Deborah Halber is a Boston-based journalist whose work has appeared in The Boston Globe; Technology Review; the interactive, illustrated digital magazine Symbolia; and many university publications. A native New Yorker, she received her BA from Brandeis University and an MA in journalism from New York University. A member of the American Society of Journalists and Authors, Mystery Writers of America, and the National Association of Science Writers, she has chronicled breakthroughs in neuroscience, molecular biology, energy, and technology at MIT and Tufts, but is most enthralled with “quantum weirdness,” worm longevity, cell undertakers, and the properties of snail slime. Visit her at DeborahHalber.com.
“A lively study that’s part whodunit, part sociological study. . .
. The result is eminently entertaining and will be devoured by
armchair detectives.”
*Publishers Weekly*
“Brilliant . . . Ms. Halber chronicles with lucidity and wit . . .
the workings of this fascinating new subculture.”
*The Wall Street Journal*
“The Skeleton Crew is a carefully crafted account of an intriguing
new opportunity for arm chair sleuths. Thanks to the Internet,
anyone with a computer, curiosity, patience, and a passion for
justice can enter the dark world of missing persons and unsolved
homicides. It’s fascinating to learn how such matches are made and
heartening to witness the growing cooperation between law
enforcement and ordinary citizens whose persistence can sometimes
crack the code in cold cases that have languished unresolved for
years. I loved it.”
*Sue Grafton*
“From home-computer screens to a new national database, join The
Skeleton Crew for a page-turning behind-the-scenes look at the
world of Internet sleuths who give names to the men and women who
have died without identity. For the first time ever, readers are
brought the real-life cases of missing persons, the unidentified
dead, and the network of people that gives them their names . . .
proving once again what I said at the conclusion of every episode
of America’s Most Wanted: ‘One person can make a difference.’”
*John Walsh, host of America's Most Wanted*
"A compelling glimpse into a little-known subculture inhabited by a
colorful cast of the idiosyncratic, the quirky, and the downright
weird."
*Alison Bass, author of Side Effects*
"In this highly addictive story-within-a-story narrative, Deborah
Halber skillfully exposes the complex Internet subculture of
amateur sleuths. The people who obsess over the fates and
identities of Jane and John Does are puzzles in themselves, which
adds a fascinating layer to this captivating book. The Skeleton
Crew will likely inspire many more case resolutions."
*Katherine Ramsland, author of The Devil's Dozen and Cemetery
Stories*
“Exploring the world of amateur sleuths, Halber proves to be the
perfect guide: unflinching, perceptive, wry. I was hooked from page
one.”
*Allison Hoover Bartlett, bestselling author of The Man Who Loved
Books Too Much*
“Halber’s artful sleuthing into this little-known demimonde leaves
one bloodthirsty for more.”
*Ted Botha, author of The Girl with the Crooked Nose*
“An integral component of NamUs is the group of responsible,
dedicated volunteers who scour case details in an effort to match
long-term missing persons to unidentified decedents. In The
Skeleton Crew, Deborah Halber follows the journey of some of these
volunteers who have made it their mission to assist criminal
justice professionals in resolving those cases.”
*Arthur Eisenberg, PhD, Co-Director, UNT Center for Human
Identification*
“For me, this book was much more than a terrific read about a
layered subculture in a field that crosses my own. It was an
invitation to get involved… I hope a lot of people read this book.
I hope they feel the urgency of the need to identify those who’ve
been separated from their names and to reunite the missing with
their loved ones. I hope this book inspires the addition of many
more eyes and ears in this work…I know of no better guide for
navigating this multifaceted world than Halber’s book.”
*Psychology Today*
“Compelling”
*Discover Magazine*
"The journey is fascinating."
*Shelf Awareness*
If you like tales of discovered body parts, heads in concrete in
buckets, corpses whose hands have been cut off, decomposition,
decay and death, then this fascinating, riveting book is for
you.
*Providence Journal*
"Halber's intriguing book ought to bring in lots more
volunteers."
*Commercial Dispatch*
“[An] absorbing look at a very odd corner of our world.”
*The Seattle Times*
"Engaging, arful."
*Los Angeles Review of Books*
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