Since the books in this series can stand alone (except for the personal details about the main character's life, which I am not particularly interested in), I have not bothered looking for and reading them in the right order.
My two-cent for just this book: I liked the plot in overall, however I did find it a bit too length-y, the details were unnecessarily stretched out abit. I also saw that there were many people, down in the review section, saying that this book has too much details about what happens to body after death -- the body prep for funeral procedure, stages of decompostions, but I thought those were the essence of this book. I loved learning about those details. I had always wondered how do the undertakers preps the body (especially someone who had horrible accident). This helped me realize that in a way undertakers are medical students; they have to know about microbiology, chemistry, biochemistry, anatomy on top of that have skills of a surgeons, painters and sculptors. How cool is that! If that doesn't sound facinating I dunno what does. Anyway back to book, Constable Cooper is still adorable and DS Fry is still annoying. The relationship between those two is ugh, I feel like they are going to end up together one minute and next Fry goes and ruins that thought for me.
I also thought it was a self-reflecting book in a way. The talk about death, whether it is accepting the death of loved ones or coming in terms with your own death down the road, it makes you think, "well, where do I stand on the spectrum of accepting this natural phenomena?" Are you avoiding thinking about it or constantly worrying about it? I thought Booth showed this using Gavin, he was constantly worrying about his tenure before then later thought of just enjoying the life as it come. And I think that is how we should be living as well. Live in the moment, take in every precious seconds of our "borrowed" time here on earth --things that are happening inside us and around us -- without constanly worrying about our past or future. I had heard the quote "You only hate what you don't understand." before, so I don't like using the word hate anymore. Cooper says it in this book as well "It's the unknown we're most frightened of, the things we don't understand. And more than anything else in the world, death is the great unknown." Isn't that true though? Not just in regards to death, also people around us? People that we think we hate? If we take a step back and think "wait why do i hate this person?", usually it is not because they did us wrong but because we dont understand why they did what they did.
Another quote that hit me hard was this: "We know so little about death. But the fact is, most of us know even less about love." Why can we not say what is on my mind honestly? World would be a better place if we could only express our love toward others openly, does not have to be romantic love but also friendship, parental, strangers too, instead of hiding it inside us. I mean c'mon how times have you thought someone's dress, shoes, hair or whatever looked good but never voiced it out? I know i have had those moments hundreds of times! "Would it kill me to say it out loud? No! So why didn't I?" A question I have. asked myself hundreds of times too. All I can say is it's a work in progress for now, I don't blurt of every single time, I have started to voice them out little by little. Let us spread the love, people, not hate! :)
Overall, good read. Enjoyed it!