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Formats
Hardcover Book Details
  • 05/2020
  • 9781838028077
  • 244 pages
  • $20.08
Ebook Details
  • 9781838028008
  • 245 pages
  • $2.99
Paperback Book Details
  • 04/2020
  • 9781838028022
  • 296 pages
  • $15.99
David Hutchison
Author, Illustrator
The Book of Skulls
A Victorian tale of gender-bending, hidden identity, obsession and gruesome murder, set in Edinburgh's Old Town. 1875. Liz Moliette; a poor orphan of unknown heritage, and Amulya Patel; from a wealthy Indian family, are the only female students at the Edinburgh Medical School, where a hostile attitude towards women is driven by Professor Atticus. However Liz and Amulya have allies in fellow student Campbell Preeble, The Reekie reporter Hector Findlay and the charming Dr Paul Love. In dire need of funds, Liz becomes assistant to gruff lecturer and police surgeon Dr Florian Blyth. When a series of grisly murders take place the doctor and Liz help Inspector Macleod in his investigation, which leads to the Edinburgh Asylum, the Burry Man festival and the quack science of phrenology The search for the killer comes dangerously close to Liz as she uncovers her own family secrets.
Reviews
Hutchison (the YA novel Storm Hags) draws on early police forensics in his tightly plotted adult debut. In 1875, pragmatic Afro-British woman Liz Moliette leaves the London orphanage that raised her to attend medical school in Edinburgh, despite the school not allowing women to graduate. She befriends Amulya Patel, the only other female student, and the affable, secretly gay Campbell Preeble. Despite the efforts of male students and professors to thwart them, Liz excels and moves toward her dream of working in forensics by becoming assistant to police surgeon Florian Blyth. When decapitated bodies begin appearing, the police call on Blyth, who has been living as a man in order to practice. After Liz and Amulya help exonerate journalist Hector Findlay, who has been carrying on a relationship with Campbell, police suspect a phrenologist is collecting the skulls of unusual specimens. They continue their investigation, not realizing that Liz is in grave danger because the culprit’s collection has a spot “for the perfect mixed-race female.” Moments of danger and the police’s slow progress provide satisfying tension. This will gratify fans of historic police procedurals with a queer bent. (Self-published)
HotHouse Horror

David Hutchison is a Scottish writer and filmmaker who was the man responsible for our favourite horror comedy film of 2017 Baobhan Sith (White Fairy). So we were delighted when David asked us if we’d be interested in reviewing his latest project, the self illustrated historic crime mystery The Book of Skulls.

The Book of Skulls is David’s first book in a series called The Doctresses. Set in 1875 The Book of Skulls follows the adventures of the foundling mixed race Liz Moliette and her sidekick Amulya Patel as they enroll at the Edinburgh Medical School. As the the first female students at this prestigious institution (and indeed the first anywhere in the UK) they face an uphill struggle against the entrenched hostile attitudes of much of the teaching staff led by Professor Atticus. In need of funds Liz becomes the assistant to Dr. Florian Blyth, who aside from his duties at the medical school is also Edinburgh’s police surgeon. So when a series of gruesome murders take place each leaving behind a headless corpse Liz finds herself drawn into Inspector Macleod’s investigation.

When Blyth is seriously assaulted and put out of action Liz finds herself not only in the front line of the investigation as the body count ratchets up, but also in danger as she, Amuyla and their friends fellow student and photographer Campbell Preeble and Hector Findlay, a reporter on Edinburgh’s local paper The Reekie start to uncover a mystery that links Edinburgh’s Asylum for the Insane, the Burry Man Festival, a séance, an Egyptologist and the pseudoscience of phrenology while also uncovering the secrets of Liz’s own past.

Inspired by the real story of the Edinburgh Seven, the first female medical students to enroll at Edinburgh in 1869 (that also inspired TL Wiswell’s rather glorious gender inverted play Albertina West Reanimator at the London Horror Festival in 2019) and the curious case of Edinburgh graduate Dr. James Miranda Barry, the Army surgeon, who on his death in 1865 turned out to have been a woman all along, The Book of Skulls is an intriguing adventure mystery that incorporates elements of period horror, police procedural and romance, while also making serious points about gender and racial inequality, identity and LGBTQ sexuality. I think Liz and Amulya have lot of potential as a duo, one from a lowly background the other from a contrastingly privileged one, because neither is afraid to challenge what polite white society expects from them and It’s going to be really interesting to follow their journey as the series progresses. You really could not wish for a better location for creepy goings on than Victorian Edinburgh and Hutchison’s recreation of the city’s past is wonderfully evocative taking in locations including the port town of Leith, Edinburgh New Town, the seaside district of Portobello and the height of Calton Hill. You can almost taste the haar as it rolls in!

An intriguing gateway to a new mystery series we give The Book of Skulls a 666/666.

Formats
Hardcover Book Details
  • 05/2020
  • 9781838028077
  • 244 pages
  • $20.08
Ebook Details
  • 9781838028008
  • 245 pages
  • $2.99
Paperback Book Details
  • 04/2020
  • 9781838028022
  • 296 pages
  • $15.99
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