To some, the history and/or phenomenon of premature burial may not seem like a very enjoyable read. I’ve never been bothered by the idea. While it isn’t touched upon in the book, embalming, which I am fairly knowledgeable about, pretty much puts to rest any chance of being buried alive, at least in this country. Perhaps it is that lack of fear concerning premature burial that made me so interesting in reading this book in the first place. Now, I don’t review or read nonfiction very often. I’ve always been an escapist and love that transportation to another person, place, or time that fiction offers. Whereas I would normally talk about characters are themes and all that literary criticism stuff, I suppose I’ll cut it short and simply sum up the book, as well as my feelings about it.
The book is divided into twelve chapters. The first two deal mainly with different reports, stories, and myths surrounding cases of premature burial throughout history. If you’re hoping to read a book full of endless gruesome tales of people being buried alive, then this is the book for you. Bondeson helps weed out the clearly fictional stories by detailing common elements that run throughout almost every single story. There are two problems with these chapters. First, we’ve all heard stories like these and fifty pages of them is not the most interesting way to start off a book that we’re reading for the purpose of gleaning some cold, hard facts about the subject. Secondly, these stories are not contained to these two chapters. In almost every single section we continuously have more fairy tales of premature burial heaped upon us. As I said, if this is what your looking for, great. I myself am not.
Chapters three and four deal with that which lies at the heart of this subject, namely the signs of death. When it comes down to it, this book is really more about the signs of death, than premature burial. This is simply because it is the untrustworthy signs of death that lead to a premature interment. Bondeson gives a fascinating perspective of a medical and scientific community struggling against superstition and the ego of a physician unable to admit that the criteria of death may be fallible. It is easy to see why it had once been so difficult to definitively prove the state of a human being’s life.
Chapters five and six deal with the rather morbid technologies that sprang up as a result of rampant fear of premature burial. Here we are given lengthy details of security coffins and hospitals for the dead, where corpses were stored until putrefaction set in (this was considered by many the only sure sign of a person’s death). After these tidbits, the next two chapters return to the subject of the signs of death and mark the technological advances by the medical community that helped to create a more cohesive and reliable set of signs of death.
Finally, after chapters on the raving lunatics who pursued anti-premature burial legislation, and a short history of the literary popularity of the subject, Bondeson ends the book with two important chapters. The first asks whether or not people were really buried alive. To make a long story short, yes. The last chapter asks whether or not this could happen today. Again, long story short, under the right circumstances, sure, anything’s possible.
Overall, while I found the recurrence of silly burial stories and many of the same facts a bit tedious at times, this was still an engaging read. I have seen this book criticized for the same reasons I have just sighted. However, this really is the definitive book on the subject (at least that is concerned with facts) and Bondeson’s status as a physician gives him the proper insight an author of this subject needs. All in all, to the curious, I recommend this one.