I like reading about medical history and sometimes that veers into the more morbid stories; I was fascinated by this book from the moment I found it. The author combines several perspectives around the human cadaver, making up for an interesting roundup. I learned a lot from this! I also liked how it reflected on the language used around the bodies, their parts and what happened to them; interestingly, this tends to differ from profession to profession.
I preferred the first three chapters, that covered research purposes around surgery, anatomy and decomposing. Maybe because they came closest to what I expected from this. Maybe, because firing bullets at a cadaver isn’t all that interesting anymore after reading about gory body farms. And maybe, because at some point in this book it was barely about human cadavers anymore. Somewhere halfway, the testing on animals really got out of hand and it appeared the author relished in providing all details. Although I knew of some of these examples, having recently read a different story on (the history of) organ donation, the approach here was a bit much for my vegan ass. Also no longer really enjoyed the jokes, because cruel experiments like attaching an extra head to an already complete dog aren’t really funny to me (this was supposed to be about cadavers, not living animals). I was happy to move on from this part of the book and diving into getting rid of our remains.
So although I would have preferred at some points to focus more on the human body than on some of the exact details of what preceded it all, I was still intrigued by a lot of it. The research done for this is elaborate, including lots of literature and field work by the author, and for most of it the style added a nice touch, to keep this from being either too dry or scientific. It’s an old one tho, I wonder what updates could be added in the +20 years since this has been first published (I read the 2003 edition but if I understand correctly the 2021 one only differs in epilogue?).