by Ian Weir
The Reckoning of WM. STARLING, Esq., a Foundling, concerning Monstrous Crimes and Infernal Aspirations, with Perpetrators Named and Shrouded Infamies disclosed to Light of Day, as set down by his Own Hand in this year 1816
London, 1816. The Napoleonic War is over, Romanticism is at its high tide, and the great city is charged with the thrill of scientific discovery and Regency abandon. The nineteen-year-old foundling Will Starling returns from the Continent, having spent five years assisting military surgeon Alec Comrie, and now is helping Comrie build a civilian practice in London's rough Cripplegate area. This means entering into an uneasy alliance with the Doomsday Men: grave robbers who supply surgeons with cadavers for dissection. There are wild rumors about Dionysus Atherton, an old university friend of Comrie's and the brightest of London's emerging surgical stars, whispers of experiments on corpses not quite dead, in a bid to unlock the mystery of death itself. Will works obsessively to ferret out the truth; the investigation twists and turns through brothels and charnel houses and the mansions of Mayfair.
"Starred Review. What Dickens might have written had he set loose Stevenson's Dr. Jekyll to explore the doomsday trade." - Kirkus
"A fascinating, well-researched exploration of surgery's shift from disreputable butchery to medical science, shot through with an irresistible Frankenstein current; perfect for those who enjoy Louis Bayard's dark historical thrillers and Dan Simmons' Drood (2009)." - Booklist
"Weir, the creator of CBC's Arctic Air, has written a note-perfect historical novel of body snatching, murder and evil fun." - The Toronto Star
"[Ian Weir] crafts a wonderfully, thrillingly funif truly smelly and grossromp... an extraordinary taleof inquiry, of secrets pried, of love and vengeancewith melodramatic theatrical and literary tropes in play... [a] clever and masterfully told 'lurid Tale.'" - The Winnipeg Review
"Will Starling - both the character and the book - is a splendid literary achievement, and a genuine pleasure." - The Globe and Mail
"Weir's writing is so springy, and his vision so panoramic, that you won't care that the novel makes you feel as though you've got dirt under your fingernails just from reading it. Yet amid the muck, Will Starling also presents a ringing and surprisingly touching endorsement of science over legend and anecdote." - National Post
"A rollicking good yarn with many twists and turns... It's a lot of fun and a tale well told." - The Vancouver Sun
"Will Starling is a sly, spirited hero who leaps off the page to take you on a riveting journey through London's glorious, hair-raising underbelly... Weir's prose is both raw and lyrical; his evocation of Regency London, magnificent. Will Starling is a must read." - Stacy Carlson, author of Among the Wonderful
"Will Starling is a rollicking romp through the English language, an earthy, bawdy, brain-bending delight. - Annabel Lyon, author of The Sweet Girl
"Ian Weir's crackerjack novel is many things: a whodunit, a penny dreadful, a scrupulous historical narrative--but most of all and most simply, it is a rollicking, fireballing, big-hearted book that's just a hell of a lot of fun to read." - Craig Davidson, author of Cataract City
"This is not the polite England of Jane Austen or George Eliot but the graveyards, hospitals and charnel houses of East London ... Ian Weir's characters are as engaging as the Artful Dodger or Fagin or Martin Chuzzlewit." - Roberta Rich, author of The Midwife of Venice
This information about Will Starling was first featured
in "The BookBrowse Review" - BookBrowse's membership magazine, and in our weekly "Publishing This Week" newsletter. Publication information is for the USA, and (unless stated otherwise) represents the first print edition. The reviews are necessarily limited to those that were available to us ahead of publication. If you are the publisher or author and feel that they do not properly reflect the range of media opinion now available, send us a message with the mainstream reviews that you would like to see added.
Any "Author Information" displayed below reflects the author's biography at the time this particular book was published.
North Carolina-born Ian Weir is an award winning playwright, screenwriter and novelist. He holds both American and Canadian citizenship. His first historical fiction novel, Daniel O'Thunder, was named one of the top historical novels of 2011 by Library Journal and was a finalist for four awards: The Commonwealth Writers' Prize for First Book, the Amazon.ca First Novel Award, the Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize and the Canadian Authors Association Award for Fiction. Ian lives near Vancouver, B.C., and was writer and executive producer of the critically acclaimed CBC miniseries Dragon Boys and is creator and executive producer of the CBC hit tv series Arctic Air. He has also written more than 150 episodes for over twenty different series, stage plays, radio plays, and young adult novels. Will Starling is his second novel for adults.
They say that in the end truth will triumph, but it's a lie.
Click Here to find out who said this, as well as discovering other famous literary quotes!
Your guide toexceptional books
BookBrowse seeks out and recommends the best in contemporary fiction and nonfiction—books that not only engage and entertain but also deepen our understanding of ourselves and the world around us.