"They burn their victim, they blow him up, they toss him in the ocean, they bury him in the desert, they throw 'em to wood chippers. Sometimes, you know, years go by. They relax. Then they start living their lives like they didn't do anything wrong, like they didn't spend somebody else's life in order to get what they got. They think they're safe from retribution. You make those bastards unsafe." - Booth to Brennan on the TV show Bones, here appropriated because it's an absolutely perfect way to express my admiration for what these people do.
No Stone Unturned tells the story of the formation of Necrosearch, a collective made up of people at the top of their various fields, and those with unique skills to offer (such as the self-titled slobberologist who works with bloodhounds). It also goes through a few of their milestone cases, as well as touching on cases handled by some of the individual members.
Initially it's a sprawling narrative, seguing off as each member connects to another, diverting into that member's own cases and history. But gradually, the narrative and the group start to pull together into a more cohesive and refined whole, and the last half (ish) of the book focuses more into those big cases that they've handled. This edition also contained updates from 2015, 8 years since the book was originally published.
It really is a fascinating read. Initially dubbing themselves the PIG people (Pigs In Ground), the group started with a few people who knew a few people, who had wondered if their fields of expertise might be used to help police locate remote or hidden graves. As the name suggests, they began by burying dead pigs on a piece of land donated by a county sympathetic to their ideas, and used that to establish parameters for different conditions. As they discovered more, they added more members to their group, and began to make truly groundbreaking (pardon the pun but I couldn't resist) leaps in their newly-created field.
The book didn't shy away from their learning experiences (the group was determined from the start not to classify success as the determination of the location of a burial, but rather something learned), but instead presented them just as the group took them - as educational and interesting. And as well as knowledgeable, the members of this group are presented as immensely caring and human people. And given they donate what free time they do have, to try and keep the loved and lost coming home, I feel they're thoroughly worth the respect the author of this book uses to portray them.
Well worth the read for anyone with an interest.