Digging Up the Dead: Uncovering the Life and Times of an Extraordinary Surgeon
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #48792 in Books
- Published on: 2008-03-06
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 336 pages
Editorial Reviews
Sunday Express
`gripping and sometimes unsettling'
Contemporary Review
`the author....give[s] readers a balanced and objective life of an extra-ordinary man'
Contemporary Review
`the author....give[s] readers a balanced and objective life of an extra-ordinary man'
Customer Reviews
Outstanding !
Druin Burch's exposition on the life and times of the world famous surgeon Astley Cooper is not only a brilliantly researched and written medical biography but also an exceptional biography full stop, as well as a great read.
He outlines the life of an extraordinary person, and manages to draw the reader in to not only the details of his life, but also the feelings he must have felt as he pioneered the types of basic surgery we take for granted. Exposing a fair bit of himself in the process, Burch has written a book that is easily readable by laypeople and gives an insight into traditional surgery - raw, unadulterated and with no anaesthetic !
For those interested in life in 17th and 18th century England, the book does not disappoint and Burch does a great job in recreating the sights and smells of the era.
All in all, well worth a read and an exciting book for a first time author.
A Definate 'Must Read' for all Medical Historians
Druin Burch has opened up the doors of the 18th century dead house, lifted the lid on the coffins and takes the reader inside the mind of Astley Cooper's incredible life during a period of vast social, scientific and political changes. Burch does not attempt to dumb down Cooper's world, and uses it as a framework to provide the reader with a detailed insight of what being a physician and/or surgeon was all about. For medical historians, this is a must-read, and one you will not want to leave alone. Succinctly put, this publication is an education in itself and very well worth the 5 stars I have awarded.
Exceptional Biography
I have no medical training whatsoever, must confess that I had not heard of Sir Astley Cooper and am bordering on the unneccessarily squeamish in medical matters, yet I found this to be a thoroughly engaging, well written and unusually well-informed biography which held my attention from beginning to end.
Being a doctor and experienced in A&E has given Druin Burch an unique position from which to write about and review the life of a surgeon of two centuries ago. The juxtaposition of modern-day gore in the life of an hospital doctor with the frightening world of the surgeon (and in particular the patient) of the early nineteenth century could so easily have jarred but Burch works the two together seamlessly throughout the book and they help each other enormously.
It also contains easily the most revolting pair of sentences I have ever read together in any work.
Very difficult to believe that this is the first book from the author. Impossible to believe that it will be the last.



