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Devil Bones: A Novel (Temperance Brennan Novels)

Devil Bones: A Novel (Temperance Brennan Novels)

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Author: Kathy Reichs
Creator: Linda Emond
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Audio
Category: Book

List Price: $39.95
Buy New: $19.39
You Save: $20.56 (51%)



New (29) Used (10) from $18.18

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 32 reviews
Sales Rank: 119399

Format: Audiobook, Unabridged
Media: Audio CD
Edition: Unabridged
Number Of Items: 8
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 5.9 x 5.1 x 1.2

ISBN: 0743571916
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN: 9780743571913
ASIN: 0743571916

Publication Date: August 26, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Devil Bones: A Novel (Temperance Brennan Novels)
  • Hardcover - Devil Bones: A Novel (Temperance Brennan Novels)
  • Audio CD - Devil Bones: A Novel (Temperance Brennan Novels)
  • Hardcover - Devil Bones (Wheeler Large Print Book Series)
  • Kindle Edition - Devil Bones: A Novel
  • Audio Download - Devil Bones: A Novel (Unabridged)
  • Paperback - Devil Bones
  • Audio Download - Devil Bones: A Novel

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  • Bones to Ashes: A Novel (Temperance Brennan Novels)
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  • The Keepsake: A Novel
  • Scarpetta (Kay Scarpetta)

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review

Amazon.com Exclusive: Jeffery Deaver on Devil Bones
Jeffery Deaver is the bestselling author of The Broken Window, The Sleeping Doll, The Cold Moon, The Blue Nowhere, The Bone Collector, The Empty Chair, The Devil's Teardrop, and fifteen other suspense novels. His book A Maiden's Grave was made into an HBO movie starring James Garner and Marlee Matlin, and his novel The Bone Collector was made into a feature release from Universal Pictures, starring Denzel Washington. He lives in North Carolina.

It's always a pleasure to see a new installment in the saga of Temperence Brennan, the forensic anthropologist who plies her trade in both Charlotte, North Carolina, and Montreal.

Devil Bones, set in the U S of A, opens with a grisly discovery that offers a very different take on This Old House. Tempe is pulled from staid academia to investigate the troubling and mystifying scene, which involves cauldrons, ceremonial religious artifacts and, most troubling, the severed head of a teenage girl.

Another torso is located nearby, and the story is off and running.

Tempe and Charlotte police department detective Erskine "Skinny" Slidell, follow leads that take them through the seamier and the chicer sides of North Carolina's largest city--the worlds of Santeria, voodoo, the Wiccan religion (any witches out there: I'm not lumping them together!), and male prostitution. Our heroine also locks horns with a crusading minister turned politician, and there's a reporter who manages to show up at all the wrong moments.

Reichs juggles the questions of who done it (and who's gonna get done next) until the very end with consummate skill. In series books, readers treat characters as friends and follow those storylines as ardently as the ones involving murder and mayhem. Not content to keep things simmering on low boil, Reichs dunks her protagonist into a pressure cooker, with plenty of turmoil stirred up by a former lover, a--possibly--current one and, most significantly for this reader, yet another ghost of life past, about which I'll say no more here. Trouble on campus also surfaces for Professor Brennan, with whom we experience one of the most harrowing moments in the book: a meeting of professors and department heads (university politics as weapon of mass destruction). Oh, and we can't forget some brief appearances by the ex, who is behaving just like, well, an ex.

It might have been my imagination but I believe too that I saw the bones, if you will, of a possible subplot involving Tempe's daughter, Katy, who's working in the public defender's office. I'm looking forward to seeing Reich confirm or deny this in the next installment.

In Devil Bones we get plenty of what we've come to expect in a Reichs novel: engrossing details on forensic anthropology and anatomical science. Her mastery, and love, of those subjects, which Reichs herself practices (in both Montreal and Charlotte, by the way), is evident in her writing. We're also treated to plenty of esoterica about non-mainstream religions and history (I mean, I live in North Carolina and didn't know Charlotte was named for a seventeen-year-old German duchess). The author deftly negotiates that fine line between using such information to enhance the experience of reading a novel and padding prose. She gives us what we need to know--to enrich plot, character or atmosphere--and then gets back to the story.

And speaking of which: As an author writing in the same genre, I was impressed with Reichs's ability to keep the roller coaster on track and speeding along, page after page. She's a true master of cliff hangers--a neglected skill in a field where far too many lazy authors end chapters with people leaving rooms, falling asleep or offering hand-tipping foreshadowings of what's to come. I call this the question-mark factor and when writing my thriller I actually tally up the number of scenes that end in a compelling, unresolved issue that drives the reader forward.

Reichs has question marks aplenty.

My one complaint: I read the novel in one sitting. But I'm hoping that while poor Tempe may want a break after everything that happens to her in Devil Bones, author Reichs isn't giving her any rest and is hard at work on number 12.

