Âé¶¹´«Ã½

Digging the deceased

By Maggie Mcdonald

7 December 2002

Pinpointing time of death is exceedingly difficult – certainly a lot harder than it looks in all those blood thirsty novels and TV dramas. Jessica Snyder Sachs takes a refreshingly realistic approach to the subject in Corpse (Perseus, $15). She won acclaim from our reviewer, Bernard Knight, emeritus professor of forensic pathology at the University of Wales.

Death, acknowledges Sachs, is a complicated process. She looks at the methods entomologists use to estimate time of death: for example, tracing the life cycles of corpse flies and obscure beetles that seize on dead bodies as richly furnished homes for their larvae.…

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