With Jessie Riley.” Lilah blinked. “But. . . Nix's mother is dead. Charlie Pinkeye killed her.” “Yes,” agreed Tom. “Charlie beat her so badly that she was dying when I found her. I held her while she died, Lilah. I felt her go.
Anthropologist Dr. Bill Brockton founded Tennessee's world-famous Body Farm—a small piece of land where corpses are left to decay in order to gain important forensic information.
Ghostwriters. In. The. Sky. I was wandering through a desert hot, In the sky, I saw people writing a lot, one called my name and said be careful or you may share our fate, "what fate what are you doing?" I asked "we are ghostwriters to ...
Benny, Nix, Lou, and Lilah journey through a fierce wilderness that was once America searching for the jet they saw months ago, while evading fierce animals and a new kind of zombie.
The book evolves sequentially, beginning with a discussion of all things forensic, the broad field of anthropology, and the process of death, decomposition, and skeletonization.
Bill's life is turned upside down when his dad leaves and his mom moves them to her parent's home, where he turns to drugs, alcohol, and exploration of his sexuality to combat his loneliness.
A Dhampir warrior must embrace her dark magic to defeat a powerful enemy in this urban fantast series full of “thrilling suspense and strong characters” (InD’tale, on Blood and Magic).
Flesh and Bone. What every woman is made of. Beautiful, daring, naughty, sensual. She has a fantasy, she wants to go higher, she searches for her own definition of love....
Featuring: The Blade of Tears by Lydia Sharp, No Man's Land by K.G. McAbee, Wrists by Shennandoah Diaz, All the World a Grave by Michael McClung, Blood on the Beach by Anne Michaud, The Scarlet Cat by Rebecca Lloyd, The Mortician's Secret ...
From the Publisher : Flesh and Bone: An Introduction to Forensic Anthropology offers the reader a solid background in forensic anthropology by out- lining some of the methods and procedures...
'If you like Kathy Reichs, you'll like Jefferson Bass' The Times.
The book evolves sequentially, beginning with a discussion of the structure and function of forensic science including its legal and scientific associations, and the fields that comprise various lab and police sciences.
"I found this book to be a pleasure to read, and I thoroughly recommend it as an excellent text that may be used in introductory courses on the subject, or simply as an interesting volume for use by anyone who might have a personal interest ...