If you enjoy Bones or CSI, you may be surprised and interested to know that Louisiana has their own real-life version, an organization busy solving cases and identifying persons lost and found. Bone Remains: Cold Cases in Forensic Anthropology is Mary H. Manhein’s third book that explores the fascinating work she has done as creator and director of Louisiana State University’s FACES (Forensic Anthropology and Computer Enhancement Services) laboratory. She has over thirty years of experience in identifying bodies in Louisiana and across the country, and this book collects several of her most remarkable cases.
One such interesting case is at once local and international, modern and ancient: a case involving an Egyptian mummy that was thousands of years old. Known only as the “Princess of Thebes,” a museum in Baton Rouge inherited the mummy from a Philadelphia museum that closed down, and the curator asked Mary and her team to examine her.
Under a time limit and using x-rays only, they studied her and immediately realized that she was not a princess at all, but had a pelvis and skull that indicated she was in fact a he. The bones also told them that he was in good health and young, perhaps between 25 and 30 years old, and that his ribs had 17 breaks in them. The x-rays showed that he had been placed on a stretcher made of reeds. All of this indicated that perhaps this young man died of a crushing injury far from home and was carried home on a stretcher to be buried. Last of all, the lab created a drawing of what he may have looked like based on the bones of his face, revealing a handsome young man. The amount of information they gleaned from x-rays is astonishing, bringing this silent mummy’s past to life.
Each chapter investigates a different case, including a chilling discovery of a small skeleton whose teeth had braces with pink bands, a Civil War soldier’s final resting place, and the many graves disturbed by Hurricane Isaac. The author includes some unsolved cases as well. Unfortunately, there are a few weaknesses: the information on a couple of the cases is too brief and not fleshed out well enough, and there were a couple of typos.
Minor flaws aside, the author’s straightforward writing style is at once conversational and knowledgeable, and the respect and care she has for each unidentified person is evident. The book reveals that exciting work is being done in Louisiana, work that has had national impact. Intriguing, easy to read, and of local interest, Bone Remains will keep you absorbed.