Spook
Roach, Mary
Roach, Mary
Starred Review. Roach made an exceptional debut two years ago with Stiff—it
might seem a hard act to follow. Yet she has done it again: after her
study of what becomes of our mortal coil after death, she now presents
an equally smart, quirky, hilarious look at whether there is a soul that
survives our physical demise. Roach perfectly balances her skepticism
and her boundless curiosity with a sincere desire to know. She ranges
into the oddest nooks and crannies of both science and belief (and
scientists who believe), regaling the reader with tales of Duncan
Macdougall, a respected surgeon who weighed consumptives at their moment
of death to see if the escaping soul could be measured in ounces, and
of female mediums who, during séances, extruded a substance called
ectoplasm from their private parts (she even examines a piece of alleged
ectoplasm archived at Cambridge University). She goes to school to
learn to be a medium, subjects her brain to electromagnetic waves to see
if they induce the experience of seeing ghosts and joins a group trying
to record sounds made by the spirits of the Donner party. The text is
littered with footnotes: tangential but delicious tidbits that Roach
clearly couldn't bear to leave out. She is an original who can enliven
any subject with wit, keen reporting and a sly intelligence.
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