Join Books.org — it's free

Administration & Management, Social Sciences - General & Miscellaneous, Health Law, Medicine, Legal Theory & Philosophy, Clinical Medicine
Deadhouse: Life in a Coroner's Office by John Temple β€” book cover

Deadhouse: Life in a Coroner's Office

by John Temple
Available on Bookshop Write a review

Books.org participates in affiliate programs including Bookshop.org and the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. We may earn a commission from qualifying purchases made through links on this page, at no additional cost to you.

Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

Whenever a dead body is found in Pittsburgh, a team of investigators at the coroner's office begins to probe the mystery. Ed Strimlan is a doctor who never got to practice medicine. Instead he discovers how people died. Mike Chichwak is a stolid ex-paramedic, respected around the office for his compassion and doggedness. Tiffani Hunt is twenty-one, a single mother who questions whether she wants to spend her nights around dead bodies.

All three deputy coroners featured in Deadhouse: Life in a Coroner's Office share one trait: a compulsive curiosity. A good thing too, because any observation at a death scene can prove meaningful. A bag of groceries standing on a kitchen counter, the milk turning sour. A broken lamp lying on the carpet of an otherwise tidy living room. When they approach a corpse, the investigators consider everything. Is the victim face-up or face-down? How stiff are the limbs? Are the hands dirty or clean? By the time they bag the body and load it into the coroner's wagon, Tiffani, Ed, and Mike have often unearthed intimate details that are unknown even to the victim's family and friends.

The intrigues of investigating death help make up for the bad parts of the job. There are plenty of burdens-grief-stricken families, decomposed bodies, tangled local politics, and gore. And maybe worst of all, the ever-present reminder of mortality and human frailness.

Deadhouse also chronicles the evolution of forensic medicine, from early rituals performed over bodies found dead to the controversial advent of modern forensic pathology. It explains how pathologists "read" bullet wounds and lacerations, how someone dies from a drug overdose or a motorcycle crash or a drowning, and how investigators uncover the clues that lead to the truth.

Synopsis

An inside look at a big city coroner's office where investigators probe the mysteries of death

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Book Details

Published
July 1, 2007
Publisher
University Press of Mississippi
Pages
177
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781934110300

More by John Temple

Similar books