--Jeffery Deaver




Product Description
In a house under renovation, a plumber uncovers a cellar no one knew about, and makes a rather grisly discovery -- a decapitated chicken, animal bones, and cauldrons containing beads, feathers, and other relics of religious ceremonies. In the center of the shrine is the skull of a teenage girl. Meanwhile, on a nearby lakeshore, the headless body of a teenage boy is found by a man walking his dog.

Led by a preacher turned politician, citizen vigilantes blame devil worshippers and Wiccans and begin a witch hunt, intent on seeking revenge. Forensic anthropologist Temperance Brennan -- "five-five, feisty, and forty-plus" -- is called in to investigate, and a complex and gripping tale unfolds in this deadly mix of voodoo, Santeria, and devil worship.

With a popular series on Fox -- now in its third season and in full syndication -- Kathy Reichs has established herself as the dominant talent in forensic mystery writing. Devil Bones, her eleventh taut, always surprising, scientifically fascinating mystery features Reichs's signature blend of forensic descriptions that "chill to the bone" (Entertainment Weekly) and the surprising plot twists that have made her a number one bestselling author in the United States and around the world.


Customer Reviews:   Read 27 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars It's all right   October 10, 2008
 0 out of 5 found this review helpful

I'm not going to recap the story for you as it has been covered several times.

I have read every novel by Kathy Reichs and this is the first one I have NOT enjoyed. What's worse is I have been aware of it all along. Every page has been a little too much, a little too much detail, a little too much covering of the info we already know about Temperance. Not nearly as bad as Patricia Cornwell. One of the reasons Cornwell is so tedious is because she is the center of every novel. In Temperance Brennan novels, the mystery is the center.

But there is a terrible disconnect between the novel and the television program. The characters are unpleasantly different. The television program has a character who is wooden, unfeeling, scientific to a fault. The differences make it very difficult to read the book.

Part of the problem is that I can't figure out which Temperance I like better. It may be the one on television.



3 out of 5 stars Reasonably entertaining, until the lame ending   October 5, 2008
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

Devil Bones delivers pretty much what you expect. I'm not a huge fan of the author, but generally speaking I like Reichs' writing and appreciate her sense of humour. She finds a nice balance when describing the forensic elements of her novels so that it informs the reader without getting bogged down in detail. While I would prefer less info on Tempe's love life drama, compared to her contemporaries, Reichs shows reasonable restraint in this area.

I found Devil Bones unremarkable but enjoyable enough to read; that is, until the lame ending. The conclusion is poorly conceived, requiring Tempe to make some ridiculous leaps in deductive reasoning. The killer's actions are preposterous and the novel falls flat as a result. I've raised this issue before, but I have to say it again: I'm getting very tired of the `killer tries to kill our hero because he/she is getting too close to solving the crime' plotline. This is something that rarely happens in real life and is becoming far too common in crime fiction and TV crime shows. Enough already. It's been done to death.

The Bottom Line: The plot is thin and the pieces don't come together in the end. The novel's resolution is an illogical mess. Even so, the novel was reasonably entertaining, most of the time. I found some of the info on Wicca and Sanitaria pretty interesting and the writing and characters are above average. The end result: I just barely give this novel 3 stars.



3 out of 5 stars I wanted to love it, but...   October 4, 2008
I just didn't. I've read every book she's written, and I even love the TV series (didn't think I would - don't usually like TV or movie adaptations of books, but they are SO different that I barely think of them as related.)

As I remember, on all her other books, I've stayed up late into the night because I couldn't put them down. Not so, this one - I kept picking it up and putting it down in fits and spurts. It wasn't holding my attention. And I can't put my finger on the "why".

I don't mind Tempe's flaws, but I really don't think I (as a fairly intelligent, but in no way medically trained person) should be able to figure out some of the antrhopological mysteries ahead of her. There's even a line where Tempe says, "How did I miss that?" and I had to agree. I may have even yelled out loud, "Yeah, how did you?" startling my husband, to say the least.

And while I know that we need Tempe involved in investigations to keep the series going, I really don't understand how an anthropologist is allowed to go along to question witnesses or chase down perps. I am very interested in the science, so a little more lab time and a little less, "what is she doing in the street?" wouldn't be a bad thing to me.

I always enjoy more the books that are set in Montreal - I think I don't love the Charlotte sub-characters as much. The daughter and the ex are just getting way too annoying, the detectives not as engaging... I am glad to see the next book is going back to Quebec.

I am in no way ready to give up on the series, but I hope the next one is more engaging. That being said, I still wouldn't tell anyone to skip it - just don't expect the best of the series in this one.



5 out of 5 stars She hit it out of the ball park again!   September 30, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

Kathy Reichs is a genius! I honestly don't know how she does it all but I love her descriptions and the way she can use language to paint a picture. These books are so packed with science I can use them in the classroom to emphasize topics on Forensics as well as other basic science topics.

I can never put Kathy Reichs books down so the minute I get it I have to force myself to savor each and every moment.

I love the interview in the back of the book- it makes her so personable.



3 out of 5 stars Devil Bones   September 29, 2008
Interesting, but hard to follow. I was excited to have a new Kathy Reichs, but it was a letdown after "Cross Bones."

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