ncrabb 's review for:

206 Bones by Kathy Reichs
4.0

This is one of the most memorable books in the series. I don’t know that I suffer from full-blown claustrophobia, but small spaces or even large rooms where I’m not relatively close to an exit ramp up my anxiety levels measurably. That may be why this book made such a mark. As it begins, Temperance Brennan awakens in an extremely confined place apparently underground. She is bound hand and foot, and her place of captivity seems to be long and narrow. The remainder of the book is a kind of flashback that shows you the events leading up to her confinement. They, too, are interesting and will keep you reading.

Someone in Chicago accuses her of blowing a high-profile investigation; at her Montreal office, she receives a nasty note demanding that she return to the U.S. But how did she get inside the subterranean tube or tunnel? Who are the other skeletons with whom he shares the space? Who put her there? And why?

My only gripe is I guessed early on who kidnapped Brennan, but it was mostly a guess, not some super-power sleuth ability. You may not have the same experience.