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Soul of the Fire (Inspector...

4.43 avg rating — 400 ratings — published 2014 — 11 editions
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More books by Eliot Pattison…
The Skull Mantra Water Touching Stone Bone Mountain Beautiful Ghosts Prayer of the Dragon The Lord of Death Mandarin Gate
(10 books)
by
4.12 avg rating — 11,103 ratings

Bone Rattler Eye of the Raven Original Death Blood of the Oak Savage Liberty The King's Beast Freedom's Ghost: A Mystery ...
(7 books)
by
3.90 avg rating — 4,050 ratings

Ashes of the Earth
(1 book)
by
3.51 avg rating — 407 ratings

Eliot’s Recent Updates

Eliot Pattison wrote a new blog post

Happy Thanksgiving

We often hear that Thanksgiving is a uniquely American holiday, inspired by the Pilgrims and formally enacted by Abraham Lincoln, but I have never tho Read more of this blog post »
More of Eliot's books…
Quotes by Eliot Pattison  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“I tell them that the only peace you find up on a mountain is the peace you bring with you.”
Eliot Pattison, The Lord of Death

“Investigations, meditations, careers, relationships were much the same, he mused. They failed because no one thought to ask the right question.”
Eliot Pattison, The Skull Mantra

“Shan stared at his glass, then lifted it under his nose. It was the closest he would knowingly get to tasting the hard liquor. It was not because it would violate the vows of the monks, which he had not taken, but because somehow it felt as though it would violate his teachers who still sat behind prison wire in Lhadrung.”
Eliot Pattison, Water Touching Stone

Polls

What should our moderator recommends book be for June 2025?

The Girl Behind the Wall by Mandy Robotham
The Girl Behind the Wall
Mandy Robotham

A city divided.

When the Berlin Wall goes up, Karin is on the wrong side of the city. Overnight, she’s trapped under Soviet rule in unforgiving East Berlin and separated from her twin sister, Jutta.

Two sisters torn apart.

Karin and Jutta lead parallel lives for years, cut off by the Wall. But Karin finds one reason to keep going: Otto, the man who gives her hope, even amidst the brutal East German regime.

One impossible choice…

When Jutta finds a hidden way through the wall, the twins are reunited. But the Stasi have eyes everywhere, and soon Karin is faced with a terrible decision: to flee to the West and be with her sister, or sacrifice it all to follow her heart?
 
  9 votes 32.1%

Bone Rattler (Duncan McCallum, #1) by Eliot Pattison
Bone Rattler
Eliot Pattison

Aboard a British convict ship bound for the New World, Duncan McCallum witnesses a series of murders and seeming suicides among his fellow Scottish prisoners that thrusts him into the bloody maw of the French and Indian War.

As the only man aboard with any medical training, Duncan is ordered to assemble evidence to hold another prisoner accountable for the deaths - or face punishment that will mean his own death. His conclusions suggest that the wave of violence is somehow linked to the "savages" of the American wilderness. Duncan's suspicions that the prison company is to be sacrificed in the war seem to be confirmed when he learns that they are all indentured to Lord Ramsey's estate in the uncharted New York woodlands, a Heart of Darkness where multiple warring factions are engaged in physical, psychological, and spiritual battle.

Following a strange trail of clues that seem half Iroquois and half Highland Scot, mesmerized by the Lord Ramsey's beautiful daughter, and frequently defying death in a dangerous wilderness populated by grizzled European settlers, mysterious scalping parties, and Indian sorcerers, Duncan McCallum, exiled chief of his near-extinct clan, finds the source of all evil at the site of an Indian massacre.
 
  7 votes 25.0%

The Hangman's Daughter (The Hangman's Daughter, #1) by Oliver Pötzsch
The Hangman's Daughter
Oliver Pötzsch

Magdalena, the clever and headstrong daughter of Bavarian hangman Jakob Kuisl, lives with her father outside the village walls and is destined to be married off to another hangman’s son—except that the town physician’s son is hopelessly in love with her. And her father’s wisdom and empathy are as unusual as his despised profession. It is 1659, the Thirty Years’ War has finally ended, and there hasn’t been a witchcraft mania in decades. But now, a drowning and gruesomely injured boy, tattooed with the mark of a witch, is pulled from a river and the villagers suspect the local midwife, Martha Stechlin.

Jakob Kuisl is charged with extracting a confession from her and torturing her until he gets one. Convinced she is innocent, he, Magdalena, and her would-be suitor race against the clock to find the true killer. Approaching Walpurgisnacht, when witches are believed to dance in the forest and mate with the devil, another tattooed orphan is found dead and the town becomes frenzied. More than one person has spotted what looks like the devil—a man with a hand made only of bones. The hangman, his daughter, and the doctor’s son face a terrifying and very real enemy.
 
  7 votes 25.0%

Lydia Cassatt Reading the Morning Paper by Harriet Scott Chessman
Lydia Cassatt Reading the Morning Paper
Harriet Scott Chessman

This richly imagined fiction entices us into the world of Mary Cassatt’s early Impressionist paintings. The story is told by Mary’s sister Lydia, as she poses for five of her sister’s most unusual paintings, which are reproduced in, and form the focal point of each chapter. Ill with Bright’s disease and conscious of her approaching death, Lydia contemplates her world with courageous openness, and asks important questions about love and art’s capacity to remember.
 
  5 votes 17.9%

28 total votes
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51074 Q&A with Eliot Pattison — 14 members — last activity Jul 27, 2011 06:14PM
The chat will run from Sunday, July 17 - Thursday, July 28.
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