Every Contact Leaves a Trace, Jo Ward
Every Contact Leaves a Trace, Jo Ward
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Every Contact Leaves a Trace
My Life as a Crime Scene Investigator

Author: Jo Ward

Narrator: Sarah Thom

Unabridged: 7 hr 18 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Aurum

Published: 05/16/2024


Synopsis

Enter the fascinating world of crime scene investigation with this chilling memoir from a senior investigator.

For most people, dead bodies are horrifying. They are the physical representation of everything we’re afraid of – our own mortality, the unknown, the inevitability, and lack of dignity of the end.

But for Jo Ward, a dead body is absolutely fascinating…

For Jo, a normal day’s work involves getting up-close and personal with the dead – generally the murdered dead – exploring every inch of their battered and bloody bodies and finding the clues that will lead the police to their killers.

Every scene teaches her something new. Every murder is a chance to obtain justice for the dead. Because every contact leaves a trace… Jo Ward is part of a generation of pioneering women who lead forensic investigation around the world. She investigates high-profile crimes – murder, domestic killings, infanticide, and rape.

If you’re a fan of Sue Black and Patricia Wiltshire, Every Contact Leaves a Trace is for you. It’s a rare glimpse into a formidable woman and the world of forensics, chronicling some of Jo’s toughest and most groundbreaking cases, and offering insight into how she copes despite seeing the most shocking excesses of humanity.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Kirsti

Oral history featuring forensic psychologists, homicide detectives, cold-case experts, latent print specialists, forensic anthropologists, evidence technicians, scene photographers, and forensic botanists. (I didn't even know there were forensic botanists, and boy are they interesting.) Debunks a lo......more

I really liked this book, but I don't have much to say about it. It's an oral history of forensics, and I especially loved the feel it gives you for the voices of the people who do this work and the language they use (which varies widely, as one would expect) in talking about what they do.......more

Goodreads review by Thomas

The book is basically a series of anecdotes which the author has put together. Still it does a good job of describing how DNA and forensic studies have evolved over the past thirty years, how law enforcement has to be careful is using it, how scientists have to be careful as well, how there is so mu......more