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Some Rise by Sin

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Some Rise by Sin

By: Siôn Scott-Wilson
Narrated by: David Lane Pusey
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About this listen

1829 is a tough year to be a body snatcher. Burke and Hare have just been convicted of killing people to sell their bodies, to widespread outrage — but despite the bad press, doctors still need fresh corpses for medical research.

Sammy and Facey are a couple of so-called "resurrection men", making a living among society's fringe-dwellers by hoisting the newly departed from the churchyards of London whilst masquerading as late-night bakers. Operating on tip-offs and rumors in the capital’s drinking dens and fighting pits, the pair find themselves in receipt of some valuable intelligence: An unusual cadaver has popped up on the market - that of a hermaphrodite.

For any medic worth his salt, it’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity — a medical curiosity and rara avis — and famous anatomist Joshua Brookes commissions the two men to obtain the body, at any cost. But some corpses hold secrets, and before long, the enterprise becomes a deadlier and more complex undertaking than either man could ever have imagined.

Some Rise by Sin is a rich, authentic, and absorbing historical narrative with a darker edge, a story of surviving on the outskirts of respectability. With echoes of Michel Faber’s The Crimson Petal and the White, it is meticulously researched and suffused with the dark and grimy atmosphere of Regency London, and explores what ambition can mean for poor people in a society that conspires to grind them down at every turn.

©2021 Deixis Press (P)2021 Deixis Press
Historical Literary Fiction Fiction England
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I didn’t want this to end

Fantastic story brilliantly read, you can almost smell the Thames and taste the London air in this brilliantly crafted period thriller. Can’t wait for the next one.

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Enter the grimy underworld of London gravediggers!

Im always on the look out for a great narrator since discovering Steven Pacey's work on Joe Abercrombie's epic grimdark fantasy series. it has been very difficult to find any other narrator who lives up to that great performance. David Lane Pusey has done an admirable job here. It took me a couple of chapters to appreciate at first, but his subtle portrayal of each character really shone through. I love a narrator who can bring every character to life with a unique voice.

The story itself is fantastic! A bit of a romp, with some grimmer parts mixed in with comedy. Lovable rogue characters and what felt like an accurate portrayal of old London with colloquial sayings and rhyming slang thrown in. An excellent way to spend a few evenings, I'd recommend it for fantasy fans wanting to branch out a bit into historical fiction, with a more gruesome crime mystery theme.

Favourite character - Rosamund, of course!
Favourite moment - hard without spoiling. A certain rescue from a grim ironic death by the fabulous Pure John!

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