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Bones of the Barbary Coast

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

In this thrilling novel set in two periods of San Francisco history, Cree Black confronts the mystery of one of the strangest victims of the Great Quake.

Bert Marchetti, a friend and homicide inspector, asks Cree to help investigate a human skeleton recently unearthed in the foundation of an old San Francisco home, supposedly the bones of a victim of the 1906 earthquake. The bones have been sent to UC Berkeley for analysis, where their peculiar characteristics and anatomical deformities have intrigued the forensic anthropology team. They call the skeleton Wolfman. So who was the Wolfman? What caused the deformities, and how did he end up in that grand hilltop home?

Cree's historical research takes her back to the unholy glory days of the Barbary Coast, old San Francisco's infamous red-light district.As she assists at the forensics lab, she also begins to realize that Bert Marchetti's involvement with the case is more complex than he has let on. Her narrative is illuminated by entries from the 1889 diary of Lydia Schweitzer, a Victorian woman with her own secrets—and her own compelling interest in the person who would come to be known as the Wolfman.

A vivid and elegantly plotted thriller that reveals San Francisco's hidden face across two centuries, Bones of the Barbary Coast tells the story of two women determined to face human nature's darkest aspects with courage and compassion.

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  • Reviews

    • AudioFile Magazine
      The lives of two women, past and present, intersect when a human skeleton-presumably a victim of the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake-is unearthed in the foundation of a Victorian home. In present time, Cree Black's forensic and research abilities are challenged by the skeleton-which apparently walked on all fours. Going back in time, Lydia Schweitzer's 1906 diary exposes the degradation of the Barbary Coast, which serves as backdrop for the victim's life. Anna Fields's narration precisely delineates these two women. She slips into working-class Brooklynese when Cree is angry and effectively expresses Lydia's incredulity when she enters a brothel where patrons are entertained by deformed humans fighting feral dogs. When Fields narrates Black's own encounter with the dogs, her reading is haggard, gasping, and entirely believable. K.A.T. (c) AudioFile 2007, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 8, 2006
      In Hecht's less than satisfying third novel to feature paranormal investigator Lucretia "Cree" Black (after 2004's Land of Echoes
      ), an old family friend, SFPD homicide detective Bert Marchetti, who's nearing retirement and wishes to leave the force with as few loose ends as possible, enlists Cree's help with an unusual skeletal find—an apparent victim of the 1906 earthquake whose strange physiognomy leads the forensic anthropologists on the case to dub him the Wolfman. The detective's motives become suspect when Cree realizes that his agenda may include settling scores with a deformed radiologist Marchetti believes is an unpunished murderer. The chance discovery of a 19th-century diary enables Cree to piece together some details about the Wolfman, but the two main plot lines never quite mesh, and her risky actions belie her reputation for being levelheaded.

    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2007
      Hecht sets and maintains a slow pace in his third Cree Black novel (after "Land of Echoes"), much to the story's detriment. Dusting off the literary chestnut of using flashbacks to tell a tale from two perspectives (present day/distant past), Hecht illuminates the tale of an eerily wolfman-like skeleton entombed after the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. When an old family friend and cop (Bert "the machete" Marchetti) calls Cree for aid on a case, she brings her open-mindedness, Ph.D. in parapsychology, and sensibility as a researcher to the task. In the process, Cree stumbles upon the diary of Lydia Schweitzer, a Victorian-era tender heart. Lydia's up-close-and-personal episodes with the wolfman humanize the considerable forensic anthropology aspects of the book. Driving the action is damaged tough-guy Bert and his deadly feud with a creepy, scarred radiologist. Consider Nevada Barr's aptly titled "Flashback" for an effective example of flashback as literacy device. Read by Anna Fields, "Bones" is a marginal purchase; recommended only for libraries where the two prior titles did well.Douglas C. Lord, Connecticut State Lib., Hartford

      Copyright 2007 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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