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Arrow Books, Random House Australia, April 2006
Review by Kerrie Smith
Forensic anthropologist Dr. Temperance Brennan is called in as a
consultant to the post-mortem of a middle-aged orthodox Jew found shot
dead in Montreal. Tempe sees her job as restoring the identity that death
has erased. In this case the mutilated body was found in a cupboard with
some very hungry cats. Tempe must decide whether it is possible for the
man to have committed suicide. At the mortuary a man, who appears to be
one of those assigned by the local synagogue to observe the post-mortem,
hands Tempe an envelope containing a photograph of an ancient skeleton. He
assures her that the photograph holds the key to understanding this death.
The mystery that unravels leads Tempe to Israel, to Masada and Jerusalem,
and right to the beginnings of the Christian era.
In CROSS BONES it is easy to get caught up in the action of the
investigation that Tempe and Ryan carry out in Jerusalem. The reader only
sees events through Tempe's eyes, which can be a little frustrating at
times as other characters pursue other lines of enquiry. In the long run,
I don't think Reichs managed to make the connection between the death in
Montreal and the anthropological investigation in Israel as solid as she
would have liked to. Nevertheless, the result is fast-paced, very
readable, and contains excellent elements of suspense.
CROSS BONES is the ninth in Kathy Reich's Temperance Brennan series but is
a departure from her usual focus. As Reichs herself says, most Temperance
Brennan novels spring from a mixture of her real forensic cases, in her
real-life role as a forensic anthropologist working in North Carolina and
Quebec. This story began with an opportunity presented to her by Dr. James
Tabor who carried out investigative research on Masada and is soon to
publish a non-fiction book on the Jesus Dynasty. This story may be also be
enjoyed by those whose imagination has been tickled by recent publications
related to the search for the Holy Grail. It felt to me as if Reichs
wanted to put forward some of her own ideas on the issues that are linked
to that debate.
The novel opens with a prologue that provides several pages about the
ossaries found in Masada and Jerusalem, implying that information about
these finds has not publicly been released, and giving carbon 14 dating as
first century AD, and names that seem to link the remains to Jesus and his
family. There is no doubt that this novel is very firmly based in
research. There is a clever melding of historical and technical detail,
and over a year's worth of research by Reichs herself, in this fictional
story that features Tempe Brennan and her lover, detective Andrew Ryan.
Kathy Reichs has her own website at
http://www.kathyreichs.com/welcome.htm . You can read the first
chapter of CROSS BONES online at
http://www.kathyreichs.com/crossbones.htm or take the 'Cross Bones
Challenge' that could result in your name appearing as a character in an
upcoming Kathy Reich's novel.
This review was first published on Murder and Mayhem, May 2006

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