Bone Deep / Randy Wayne White.

By: White, Randy WayneMaterial type: TextTextSeries: A Doc Ford novel ; 18Description: pages cmISBN: 9780399158131 (hardback)Subject(s): Ford, Doc (Fictitious character) -- Fiction | Marine biologists -- Fiction | Crow Indians -- Fiction | FICTION / Crime | FICTION / Suspense | FICTION / Thrillers | Florida -- FictionGenre/Form: Suspense fiction. DDC classification: 813/.54 LOC classification: PS3573.H47473 | B66 2014Other classification: FIC050000 | FIC030000 | FIC031000 Online resources: Cover image Summary: "The stunning new thriller from the New York Times-bestselling author. When a Crow Indian acquaintance of Tomlinson's asks him to help recover a relic stolen from his tribe, Doc Ford is happy to tag along-but neither Doc nor Tomlinson realize what they've let themselves in for. Their search takes them to the part of Central Florida known as Bone Valley, famous primarily for two things: a ruthless subculture of black-marketers who trade in illegal artifacts and fossils, and a multibillion-dollar phosphate industry whose strip mines compromise the very ground they walk on. Neither enterprise tolerates nosy outsiders. For each, public exposure equals big financial losses-and in a region built on a million-year accumulation of bones, there is no shortage of spots in which to hide a corpse. Or two"--
Item type: Reference
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Martha's Vineyard High School Library
FIC/WHITE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 39844500032947

"The stunning new thriller from the New York Times-bestselling author. When a Crow Indian acquaintance of Tomlinson's asks him to help recover a relic stolen from his tribe, Doc Ford is happy to tag along-but neither Doc nor Tomlinson realize what they've let themselves in for. Their search takes them to the part of Central Florida known as Bone Valley, famous primarily for two things: a ruthless subculture of black-marketers who trade in illegal artifacts and fossils, and a multibillion-dollar phosphate industry whose strip mines compromise the very ground they walk on. Neither enterprise tolerates nosy outsiders. For each, public exposure equals big financial losses-and in a region built on a million-year accumulation of bones, there is no shortage of spots in which to hide a corpse. Or two"--

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