Bones: Buried Deep

by Max Allan Collins, Kathy Reichs

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Tempe's work at the Jeffersonian Institute is put on hold when Special Agent Seeley Booth, stalled on a case deposing a Chicago mob family, calls her in to assist with a bizarre discovery: a plastic bag of skeletal remains -- and a chilling note -- left on the steps of a federal building. Tempe determines the bones are from different corpses, suggesting a serial killer's handiwork. A suspect is quickly taken into custody, but Tempe senses the case is far from closed. And as Booth's Mafia show more case heats up with violent twists and bloody discoveries, including ties to one of Chicago's most gruesome and notorious killers, Tempe must unravel the story of the bones, where the truth lies buried -- in order to stay alive. show less

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6 reviews
I guess I'd recommend this book to fans of the Bones TV series who aren't motivated to go back and read the original series the TV show was based on. This reads pretty much like fan fiction, and gets some of the voices right (Angela Montenegro's few lines in the book fit the voice of her TV show character perfectly) but I don't think Mr Collins gets Dr Brennan right. His character was a strange mix of the TV show character (completely unable to get pop-culture references) and the pre-existing Kathy Reichs novels (there's a reference to Dr Brennan's ex-husband Pete, likely to confuse those who haven't read the novels). But Kathy Reichs has, if I recall correctly, always posited that the TV show is sortof based on what could be the show more earlier life of the character in her novels -- that is, the TV show Dr Brennan goes on to become the Dr Brennan of the novels. This book, though, turns that on its head a little, since as I mentioned, there's a reference to the ex-husband Pete. The character in this book is also not credibly faithful to the Reichs novels' Dr Brennan: for instance, in this book, Dr Brennan sits down at a restaurant and calmly has a couple of glasses of chardonnay. Anyone familiar with the Reichs novels would recall a fairly significant trait of Dr Brennan is that she is a recovering alcoholic, so drinking is not something she does casually (and for some reason, I seem to recall that she actually prefers red wine).

Okay so maybe I'm a little nitpicky, but I love both the Reichs novels and the TV show, and have made room for both of them and accommodated their differences, but this book doesn't seem to fit into either area well (and it wasn't good enough to make me WANT it to, really, either).
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A pleasant enough indulgence for fans of the TV show - although there's not enough of the side characters 'back in the lab'. Initially I found the style a little clunky and perhaps clichéd, but as I started seeing and hearing my favourite TV characters I was able to sit back and loose myself in their adventures.
Fun tie-in to the TV series, some of the characterisation is spot on and the Brennan and Booth dynamic is there.
for a book based on a TV show (that was itself based on a series) - not a bad read.
It'll be confusing to keep track of the order of THREE sets of Bones media, though.
Meh. "Bones" is one of the few TV shows that I like so I thought I'd give it a try but the book, unsurprisingly, fell short.
I complained about this book on Fox's Bones posting boards. Some of the descriptions of the main characters were way off. Example - Booth has blue eyes in the book! The author used the excuse that he wrote the book before the series actually started. David Boreanaz was the first actor casts! So how can you make such a mistake!?? Did he write the book before the pilot was seen by Fox and approved as a TV series?

