



The Tale of Raw Head and Bloody Bones
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3.5 • 2 Ratings
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- £6.99
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- £6.99
Publisher Description
The year is 1750.
Meet Tristan Hart, precociously talented student of medicine.
His obsession is the nature of pain and preventing. He is on a quest to cut through superstition with the brilliant blade of science.
Meet Tristan Hart, madman and deviant.
His obsession is the nature of pain, and causing it. He is on a quest to arouse the perfect scream and slay the daemon Raw Head who torments his days and nights.
Troubled visionary, twisted genius, loving sadist.
What is real and what imagined in Tristan Hart’s brutal, beautiful, complex world?
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Tristan Hart is a psychotic sadist and a student of anatomy. Growing up in 18th-century England, he hears the legend of the boogeyman Raw-Head-and-Bloody-Bones and is not sure if Raw Head is a "Phantasm" a subtle foreshadowing of Tristan's frequent and elaborate hallucinations. While attending a surgery, Tristan discovers a need to inflict pain. He abuses prostitutes ("I dedicated Houres to the Acquisition and Perfection of my Form with the Last, the Cat, the Scourge, and the Birch Rod.... I became adept at provoking Screams of the truest Pitch and Intensity; bright Rainbows of refracted Anguish that lit up the Room"), but later meets Katherine Montague, who will become his wife and who, to Tristan's delight, enjoys pain. Much of this debut from English writer Wolf is made up of Tristan's hallucinations, populated with Goblins and Gypsies and depicted so elaborately it's sometimes hard to discern whether the narrative is taking place in his mind or in his life and, indeed, Wolf seems intent on the ambiguity. Wolf's novel is confident and unique, although at times muddled, given the extent of the hallucinatory passages, but it should attract readers of historical fiction and transgressive fantasy.
Customer Reviews
Confused story
A great backdrop to the tale but it was incredibly confusing as to what is real and what is imaged by the main character. And in the middle of the book there were 100 or so pages where the story stood still, followed by a rushed ending.
Some good humour deployed which was enjoyable.
Overall left me a little frustrated.