RESURRECTION MEN by T. K. Welsh
Category:  Historical
Age Recommendation:  Grades 9+
Release Date:  4/19/07
Publisher:  Dutton
Reviewed by:  
Christian C.
Rating:  4 Stars


1830, Modena, Italy. 12-year-old Victor returned to his home and had to watch with horror the cruel murder of his parents by
three Tyrolean soldiers. The reason? They were Carboniaris, a group of revolutionaries that fought to keep Italy united.

After the massacre, the soldiers sold Victor as a cabin boy to the Chief Mate of the
Ceres, a ship that was about to set sail.
The ship departed from Italy, and sailed along the Mediterranean coast through the Strait of Gibraltar. It sailed past the coasts
of Portugal, northern Spain, and France.

One day, in the middle of a big storm, Victor climbed up the mainmast, all the way to the topgallant, trying to escape from a
crew member whom he had accused of stealing food. But as the seaman drew closer, Victor lost his footing, fell on the deck,
and crushed his leg completely. The Chief Mate didn’t think twice:
“A cabin boy who cannot walk is of no value to this
ship…. Throw him overboard.”  
Which he did.

Clinging to a gaff, Victor drifted in the middle of the sea for several days, until he arrived at the coast of England. He was
rescued by an old man and his dog. The old man treated his leg, fed him, and taught him how to speak English and fight with
his crutch.

After a few months, the old man couldn’t afford to keep Victor any more and, once again, Victor was sold. This time to Tipple
and Biggs, two unscrupulous men who took Victor to London, by hiding him in a coffin with a decaying body.

In London, Victor lived in a house full of children and animals. He was forced to beg in the streets during the day. Life in
London at that time was difficult: jobs were scarce, health conditions were deplorable, the streets were full of excrement and
mud; people were dying of cholera. Victor soon discovered that there was a black market for dead bodies and body parts.
Doctors wanted to study the human body and were willing to pay high amounts of money for them. People like Tripple and
Biggs met the demand, and were willing to do anything for a few guineas, including digging up corpses, kidnapping, selling, or
even killing someone. Victor found out that Tripple and Biggs were after some of his friends, and he decided that he had to
reveal the mastermind of this wicked market and put an end to it.

RESURRECTION MEN is an intense, dark work of historical fiction that made me read every page intently to the end, while
trying to cope with the knot of sadness and anguish that I had in my stomach.  T. K. Welsh’s rich vocabulary and detailed
descriptions, where almost no noun goes without an adjective, transported me to the streets of London, and made me smell
the putrid odors of the city, live the horrors of the children’s lives, witness the horrid dissections of the dead bodies, and hear
the unsettling noise of the broken bones.

When I finished the novel, I was looking forward to reading the section at the end of the book that explained which historical
facts of the book were real, but unfortunately, there was none.

I highly recommend this book to anyone who likes historical fiction and is interested in learning more about an unfortunate time
in the history of medicine and the city of London. But if you’re looking for a fun, happy read, this may not be it!
Resurrection Men
by T. K. Welsh