“The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo meets the X-Files. Truly gruesome and all the more frightening due to its real-life roots.” ROB SVENSON “A strange, intriguing, and gripping novel.” NORMAN BILBROUGH, author of A Short History of Paradise “Provoking ideas, science, sex and gore all wrapped up in a novel with great characters and a gripping plot.” JULIEN THOMAS Journalist Hendrix 'Aitch' Harrison links bodies stolen from a renowned forensic research enclosure to an influential drug company specialising in genetic modification. Assisted by Sarah Wallace, a determined and beguiling forensic entomologist, he delves into a grisly world of clinical trials and a viral treatment beyond imagination. But Aitch must battle more than his fear of technology to expose the macabre fate of the drugged bodies donated to scientific research.
William Angus Knight was a British writer, educated at the University of Edinburgh. From 1876 to 1902 he was professor of moral philosophy in the University of St. Andrews. In the field of philosophy his work, editorial and other, includes his collection of Philosophical Classics for English Readers (15 volumes, 1880–90), some of which he wrote. Although he wrote numerous publications, he is probably best known for his works on Wordsworth. His edition of Wordsworth's Works and Life (1881–89) is contained in 11 volumes. He presented to the trustees of Dove Cottage, Grasmere, the poet's former home, all the editions of Wordsworths poems which he possessed.