Books

Books : reviews

Mary Roach.
Stiff: the curious lives of human cadavers.
Penguin. 2003

Whether buried, burnt, snatched, donated or decomposed, some people have been more useful dead than alive…

Stiff lifts the lid on exactly what happens to our bodies after we die. In addition to dissecting the ins and outs of decomposition, it unearths the many uses that can be made of a human corpse, from ballistics practice to body farms, crash test dummies to composting, and, in the process, digs up a wealth of ghoulishly compelling detail – from the experiment to weigh the human soul and the history of body-snatching to the true story of the human dumpling.

Mary Roach.
Packing for Mars: the curious science of life in space.
Oneworld. 2010

Space is a world devoid of the things we need to live and thrive: air, gravity, hot showers, fresh veg, privacy, beer. What happens to you when you can’t walk for a year? When you can’t have sex? Or smell flowers? What happens if you vomit in your helmet during a space walk? Mary Roach answers these questions and more in her laugh-out-loud furny guidebook for armchair astronauts arid the insatiably curious.