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Deborah Halber is a Boston-based journalist and member of the National Association of Science Writers. Learn more at www.deborahhalber.com and on Twitter @deborahhalber.

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Overuse of the word 'bucolic'. There's got to be a synonym.
 
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usquare | 9 andere besprekingen | May 24, 2020 |
There is, it turns out, an entire subculture of people on the internet obsessed with cold case crimes in which the bodies were never identified, often people who themselves have had family members disappear. They've even had some real successes at solving some of these old cases, which is maybe less surprising when you realize how disorganized law enforcement can be when it comes to coordinating missing persons reports with records of unidentified bodies.

It's a really interesting (if very, very gruesome) topic, but, honestly, I found this book disappointing. Halber's prose is vivid enough, but the structure of her writing is terrible, jumping around from topic to topic and presenting events out of order in a way that I found deeply frustrating, making what should have been a fascinating account more annoying than compelling.

Rating: I did learn some interesting things, and I suspect that on a less distracting week I'd have had more patience with it, so I'm going to give it 3/5, but I really do kind of want to rate it lower.
… (meer)
 
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bragan | 9 andere besprekingen | Jan 27, 2019 |
Not as good as I was expecting. Perhaps that's because I listened to it as an audiobook? Possibly. Perhaps the subject matter just wasn't as interesting as I anticipated.

Not a bad book by any stretch. But not anything you should rush to get immediately.

 
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LauraCerone | 9 andere besprekingen | May 26, 2016 |
The Skeleton Crew: How Amateur Sleuths Are Solving America's Coldest Cases by Deborah Halber is a very highly recommended, fascinating anecdotal look at how amateurs are solving cold cases.

Chances are you know of a cold case, an unsolved murder right in your own city. Startlingly, according to what Halber discovered, chances are also "good that you or someone you know has at one point stumbled over a dead body. There are shockingly large numbers of them out there. According to the national institute of Justice, America is home to tens of thousands of unidentified human remains, with four thousand more turning up every year: intrepid adventurers or athletes who left their IDs at home; victims of accidents and mass disasters; suicides; undocumented immigrants; the homeless; runaway teenagers; victims of serial killers; and those who cast off a former identity, changed names, and left no forwarding address." Location 159

These cases are often given "mournful monikers" from the communities in which their bodies were found and become known as the "Tent Girl, Somerton man, Princess Doe, Saltair Sally, the Boy in the Box, the Belle in the Well, the Lady Who Danced Herself to Death." I can think of several unsolved cases where I currently live and know of others from various other communities I've lived in over the years. The number of unsolved cases is shocking. It is easy to see why law enforcement officials don't prioritize these unsolved cases when there are so many other crimes that can be solved.

While amateur detectives did try to solve some of these cases over the years, often searching for a missing relative, the age of the internet has dramatically changed their success rate. Now these same amateurs have access to much more information and they often have the time and desire to solve these cold cases. It becomes a rather macabre hobby where members have created online communities based on providing information on the cold cases and virtually compete with each other to try to solve them.

"By 2001, the same unidentified corpses that were once almost universally ignored had evolved into tantalizing clues in a massive, global version of Concentration played around the clock by a hodgepodge of self-styled amateur sleuths, a dedicated skeleton crew that shared a desire to match faces to names—and names to dead bodies. Anybody with an idealistic bent, a lot of time, and a strong stomach could sign on: a stay-at-home mom in New York, a chain store cashier in Mississippi, a nurse in Nebraska, a retired cop and his exotic-dancer girlfriend in Houston." Location 376

Halber actually looks at some of these cold cases and the legends that have sprung up around them. Intertwined in the stories about the cold cases is information about the amateurs who are spending vast amounts of personal time trying to solve them. As these online communities share tips and information on discussion boards like Cold Cases and the Doe Network, they can also get overly competitive and combative with each other. Even so, many law enforcement officials are benefiting from their skills at solving these very cold cases.

Halber writes in a very conversational, anecdotal, personal style that, after glancing at other reviews, I'm guessing you either like or don't like. I happened to enjoy The Skeleton Crew a lot and part of that enjoyment was in Halber's treatment of the topic. I found The Skeleton Crew highly entertaining. She's a great writer and, much like the cold cases she's discussing and her amateurs are trying to solve, sometimes the trail to the solution takes a few meanders before you find the identity of the deceased.


Disclosure: My Kindle edition was courtesy of Simon & Schuster for review purposes.

Contents:
Prologue: The Well Driller
The Ultimate Identity Crisis
You Can Disappear Here
It’s the Ethernet, my Dear Watson
Ghost Girls
Bring out Your Dead
Inside Reefer
The Perks of Being Ornery
Seekers of Lost Souls
How to make a John Doe
Finding Bobbie Ann
Quackie is Dead
The Head in the Bucket
The Hippie and the Lawman
The oldest Unsolved Case in Massachusetts
Relief, Sadness, Success
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Endnotes
… (meer)
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SheTreadsSoftly | 9 andere besprekingen | Mar 21, 2016 |

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Werken
2
Leden
183
Populariteit
#118,259
Waardering
½ 3.4
Besprekingen
10
ISBNs
9

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