Dead men do tell tales
William R. Maples et Michael Browning1994

Synopsis

Moyenne

19.0

2 votes

EXCELLENT

Noted forensic anthropologist Maples, whose specialty is the study of bones, and freelance journalist Browning here recount Maples’s criminal and anthropological investigations over the past 20 years. The meandering text combines episodes from Maples’s personal life and education with discourses on his philosophy, his teaching at the Univ. of Florida and his work. The book’s strength is as a snapshot of the world of forensic scientists, vividly portraying the siege mentality of many of them when their objective data are used for purposes other than ascertaining the truth about how a victim died. Despite the two-dimensional depiction of the people who were the objects of Maples’s investigations-including the “likely” remains of Romanov Tsar Nicholas II-his memoirs should hold readers’ interest.B

2 éditions pour ce livre

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2001 Editions Broadway Books

Anglaise Langue anglaise | 292 pages

1994 Editions Doubleday

Anglaise Langue anglaise | 292 pages | Sortie : 1er octobre 1994

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