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  • Still Life with Bones: A forensic quest for justice among Latin America’s mass graves

  • "Essential reading as a human"
  • By: Dr Alexa Hagerty
  • Narrated by: Rose Akroyd
  • Length: 8 hrs and 11 mins
  • 4.7 out of 5 stars (3 ratings)

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Still Life with Bones: A forensic quest for justice among Latin America’s mass graves

By: Dr Alexa Hagerty
Narrated by: Rose Akroyd
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Publisher's Summary

An anthropologist working with forensic teams and victims' families to investigate crimes against humanity in Latin America explores what science can tell us about the lives of the dead in this haunting account of grief, the power of ritual, and a quest for justice.

"Exhumation can divide brothers and restore fathers, open old wounds and open the possibility of regeneration-of building something new with the pile of broken mirrors that is loss and mourning."

Over the course of Guatemala's thirty-year armed conflict -the longest ever in Central America-over 200,000 people were killed. During Argentina's military dictatorship in the seventies, over 30,000 people were disappeared. Today, forensic anthropologists in each country are gathering evidence to prove atrocities and seek justice. But these teams do more than just study skeletons-they work to repair families and countries torn apart by violence.

In Still Life with Bones, anthropologist Alexa Hagerty learns to see the dead body with a forensic eye. She examines bones for evidence of torture and fatal wounds-hands bound by rope, cuts from machetes-but also for signs of a life lived: to articulate how life shapes us down to the bone. A weaver is recognized from the tiny bones of the toes, molded by years of kneeling before a loom; a girl is identified alongside her pet dog. In the tenderness of understanding these bones, Hagerty discovers how exhumation serves as a ritual in the naming and placement of the dead, and connects ancestors with future generations. She shows us how this work can bring meaning to families dealing with unimaginable loss, and how its symbolic force can also extend to entire societies in the aftermath of state terror and genocide. Encountering the dead has the power to transform us, making us consider each other, our lives, and the world differently.

Weaving together powerful stories about investigative breakthroughs, grieving families, histories of violence, and her own forensic coming of age, Hagerty crafts a moving portrait of the living and the dead.

©2023 Alexa Hagerty (P)2023 Headline Publishing Group Ltd

Critic Reviews

"Touching, but achingly honest-a most amazing account of training as a forensic anthropologist. When Hagerty talks about 'lives being violently made into bones', I defy you not to be moved. The text is unflinching, but then the crimes and the victims deserve nothing less. I guarantee this will make you think long and hard about cruelty and human rights and the dedication and humanity of the forensic scientist." (Professor Dame Sue Black, anatomist and bestselling author of All that Remains)

"In this unforgettable debut, Alexa Hagerty reveals the intimacy and sacredness of forensics, revealing it as a task that, despite its Sisyphean nature, is evermore vital to preservation of memory, story, and ritual-a slow, intricate counterweight to the obliterating power of modern violence. Still Life with Bones is at once horrifying and impossibly hopeful." (Francisco Cantú, New York Times bestselling author of The Line Becomes a River)

"Still Life with Bones will hold readers rapt. Hagerty takes us deeply inside the experience of an anthropologist learning to dispassionately decode scientific clues while never forgetting that in each bone there is a brutally murdered person who still cries. A startling and profound meditation on death and resilience." (T.M. Luhrmann, author of How God Becomes Real)

What listeners say about Still Life with Bones: A forensic quest for justice among Latin America’s mass graves

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Excellent story

This was a beautifully read book that artfully covered the horrors of Guatemala and Argentina, the science of exhumation and anthropology and the emotional response it generated. Desperately sad in places.

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Dark, chilling and deeply human

A gripping account of state led abuse of their own populations. I was more interested in the biological side of things rather than the psychological, however a very interesting read. A bit drawn out in some parts, but a real statement on what humans can do to each other and in response to injustices. Really cements the great work these groups are doing to find the disappeared.

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