206 Bones

206 Bones is the twelfth novel by Kathy Reichs starring forensic anthropologist Temperance Brennan.

206 Bones
First edition (US)
AuthorKathy Reichs
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SeriesTemperance Brennan
GenreCrime novel
PublisherScribner (US)
Heinemann (UK)
Publication date
2009
Media typePrint Hardback
Pages303
ISBN978-0-434-01468-2
OCLC427611057
Preceded byDevil Bones 
Followed bySpider Bones 

Plot

The book opens with Brennan imprisoned in an enclosed space, unable to remember where she is and how she got there.[1] The plot is interspersed with Brennan's account of how she escapes, culminating in the final dénouement.

The rest of the story is told in flashback. When Brennan has to recover the remains of a murdered elderly woman from a shallow grave in the midst of a freezing Quebec winter, she thinks she has the full set of 206 bones, but when she returns to her lab to analyze the remains, she discovers that certain crucial finger bones (that could confirm the identity of the victim) are not present.

Brennan soon discovers that an accusation of incompetence has been made against her: an anonymous phone call to the father of a murder victim alleges that Brennan neglected to observe trauma resulting from a bullet wound in the bones of an aging Chicago heiress that were found in the Quebec countryside some months previously. Brennan and her on-again/off-again lover Detective Andrew Ryan set out to Chicago to attempt to clear her name, where, much to Brennan's annoyance, Ryan bonds with her estranged husband's Latvian family after his flight back to Montreal is delayed by the weather.

The morale of the Montreal forensics team is poor, with the addition of a disruptive new recruit to the group, and the department head on extended sick leave. Two more elderly women are dead or missing, and Ryan suspects that the force may be dealing with a serial killer. In the process of solving the crime, Brennan also has to deal with an aggressive cat-hating neighbour and a cold case in Chicago involving a family link.

gollark: ↑ palaiologos
gollark: https://hackaday.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/2154px-Ion_engine.svg_.png?resize=250
gollark: So they would be correct.
gollark: I mean, it's demonstrably true.
gollark: Writing separate parsing logic for all the different things would be annoying but I don't think I can have a unified syntax for all this stuff which doesn't look really stupid.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.