Body Snatching Book Report

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Williams, Keith. “When New York Medical Students Were Body Snatchers.” The New York Times, The New York Times, 26 Apr. 2018, www.nytimes.com/2018/04/26/nyregion/when-new-york-medical-students-were-body-snatchers.html. Medical students of the New York Medical College used to rob graves in order to have bodies to study anatomy. The students took tremendous risk, because body snatching was illegal. Only criminal could be dissected legally, however, medical professionals weren't trusted because of snake-oil salesmen, quacks, and apprentices that relied on bloodletting for cures. Klein, Christopher. “Harvard's Colonial-Era Body-Snatching Club.” History.com, A&E Television Networks, 30 Oct. 2015, www.history.com/news/harvards-colonial-era-body-snatching-club. …show more content…

Aaron. Speakers of the Dead: a Walt Whitman Mystery. Plume, 2016. This book centers around the investigative exploits of Walt Whitman, a young reporter who tries to navigate the sketchy underworld of the New York City body snatching industry in an attempt to clear his friend of a wrongful murder charge. The year is 1843, New York City. Reporter for the Aurora, Walt Whitman arrives at the local prison where his friend Lena Stowe is supposed to hang for the murder of her husband Abraham Stowe. Walt tries to present evidence that Lena is innocent but the sheriff dismisses him. Lena is hanged and Walt vows to try and prove her innocence. Walt and his editor Henry Saunders uncover a link between Abraham Stowe’s murder and body-snatching: a man named Samuel Clement. In order to find Clement, Walt and Henry must travel into the dangerous body-snatching underworld where resurrection men steal bodies and sell them to medical colleges. Walt soon discovers a link between Abraham and the Bone Bill legislation, which allows medical students to acquire bodies legally and basically wipe out the body-snatching industry, consequently causing a hatred towards Abraham. Paget, David Lewis. “The Body Snatchers.” PoemHunter.com, 18 Dec. 2012,

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