<p>‘Part intriguing detective story, part chilling description of the cavalier treatment of human remains in nineteenth-century England, Hannah Priest’s <i>Unburied</i> investigates the difference between fact and fiction, uncovering a truth stranger and more complex than 200 years of Gothic razamatazz. Thoroughly researched and engagingly told, here is a story hidden from history, of “an ordinary woman who made an extraordinary decision about her own body”.’<br /><b>Rosie Garland, author of <i>The Palace of Curiosities</i></b><br /><br />‘A meticulously researched examination of both the truth and fictions of the “Manchester Mummy”. Rich in detail, Hannah Priest’s account provides an unflinching examination of a very strange corpse that is perhaps not so strange at all — at least not for the reasons we might think.’<br /><b>Bess Lovejoy, author of <i>Rest in Pieces: The Curious Fates of Famous Corpses</i></b><br /><br />'A long overdue study of a Mancunian woman and her bizarre afterlife. Priest provides absolutely fascinating insights into eighteenth-century Manchester, its treatment of women and the dead, and our persistently morbid curiosity.'<br /><b>Campbell Price, Curator of Egypt and Sudan, Manchester Museum</b><br /><br />‘Hannah Beswick has finally found her amanuensis. In <i>Unburied</i>, the extraordinary story of her mummified body is told at last.’<br /><b>Viktor Wynd, author of <i>The Unnatural History Museum</i></b></p>
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