Kathy Reichs

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kathleen Joan "Kathy" Reichs is native of Chicago and works as a forensic anthropologist, an academic, and bestselling writer of mystery novels. She is a Professor of anthropology at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. She divides her time between work for the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, State of North Carolina, and for the Laboratoire des Sciences Judiciaires et de Médecine Légale for the province of Québec. She is one of only fifty forensic anthropologists certified by the American Board of Forensic Anthropology and is on the Board of Directors of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences. Her schedule also involves a number of speaking engagements around the world.

Contents

[edit] Academic Career

She has taught at Northern Illinois University, University of Pittsburgh, Concordia University, McGill University and is currently the Professor of Anthropology at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.

She has appeared in Rwanda to testify at the UN Tribunal on Genocide. She has assisted Dr. Clive Snow in an exhumation in the area of Lake Atitlan in the highlands of southwest Guatemala. She was a member of the Disaster Mortuary Operational Response Team assigned to assist at the World Trade Center disaster.

[edit] Academic papers

  • Quantified comparison of frontal sinus patterns by means of computed tomography. Forensic Science International 1993 Oct;61(2-3):141-68.
  • Effect of age and osteoarthritis on bone mineral in rhesus monkey vertebrae. Journal of Bone and Mineral Research 1993 Aug;8(8):909-17.
  • Forensic anthropology in the 1990s. The American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology 1992 Jun;13(2):146-53.
  • Treponematosis: a possible case from the late prehistoric of North Carolina. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 1989 Jul;79(3):289-303.
  • Cranial suture eccentricities: a case in which precocious closure complicated determination of sex and commingling. Journal of Forensic Science 1989 Jan;34(1):263-73.
  • Ontogenetic plasticity in nonhuman primates: I. Secular trends in the Cayo Santiago macaques. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 1987 Jul;73(3):279-87.

[edit] Academic books

  • Forensic Osteology: Advances in the Identification of Human Remains (1986)

[edit] Fiction

[edit] Novels

In addition to technical books on Anthropology and Forensics, Kathy Reichs has written 9 novels (to date), which have been translated into 30 languages. Her first novel 'Déjà Dead' won the 1997 Arthur Ellis Award for Best First Novel.

The fictional heroine in her novels, Temperance Brennan, is also a forensic anthropologist. Her lifestyle closely mimics that of her creator. A good portion of the novels is based on real life science. Most of the techniques used and technology mentioned are things that Kathy Reichs uses in her real life job. The blood spatter analysis used in Deadly Decisions for instance, is directly from her job. In the novel Grave Secrets she uses her experience from her visit to Guatemala to enhance the story. Reichs has said herself that she didn't want her character to be perfect and chose to give Temperance some history.

Title Published ISBNs Notes
Déjà Dead 1997 Paperback: ISBN 0-09-925518-9 Won the 1997 Arthur Ellis Award for Best First Novel
Death du Jour 1999 Paperback: ISBN 0-09-925519-7
Deadly Decisions 2000 Paperback: ISBN 0-09-930710-3, Hardback: ISBN 0-434-00820-6
Fatal Voyage 2001 Paperback: ISBN 0-09-930720-0, Audio CD: ISBN 1-85686-927-X
Grave Secrets 2002 Paperback: ISBN 0-09-930730-8, Audio CD: ISBN 1-85686-928-8
Bare Bones 2003 Paperback: ISBN 0-09-944147-0
Monday Mourning 2004 Paperback: ISBN 0-09-944148-9
Cross Bones 2005 Paperback: ISBN 0-09-944149-7, Hardback: ISBN 0-434-01040-5

Audio CD: ISBN 1-85686-985-7

Break No Bones 2006 Hardback: ISBN 0-434-01042-1, Paperback: ISBN 0-434-01544-X
Bones to Ashes 2007 Hardback: ISBN , Paperback: ISBN

[edit] Television

Main article: Bones (TV series)

In 2005, a television series , based on Kathy's heroine in her books, Temperance Brennan, premiered on FOX entitled Bones. Temperance is played by Emily Deschanel, and as in the books is a forensic anthropologist. She moonlights as an author, writing about a fictional (in her world) forensic anthropologist named Kathy Reichs. The TV series does not tie in with the book series, although it is very similar. Numerous characters' names are changed; for example Andrew Ryan becomes Special Agent Seeley Booth (played by David Boreanaz). Other characters, such as Angela Montenegro (played by Michaela Conlin), are completely new. Also, the books are all set in either North Carolina or Montreal, with the exception of Grave Secrets and Cross Bones, which are set in Guatemala and Israel respectively, while the central action and characters in the television series are based in Washington D.C..


[edit] External links