"Splendidly written and illustrated a gruesome but enjoyable journey through the history of pain and punishment. I was hooked from A to Z." - James Herbert
Who were the Maccabees? A pop group? Or a mother and her seven sons who suffered racking, skinning, burning, amputation and having their tongues pulled out and fried?
And what was foot roasting? A way of keeping warm in the winter? Or a technique from the Spanish Inquisition that involved coating the prisoner’s feet in fat and toasting them over hot coals?
From Amputation to Zero Tolerance, ‘The A-Z of Punishment & Torture’ is a grisly yet mesmerising compendium of the horrors inflicted on the human body over the centuries.
A fascinating social history, it provides as a wealth of weird folklore, such as the power of the hanged man's hand; astounding tales, like Mary Hamilton, the cross-dressing 14-times bigamist; to more recent outrages, such as the use of ‘squassation’ at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq.
“Fascinating from beginning to end.” – Robert Foster, best-selling author of ‘The Lunar Code’.
Endeavour Press is the UK's leading independent digital publisher.
I read that this is a 'Gorey' book and well, in my opinion it isnt. It just gives good details on what actually happened. Also through the a-z it gives detailed enough to look into singular events and read more on specific events and people. It is a very good read and the short reading gives you a chance to read a little of you have 5 minutes or indeed read more if you wish to. Very informative but it's a shame the digital version doesn't give the pictures whereas the hardback version does.
A bit too simplistic and anecdotal to be of much use as a reference book for the purposes of writing fantasy books, which was the reason for reading. Not a rigorously scholarly work, as numerous assertions about the cultures in which certain forms of punishment were used (e.g. the Romans) are plainly incorrect or are popular myths. The writing style of this short book is more bullet point than narrative (the author is a tabloid journalist), and the attempts at humour fall flat. A shame, as this could have been a gruesomely entertaining read.
Entertaining and great for my purposes. I’m using it as a book of writing prompts. But I really wish supporting data had been linked to specific claims.
Fantastically weird. When I was a boy, I read a lot of ominous nonfiction like "The Werewolf Encyclopedia" and "Book of Witches" that did not sound anything like non-fiction, but were elaborate collections of grim true-crime serial killer stories interspersed with legends and folklore. This book reminded me of them. I got through it in one sitting. It was descriptive without being ghoulish, thorough without fixating. A touch less technical than I would have liked. It was obviously published with the more sensitive reader in mind, so it was written with an attachment that didn't quite achieve the academic and fell far short of the clinical which, in my ever humble, should be the tone one uses when writing about torture and execution.
At least as telling as what the author detailed was what she took very deliberate pains to avoid, pun only partially intended.
Interesting, but lacking in citations. While there is a bibliography at the end, the organization of the book does not allow the reader to easily check sources. Some statistics were used, and they really needed to be cited. Aside from that, it was a fun read!
Very informative book, highlighted a lot of really interesting equipment to save for later. Some spots dragged a little but most of it had good detail and interesting background information.