Description
About the Author
Frances Larson is an Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Durham and the author of An Infinity of Things: How Sir Henry Wellcome Collected the World and Severed. She lives in Durham.
Reviews
"Larson delves into the grotesque yet wildly fascinating topic of decapitation... [Her] lively, conversational tone turns these morbid objects into something more meaningful than a mere expression of the macabre." -- Publishers Weekly
"[W]ide-ranging and thoughtful... In an age where so many taboos are fading, the severed head retains its dreadful and sacred power." -- Mike Jay - Wall Street Journal
"No need to explain why this nonfiction book made the top of my list... Despite the ghoulish subject, this is a closely researched, indeed, scholarly study of the bizarre customs of hunting, collecting, trading, displaying and otherwise bonding with other people's heads." -- Marilyn Stasio - The New York Times Book Review
"This idiosyncratic history of decapitation... jumps between historical and recent examples, from the invention of the guillotine in the French Revolution to Damien Hirst's self-portrait in a morgue... This morbid obsession, [Larson] argues, is common to all cultures-a realization that dawned on her when she worked at a museum that exhibited shrunken heads. Her book shares in this fascination-'dangerous but irresistible'-and makes some distinctions between the forms it takes." -- New Yorker
Book Information
ISBN 9780871404541
Author Frances Larson
Format Hardback
Page Count 336
Imprint Liveright Publishing Corporation
Publisher WW Norton & Co
Weight(grams) 616g
Dimensions(mm) 244mm * 165mm * 30mm