“Why would a pope seal up a skeleton and hide it in a wall?” – Dr. Bill Brockton
Summoned from his beloved “Body Farm” in Tennessee to Avignon, France by his protégé Miranda Lovelady under false pretenses, Dr. Bill Brockton soon forgets his anger at being mislead when Miranda reveals the real reason she needed her mentor.
While working on an excavation in the Palace of the Popes Miranda and her dig partner uncovered a stone ossuary filled with bones. Interesting, but not worthy enough in and of itself to warrant tricking the world-renowned forensic anthropologist into flying four thousand miles.
No, what turned the find from interesting into potentially world changing was the inscription on the ossuary… the one which indicates the bones contained within it are those of Jesus of Nazareth. Being scientists, Brockton and Miranda are initially skeptical. Being good scientists, however, they are willing to put in the research and let the forensic results speak for themselves.
When testing dates the bones at two thousand years and a link between them and the impression on the Shroud of Turin is discovered, Brockton and Miranda realize they could be sitting on one of the biggest archeological discoveries in history. They aren’t the only ones who realize it, however, and soon the two scientists find themselves in the crosshairs of rivals, the Vatican, and a very determined religious zealot, all of whom will stop at nothing to possess the bones. (more…)

She felt at home here, but she had the knack of feeling at home just about anywhere. And a girl didn’t want to overstay her welcome. – Kit Tolliver
“You have made a brand of your image and now I am going to redesign you.” – Mr. Glamour
People out in these parts can take hold of religion like it’s a drug, and they don’t want to give it up once they’ve got hold of it. – Sheriff Clem Barefield
“You’re a tough guy, Matt, a stoic, but you’ve got a lot of friends.” – Jade Lee
“I’m not from around here, and I’ve been places you’ll never want to go. Unless you’re even stupider than you look.”
The first edition of
We weren’t never bad kids, we just didn’t have nothing to hold on to, that’s all. – John Sissons
Ed Kurtz is a busy man. He recently started the publishing imprint
Though Joe McKinney has made quite a name for himself as a novelist, he was a 2009 Bram Stoker Award nominee, his collection The Red Empire and Other Stories was my first experience with his writing.







