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Present Containing Books Bones Buried Deep (Bones #1)

Title:Bones Buried Deep (Bones #1)
Author:Max Allan Collins
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Anniversary Edition
Pages:Pages: 300 pages
Published:February 28th 2006 by Pocket Star Books (first published 2006)
Categories:Mystery. Crime. Fiction. Thriller
Download Books Bones Buried Deep (Bones #1) For Free Online
Bones Buried Deep (Bones #1) Paperback | Pages: 300 pages
Rating: 3.77 | 1799 Users | 89 Reviews

Rendition Supposing Books Bones Buried Deep (Bones #1)

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 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.

Define Books Conducive To Bones Buried Deep (Bones #1)

Original Title: Bones Buried Deep
ISBN: 1416524614 (ISBN13: 9781416524618)
Edition Language: English
Series: Bones #1

Rating Containing Books Bones Buried Deep (Bones #1)
Ratings: 3.77 From 1799 Users | 89 Reviews

Judgment Containing Books Bones Buried Deep (Bones #1)
This is not Max Allan Collins at his best. I love his CSI novels, Nathan Heller, Mike Hammer and Road to Perdition. This one was a let down compared to the other books he has written.Mr. Collins' previous books appeared to be well-researched. His CSI novels for both Las Vegas and Miami were so vivid and life-like that I could actually see and hear the characters. It was as if I were watching an actual episode.Bones: Buried Deep uses the characters from the TV series but they did not match up

I bought this book because I was a fan of the TV show 'Bones' - unfortunately the characters within this book don't really ring true to either the show or the book series by Kathy Reichs (which formed the basis of the show).At a guess I would say that this book is set early season one, possibly season two of the show - the squints have passing mentions as the book is based in Chicago, it is a shame that they are used so infrequently as the Angela - Brennan interactions are some of the more

Entertaining especially for fans of the TV show. Reading this book from beginning to end was like watching an episode of Bones. The character's voices were made so clear, their attitudes and personalities and actions so perfectly their own. The book allowed viewers of the show literary versions of their favorite characters without a hint that their parts were written by someone other than the show's weekly scribes.Obviously, the Temperance Brennan of the Bones TV show is a different Temperance

It is a good story and keeps true to the characters we know in the TV series.

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

If you like "Bones" the TV series then you will like this book! FBI Special Agent Seeley Booth works on this case with Temperance of the Jeffersonian Institute to solve a case, which starts with a bag of bones dropped off at the entrance of a federal building in Chicago. The web unravels as more clues are discovered with more bones are deposited through out the city and at a national park. Each of the initial deposit of bones in a plastic bag with a bizarre a chilling note. A real twist comes

Common knowledge tells us not to expect much from authors who write novels based on tv shows. Max Allan Collins is happily one of the few exceptions that prove the rule. Collins has been writing detective fiction for a long time, and it's obvious from the story's get-go that the reader is in capable hands here. Collins' writing style is so economically fluid and precise that it's almost like the book was written by a machine, were it not for the surprisingly sophisticated sense of humor. I would

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