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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

In the most suspenseful installment of the New York Times bestselling Body Farm series to date, forensic anthropologist Dr. Bill Brockton investigates a bizarre murder—and confronts a deadly enemy he thought he'd put behind bars for good

Forensic anthropologist Bill Brockton has spent twenty-five years solving brutal murders—but none so horrific and merciless as his latest case: A ravaged set of skeletal remains is found scattered in the woods of nearby Cook County. They are all that is left of a victim who had been chained, hand and foot, to a tree on a remote mountainside. The bones tell Brockton and his longtime graduate assistant, Miranda, that the victim was a young male under the age of thirty. As they dig deeper to establish his identity, they uncover warning signs that long-simmering hatred is about to explode into violence, engulfing the region in chaos.

But the shocking case is only the beginning of Brockton's trials. In the middle of the troubling investigation, the unthinkable happens. The most frightening and deadliest criminal Brockton has ever foiled—the sadistic serial killer Nick Satterfield—escapes from prison, bent on wreaking vengeance. And he's had nearly twenty years to plan.

Simply killing Brockton isn't enough. Satterfield wants to make his nemesis suffer first, by destroying everything Brockton holds dear: his son, daughter-in-law, and grandsons, and even Miranda, who's now on the verge of completing her Ph.D. and launching a forensic career of her own.

Barraged by dangers striking from all directions, haunted by the ghosts of old cases, and desperate to save those he loves, Brockton finds himself slipping closer to the abyss. Pushed to the edge, he is forced to question the two pillars that have guided his life and his entire career—the justice system and the quality of mercy. Can the two truly coexist?

If he cannot reconcile these principles, which will Brockton choose in his ultimate moment of truth?

A harrowing, thoughtful, and provocative tale that explores what happens when one honorable, rational man is tested beyond all measure, Without Mercy is a powerful exploration that raises uneasy questions about justice and revenge, compassion and principle, the desire to kill and the will to survive.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      The newest of the Body Farm mysteries describes careful forensic anthropology in the folksy style of Knoxville, Tennessee. Narrator Tom Stechschulte provides a down-home delivery. Forensic anthropologist Dr. Bill Brockton investigates when a skeleton is found tied to a tree on a mountainside. As he works that case, a murderer he put in prison escapes--and comes after him for revenge. Stechschulte sounds comfortable with the technical language of crime investigation and autopsies. Not only is his pacing excellent, his Tennessee-accented dialogue is easy to understand, and the characters he portrays are easy to differentiate. F.C. © AudioFile 2016, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 22, 2016
      In bestseller Bass’s subpar 10th Body Farm novel (after 2015’s The Breaking Point), forensic anthropologist Bill Brockton, founder of the Body Farm for postmortem research, investigates some skeletal remains found in the woods in Tennessee’s Cooke County. The absence of a skull makes identification especially difficult, and evidence that the bones belong to a murder victim who was deliberately made into bear bait makes the need to identify the corpse urgent. Meanwhile, Brockton’s bête noire, serial killer Nick Satterfield, who almost took the lives of the scientist and his family decades earlier, escapes from prison in a way that Thomas Harris fans will find familiar. Satterfield’s appearance shifts the book’s emphasis from interesting scientific detective work to a paint-by-the-numbers cat and mouse game with a sadistic madman. The action builds to a denouement that’s predictably implausible. Bass is the pseudonym for the writing team of Bill Bass, founder of the real-life Body Farm, and Jon Jefferson. Agent: Giles Anderson, Anderson Literary Agency.

    • Library Journal

      May 15, 2016

      A battered skeleton chained to a mountaintop tree isn't the worst of forensic anthropologist Bill Brockton's worries. Nick Satterfield, the vicious serial killer Bill helped put behind bars, has broken out and is bearing down on him. Next in the "Body Farm" series, which frequently makes the New York Times best sellers list.

      Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      A scientist who's more savvy about human remains than human relationships finds his own distinguished person threatened.Buried under the grandstands of the University of Tennessee's stadium, the Osteology Lab is the domain of Dr. Bill Brockton. Like all absent-minded professors, he's dependent on his brilliant and beautiful assistant, Miranda Lovelady, and his capable secretary, Peggy Wilhoit. Still mourning the death of his wife and oblivious to romantic possibilities right under his nose, he's glum because the entrancing Miranda will probably leave once she's finished her doctorate. A pile of human bones minus a skull discovered in a remote county helps lead his mind back to his work. As a forensic anthropologist, he's helped solve many a case, but this one is particularly poignant. The victim, chained to a tree, wore a path around it desperately pacing during weeks of captivity. Brockton and Miranda take the bones back to the Body Farm, a combination morgue, lab, and classroom facility and, with the help of other specialists, determine that the victim was male, under 25, and of Middle Eastern ancestry. Once they've tracked down his identity, they have increasing reason to think this was a hate crime: the young man was Muslim, forced to eat canned pork products and smeared with bacon to lure the bear that killed him. Brockton is horrified to learn that Nick Satterfield, a ruthless killer he'd helped convict, recently escaped from prison and marked Brockton himself as bear bait. Knowing all too well that Satterfield is capable of further atrocity, Brockton agrees to make himself a deliberate target--and, as neither he nor the protective forces he works with anticipate, many others as well. Despite a contrived denouement and some saggy, draggy passages, Bass (The Breaking Point, 2015, etc.) balances anthropological instruction with a twisty tale of suspense in the 10th Body Farm case. COPYRIGHT(1) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2016
      A scientist who's more savvy about human remains than human relationships finds his own distinguished person threatened.Buried under the grandstands of the University of Tennessee's stadium, the Osteology Lab is the domain of Dr. Bill Brockton. Like all absent-minded professors, he's dependent on his brilliant and beautiful assistant, Miranda Lovelady, and his capable secretary, Peggy Wilhoit. Still mourning the death of his wife and oblivious to romantic possibilities right under his nose, he's glum because the entrancing Miranda will probably leave once she's finished her doctorate. A pile of human bones minus a skull discovered in a remote county helps lead his mind back to his work. As a forensic anthropologist, he's helped solve many a case, but this one is particularly poignant. The victim, chained to a tree, wore a path around it desperately pacing during weeks of captivity. Brockton and Miranda take the bones back to the Body Farm, a combination morgue, lab, and classroom facility and, with the help of other specialists, determine that the victim was male, under 25, and of Middle Eastern ancestry. Once they've tracked down his identity, they have increasing reason to think this was a hate crime: the young man was Muslim, forced to eat canned pork products and smeared with bacon to lure the bear that killed him. Brockton is horrified to learn that Nick Satterfield, a ruthless killer he'd helped convict, recently escaped from prison and marked Brockton himself as bear bait. Knowing all too well that Satterfield is capable of further atrocity, Brockton agrees to make himself a deliberate target--and, as neither he nor the protective forces he works with anticipate, many others as well. Despite a contrived denouement and some saggy, draggy passages, Bass (The Breaking Point, 2015, etc.) balances anthropological instruction with a twisty tale of suspense in the 10th Body Farm case.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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