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Author Information

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418+ Works 17,176 Members
Max Allen Collins was born in 1948 in Muscatine, Iowa. He is a two-time winner of the Private Eye Writer's of America's Shamus Award for his Nathaniel Heller historical thrillers "True Detective" and "Stolen Away". Collins also wrote the Dick Tracy comic strip begining in 1977 and ending in the early 1990s. He has contributed to a number of other show more comics, including Batman. Collins created his first independent feature film, Mommy, following a nightmarish experience as screenwriter on the cable movie The Expert. Collins has been contracted by DC Comics to write three tie-ins to his critically acclaimed graphic novel "The Road to Perdition", which was adapted into the feature film. Author of other such move tie-in bestsellers as "In the Line of Fire" and "Air Force One", he is also the screenwriter/director of the cult favorite suspense films "Mommie" and "Mommie's Day". (Publisher Provided) Max Allen Collins was born in Muscatine, Iowa on March 3, 1948. His graphic novel Road to Perdition, published in 1998, is the basis of the Academy Award-winning 2002 film starring Tom Hanks, Paul Newman and Daniel Craig. His other works include Road to Purgatory, Road to Paradise, Return to Perdition, Bye Bye, Baby, and Target Lancer. He won the Shamus awards for True Detective in 1983 and Stolen Away in 1991. He is completing a number of Mike Hammer novels begun by the late Mickey Spillane. He has collaborated with his wife Barbara Collins on three novels and numerous short stories. Their Antiques Flee Market won the Romantic Times Best Humorous Mystery Novel award in 2009. His comics credits include the syndicated strip Dick Tracy (1977-1993), Ms. Tree, Batman; and CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, based on the hit TV series for which he has also written ten novels. He has written tie-in books for several movies including Saving Private Ryan, Air Force One, and American Gangster, which won the Best Novel Scribe Award in 2008 from the International Association of Tie-in Writers. His non-fiction works include The History of Mystery and Men's Adventure Magazines, which won Anthony Award. He is also an independent filmmaker. He has written and directed five features and two documentaries, including the Lifetime movie Mommy and the sequel, Mommy's Day. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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96+ Works 77,738 Members
Kathy Reichs was born in Chicago, Illinois on July 7, 1948. She received a BA in anthropology from American University in 1971, a MA in physical anthropology from Northwestern University in 1972, and a Ph.D. in physical anthropology from Northwestern University in 1975. She works as a forensic anthropologist for the Office of the Chief Medical show more Examiner, State of North Carolina and for the Laboratoire des Sciences Judiciaires et de Médecine Légale in Quebec. She has taught at Northern Illinois University, University of Pittsburgh, Concordia University, McGill University, and the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. Her work as a forensic anthropologist is internationally recognized; she has traveled to Rwanda to testify at the UN Tribunal on Genocide, helped in an exhumation in the area of the highlands of southwest Guatemala, and done forensic work at Ground Zero in New York. In addition to her published academic papers and books, Reichs has written numerous works of crime fiction including Temperance Brennan series. Déjà Dead won the 1997 Arthur Ellis Award for Best First Novel. She is a producer on the Fox television series Bones, which is loosely based on her own forensic career and writing. In 2015, she won the Silver Bullet Literary Award. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Bones: Buried Deep
Original title
Bones: Buried Deep
Alternate titles
Buried Deep
Original publication date
2006-03
People/Characters
Temperance Brennan
Related movies
Bones (2005 | IMDb)
Epigraph
AS those who study them have come

To learn, bones make good

witnesses - although they speak

softly, they never lie and they never forget."



Dr. Clyde Collins Snow,

Forensics ant... (show all)hropologist
"The more outre and grotesque an

incident is the more carefully

it deserves to be examined, and the

very point which appears to

complicate the case is, when duly

considered and scien... (show all)tifically

handled, the one which is mostly

likely to elucidate it."


Sherlock Holmes

The Hound of the Baskervilles

by Arthur Conan Doyle
Dedication
For Dr. Greg Haines

and Missy Jones

who reassembled the skeleton
The author wishes to acknowledge

forensics researcher/co-plotter

Matthew V Clemens

Further acknowledgments appear at the conclusion of this novel.
First words
On a moonless June Night, Al Capone's sleek Teak motorboat skimmed like a child's tossed stone across the surface of Lake Michigan
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"Even Raymond Gianelli's son has to make his bones, you know."

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Mystery
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3553 .O4753 .B66Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
BISAC

Statistics

Members
385
Popularity
80,910
Reviews
6
Rating
½ (3.29)
Languages
6 — Dutch, English, French, German, Italian, Russian
Media
Paper
ISBNs
9
ASINs
1