True crime fans, this one’s for you. Bare Bones is like a guided tour through the dark world of unsolved mysteries led by someone who knows how to balance compassion with curiosity.
Engelbrecht is the voice behind the popular True Crime South Africa podcast. Her fascination with crime stories began when, as a teenager, her Polish friend went missing. This left its mark on her and years later, working in sales in Epping, she decided to do something positive with her life. Six years later, with tips continuing to roll in, her podcast has become a place for stories that might otherwise be forgotten. She doesn’t play detective but rather acts as a go-between passing information to the right people and offering families a sliver of hope.
In Bare Bones, Engelbrecht revisits some of her most haunting cases. Those about missing people, mysterious deaths and cold trails that suddenly warm up through a DNA match, a loose-lipped perpetrator or a random social media post. The number of missing people in South Africa varies, with the South African Police Service reporting 2 504 active cases as of May 2024. Many of these are missing through a variety of substance use, mental health, mysterious circumstances, sex work and more. Engelbrecht highlights how under-resourced our police services are and how families are often left to navigate a maze of leads, scams, hopes and heartbreak.
Dedicated to victims and their loved ones, this book is both sobering and deeply humane. Engelbrecht writes with heart, insight and purpose reminding us that behind every headline is a person, a story and a name that deserves to be remembered.
In the epilogue she gives tips on how things can be improved for victims of violent crime, including NGOs similar to Rape Crises and hospice care.
The book is dedicated to those who live with the undefined grief of not knowing and for those who know but have lost their voices.
Her previous books include Samurai Sword Murder: The Morne Harmse Story and Sizzlers: The Hate Crime That Tore Sea Point Apart.
Thanks to Jonathan Ball for the review copy.