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Book reviews for "Mapel,_William" sorted by average review score:

Dead Men Do Tell Tales: The Strange and Fascinating Cases of a Forensic Anthropologist
Published in Hardcover by Doubleday (1994)
Authors: William R. Maples and Michael Browning
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Grabbed my interest from front to back.
I have always enjoyed reading and hearing about the ways in which a crime is solved and this book told extremely technical and medical information in a way in which anyone can understand. Besides that, the subject matter itself was fascinating and enriching. Dr. Maples is one of the most amazing forensic anthropologists. He has worked on cases ranging from the family of Tsar Nicholas II in Russia to that of President Zachary Taylor. This man is highly respected in and outside of his field. I was captivated from the moment I read the first chapter and I read all 283 pages in 3 days. I couldn't put it down. In fact, why do you think I'm here? I'm looking for more books on this subject because Dr. Maples made it so interesting. There are a couple of instances which some would find stomach-turning, but not many. I would highly recommend this book for anyone interested in this type of matter.

Roll the Bones and Read the Truth They Cast
For nearly a century the science of forensics has grown from a barely understood art to a marvel of modern science. From development of finger printing in the early 1900's, to DNA gene matching of today, forensic pathology and anthropology have blossomed into the law's best weapons against criminals that stalk our world. In 'Dead Men Do Tell Tales' we enter the world of Dr. William Maples, PhD of the C A Pound Human Identification Center in Gainesville, Florida-an often brutal and ghoulish realm of dismembered corpses, hastily torched cremains of hapless victims or those dumped in septic tanks to rot and putrify in the other detritus of man's remains. Dr. Maples' own study is the field of forensic anthropology-the study of the human skeleton, and this man's expertise in that field has cemented my interest in amateur study of forensics.

Told in the first person, Maples comes across as brilliant and personable, if a little supremely confident in his own abilities as an investigator. And like Stephen Hawking's 'A Brief History of Time', isn't afraid to admit when he has erred. Where the book shines, aside from its plethora of information, is in the presentation of that information-Maples never uses terms that he doesn't explain, knowing full well that the book is going to be read more by laymen like me than a peer within the profession. So do not expect detailed treatises on anatomy, pathology or pages of chemical breakdowns. Instead, Maples presents an easy to understand work that is surprising in its level of detail, and a credit to himself and his co-author, Michael Browning, for making it understandable.

Though it is a book on anthropology, one cannot write about one subject without at least touch on the pathology end, since the two are intimately related. After explaining his own origins from his birth in Dallas, Texas, his schooling and odd jobs he held in order to pay for his college-mostly that of riding shot gun in an ambulance while working for a mortuary as they sped from accident to accident, trying to scoop business away from competing funeral homes. He majored in English, but took a course on anthropology on a lark at the suggestion of his university counsellor. In so doing he met Tom McKern, who impressed Maples with his skill as a teacher, mentoring himself to the older professor.

Past the first chapter we enter Maples' job, past his trapping baboons in Africa in 1960s to his eventual relocation as Gainesville and the C A Pound offices there. Florida, he describes, is a living organism with highways making up its arterial system, and a place where criminals, like blood cells, pass through, dumping their often mutilated cargo of human debris. In many ways I believe he softened the blow in his descriptions of finding the body of man in a septic tank where it had been for over a decade or that of three murdered drug dealers near a golf course who had been executed by fellow criminals then unceremoniously tossed into a pit to be buried. Mere words cannot describe these gruesome atrocities, but he makes it clear that while it doesn't bother him anymore, it does turn even the hardest cop green with nausea.

His affinity with tools, since they are so often used as murder weapons, has led him to collect quite an assortment of hatchets, crow bars, hammers, saws-and could often be found in the hardware department at Sears looking at tools, trying to find the right one that matches the damaged bone. His expertise in this field enabled him to study John Merrick's remains-the Elephant Man of the 19th century, and even to Russia where he examined the skeletonized remains of Tsar Nicholas and his family, almost seventy years after they were murdered by Bolsheviks during the 1917 revolution. All of this experience-almost forty years before his death in 1999, has set Maples in his ways. He possesses a strong, passionate belief that there is true evil in the world, and that somehow the world is better off without certain murderers around. Though this is tempered by his own research into the most humane ways to execute someone.

