
Dark Archives A Librarian's Investigation into the Science and History of Books Bound in Human Skin
Reviews

This is not a book I would have chosen myself. I mean, I like creepy things, but the idea of books bound in human skin is straight up disturbing. So, when it arrived as a Fantastic Strangelings book club pick, I was hesitant. Everyone, this book is so good. The author's voice is friendly and real. The chapters are incredibly well-organized. The content is honest, surprising, and informative. I learned a ton about the history of medical ethics globally and how human remains often fall into a weird legal gap because they are not owned by anyone and the person who had claim to them is dead. This book takes a considerate but unflinching look at the power some have been allowed to have over others in the past and how much (or how little) we have progressed since then.

Absolutely fascinating. It might have been strange (read: macabre) beach reading, but the journey was compelling enough to unfold as the best kind of nerdy librarian mystery thriller. I'd always assumed human-bound books to be apocryphal at best and a very strange urban legend at worst. This book is a perfect intersection between book history and horror.

My mother may have been thoroughly disappointed in me when I brought this home but it was entirely worth it - incredibly well written and vastly interesting











