The Strongest Entry in the Series
Out of all three books in Carrie Rubin’s Ben Oris medical thriller series, The Bone Elixir has the weakest premise after what was presented prior, but the strongest execution. By far, it’s the most consistent in tone and flow, with fewer plot holes and a storyline that carries the reader fully from start to finish. The pacing works well, especially when the narrative pauses to dive into family secrets, generational trauma, and the destruction left in their wake.
One of the things I appreciated most was how the women in this book came into their own. Laurette and Sophia are strong, brilliant, and independent, and really take charge of the story’s trajectory unlike previous books where it felt they were left out of the loop and hurt in the process. Sophia, in particular, is the one who devises the final plan and saves Ben when he has no strategy of his own *insert eye roll for the Caucasian man privilege*. This felt like a refreshing shift compared to the earlier books where women were often treated more as emotional stabilizers or props for plot in character development for Ben rather than fully realized stand alone characters.
Even so, some problematic elements remain. I still hold the position that I dislike Ben as the love for Laurette it is hugely problematic and that interest is a dynamic that, as a woman of color, I found troubling and unsafe given the history and circumstances surrounding what they have faced during the series. While Sophia and Laurette finally got a chance to shine, Ana put Ben in their place, and Ben met an imperfect woman in Mandy, it still irked me El was the one to fall and lose her autonomy at the end rather than Freddy, she was used as the female plot point to push the story forward. That repeated use of women as sacrificial plot devices undercuts the engagement for female readers, in my opinion.
Despite that, The Bone Elixir still stands as the best of the trilogy. I’d rate it between 3.5 and 4 stars, especially because it did have me reading it only during daylight hours and the ending with Harmony and her brother is touching, heartwarming and provided a sense of closure.
Final point Ben’s continued skepticism after everything, 3 books of everything mind you, that he has witnessed strains believability, his reluctant acceptance of the spiritual world close the door for me to like him as a person let alone the protagonist in the book, I know the author is look for an open door for further growth, but it truly is frustrating to read.
If Rubin continues the series, I’d love to see her shift focus to Laurette, Sophia, and Harmony the three women whose voices and perspectives could easily carry their own trilogy and truly would be a breath of fresh compared to Ben.