'Dead Men Do Tell Tales' is a fascinating, enjoyable read-captivating in its insights in forensic pathology and anthropology in a language that everyone can understand. It gives the novice reader in the field a general understanding of the chemical changes our bodies go through as they decompose, the organs and other bodily system are rendered down in the earth-by insects and animals, and how evidence is gleaned off bones-chisel marks, bullet holes, little nicks and scratches that can tell the investigator what tool was used, and a little insight from Maples' point of view of the people who used them. It is a fascinating, engrossing book that anyone with a reasonably strong stomach should be able to enjoy. A fitting testimony to a highly skilled man who is sadly no longer with us. Thank you, Dr. Maples.

Dead Men do Tell Tales is the best book
Dead Men do Tell Tales is a great book. It is very elequent, and puts the reader at ease, even when talking about the murder of children. It gives great insite into the world of the forensic anthropologist. The discovery of Czar Nicolas II and his family is especially well told. Dr. Maples is very good at making the reader feel like they are at the site of the grave and being the first one to dig up the bones. His argument about Alexi and Anastasia still being alive is very true. Another great story is the elephant man, Joseph Merrick. His description of the bone growths are very lifelike. When he talks about the hairs in the plaster cast of Merricks body, it brings shivers to the body. This is the best book I have ever read


Inside Maple Leaf Gardens : the rise and fall of the Toronto Maple Leafs
Published in Unknown Binding by McGraw-Hill Ryerson ()
Author: William Houston
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How an owner can run a team into the ground
The book isn't up to date (it stops somewhere in 1989) but gives a horrifying view into the obvious lack of love for the team and the building (Maple Leaf Gardens) and into the power of the former owner of the Leafs, who almost ruined one of hockey's greatest franchises. The book describes the great history of the Leafs and has beautiful pictures to illustrate it(Barilko's great flying goal). The major issue of the book is the fall of the Leafs, at the hand of their former owner, Ballard. The poor handling of promising players by incompetent managers, the personal vendettas with members of the press (Foster Hewitt and the destruction of his famous gondola) and other owners, the petty comments on everything and everybody in hockey, it's a miracle the team and the building survived Mr. Ballard and his illustrious friend, Yolanda, at all. Given the recent results of the Leafs and their departure from the Gardens, a new, revised version of this great book might be what the fans are waiting for.


Opportunities in Aerospace Careers, Rev. Ed.
Published in Paperback by McGraw-Hill/Contemporary Books (24 September, 2002)
Authors: Wallace R. Maples and William K. Kershner
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Moderate! not that great!
The book has some general iinformation. It gives some basic insight into the aerospace industry but not the whole. It is like a fresh up or first time information for someone who does not know anything about that field. If you don't know anything, then Read! it otherwise look for something else.


Calculus Projects with Maple V: A Tool, not an Oracle
Published in Paperback by Brooks Cole (29 January, 1996)
Authors: William C. Bauldry and Joseph R. Fielder
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Calculus Laboratories With Maple: A Tool Not an Oracle
Published in Paperback by Brooks Cole (1998)
Authors: William C. Bauldry and Fiedler
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Calculus, Maple Supplement
Published in Spiral-bound by John Wiley & Sons (1994)
Authors: Deborah Hughes-Hallett, Andrew Gleason, Daniel E. Flath, Sheldon P. Gordon, David O. Lomen, David Lovelock, William G. McCallum, Brad G. Osgood, Andrew Pasquale, and Jeff Tecosky-Feldman
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Day the Music Stopped
Published in Hardcover by Winston-Derek Publishers (1991)
Author: Ann William Maples
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Dead Men Do Tell Tales
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Random House of Canada Ltd. (1997)
Author: William Maple
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Elementary Differential Equations Sixth Edition and Differential Equations with Maple Second Edition
Published in Paperback by John Wiley & Sons (1997)
Authors: Garrett J. Stuck, John E. Osborn, Ronald L. Lipsman, Brian R. Hunt, Kevin R. Coombes, and William E. Boyce
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Elementary Differential Equations with Boundary Values Fifth Edition and Differential Equations with Maple Set
Published in Paperback by John Wiley & Sons (1995)
Authors: Richard C. DiPrima, Kevin R. Coombes, and William E. Boyce
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