
Cities of the Red Night
Book
An opium addict is lost in the jungle; young men wage war against an empire of mutants; a handsome...

Love With a Scandalous Lord (Daughters of Fortune, #3)
Book
For as long as she can remember, Lydia Westland has dreamed of glittering London society. Finding...

Island
Book
In Island, his last novel, Huxley transports us to a Pacific island where, for 120 years, an ideal...

Skinwalker (Jane Yellowrock #1)
Book
First in a brand new series from the author of the Rogue Mage novels Jane Yellowrock is a...

The Walking Dead Volume 14: No Way Out
Book
The world we knew is gone. The world of commerce and frivolous necessity has been replaced by a...

The Walking Dead Volume 15: We Find Ourselves
Book
The world we knew is gone. The world of commerce and frivolous necessity has been replaced by a...

7 Wonders: Architects
Tabletop Game
In 7 Wonders: Architects, 2-7 players race to become a leader of the ancient world by completing an...

A Lady’s Guide To Fortune Hunting
Book
Kitty Talbot needs a fortune. Love is not required… She’s got just twelve weeks to find a...

Cyanidation: The Refinement of My Life
Dr. Jennoa R. Graham PhD AKA Dr GNP
Book
Cyanidation is about survival, perseverance, and spiritual growth. Jennoa Graham spent many years of...
Memoir Coming of Age Young Adult Christian Living

Ross (3284 KP) rated The Art of Dying in Books
Aug 15, 2019
Ambrose Parry returns with a second book set in Victorian Edinburgh during its medical and scientific revolution. Where the first book centred around Sir James Young Simpson (and others!) search for the perfect anaesthetic, this book focuses more on the man and his reputation. Edinburgh is still a thriving centre of medical science, and reputation is everything. The book starts with Simpson's reputation being besmirched by rivals and former colleagues, looking to suggest negligence. Will Raven and Sarah Fisher team up again to gradually peel away at the facts underlying the case in question and reveal some disturbing trends.
While the plot itself, and its numerous twists and turns, is not exactly ground-breaking, it is excellently told, with clues scattered here, there and everywhere. And to weave this tale around actual historic events and cases really appeals to my mind.
This book, and its predecessor, is one of the most immersive books I have read in a long time. The reader really gets to feel as if they are in Victorian era Edinburgh. Admittedly, I read a fair part of this book while commuting to work in Edinburgh (indeed my children were all born in the Sir James Young Simpson maternity unit of the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary), but I feel the reader with less connection to the city would still get that same feeling.
There is again an underlying message of the treatment of women during those times (and indeed today), both how they are treated in the household and society and also their opportunities for a career and to explore their skills. Sarah Fisher is a strong female character who tolerates her place in society but yearns to break through the glass ceiling, proving her worth to all and sundry as she goes.
In contrast, Will Raven is somewhat spineless in this regard. He sees the issues with society but doesn't do much to act on it. Indeed, he starts the book having run away from Edinburgh and his chances of a relationship with a mere housekeeper, for fear of his heart dooming his medical career. Raven does get some amount of development, both in terms of his medical career, and also in terms of becoming the Victorian equivalent of "woke".
Parry's prose is fantastic and she (they?) truly allow the reader to feel the story unfold around them.
An utterly wonderful book with some interesting history lessons and important messages about the past that should help us build a fairer society today.