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Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers First Edition
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"One of the funniest and most unusual books of the year....Gross, educational, and unexpectedly sidesplitting."―Entertainment Weekly
Stiff is an oddly compelling, often hilarious exploration of the strange lives of our bodies postmortem. For two thousand years, cadavers―some willingly, some unwittingly―have been involved in science's boldest strides and weirdest undertakings. In this fascinating account, Mary Roach visits the good deeds of cadavers over the centuries and tells the engrossing story of our bodies when we are no longer with them.- ISBN-100393324826
- ISBN-13978-0393324822
- EditionFirst Edition
- PublisherW. W. Norton & Company
- Publication dateMay 17, 2004
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions5.5 x 0.9 x 8.3 inches
- Print length303 pages
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Editorial Reviews
Review
― Tara Parker-Pope, Wall Street Journal
"A laugh-out-loud funny book... one of those wonderful books that offers up enlightenment in the guise of entertainment."
― Michael Little, Washington City Paper
"As weird as the book gets, Roach manages to convey a sense of respect and appreciation for her subjects."
― Roy Rivenburg, Los Angeles Times
"Roach is authoritative, endlessly curious and drolly funny. Her research is scrupulous and winningly presented."
― Adam Woog, Seattle Times
"Mary Roach is one of an endangered species: a science writer with a sense of humor. She is able to make macabre funny without looting death of its dignity."
― Brian Richard Boylan, Denver Post
"Roach writes in an insouciant style and displays her métier in tangents about bizarre incidents in pathological history. Death may have the last laugh, but, in the meantime, Roach finds merriment in the macabre."
― Gilbert Taylor, Booklist
"Acutely entertaining, morbidly fascinating."
― Susan Adams, Forbes
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : W. W. Norton & Company; First Edition (May 17, 2004)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 303 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0393324826
- ISBN-13 : 978-0393324822
- Reading age : 1 year and up
- Lexile measure : 1230L
- Item Weight : 9.6 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 0.9 x 8.3 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #269,021 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1 in Forensic Medicine (Books)
- #8 in Death
- #14 in Anatomy (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Mary Roach is the author of Grunt: The Curious Science of Humans at War, Packing for Mars: The Curious Science of Life in the Void, Bonk: The Curious Coupling of Science and Sex, Spook: Science Tackles the Afterlife, and Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers. Her writing has appeared in Outside, Wired, National Geographic, and the New York Times Magazine, among others. She lives in Oakland, California.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book fascinating and well-written, with a stream of consciousness style that keeps them engaged. They appreciate its careful research and how it explains the scientific use of cadavers, while maintaining a respectful and non-macabre tone throughout. The humor receives positive feedback, with customers noting the author's drily witty approach, and one review highlighting how it covers a wide range of subject matter in detail. While many find the content morbidly fascinating, opinions about its gruesomeness are mixed.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as a fascinating and engaging read with off-beat topics that are fun to explore.
"...But lest that sound too heavy, Stiff is every bit as engaging and fun as you would hope from Roach’s reputation...." Read more
"...those with a strongish stomach, Mary Roach's book is, really, a delightful read. And eye-opening...." Read more
"...informative on the history and uses of cadavers while also providing entertainment through Roach’s unique style of writing...." Read more
"...a sensitive subject that, like many of her subsequent works, leaves readers fascinated and a bit squeamish...." Read more
Customers find the book thought-provoking and carefully researched, with one customer noting it covers a wide range of subject matter in detail.
"...More than that, she finds depth and thoughtfulness to discuss beyond what you would expect, to the point where you get the impression that she could..." Read more
"...And eye-opening. And unlike most books, it may have the quite real effect of influencing your after-lifestyle choices." Read more
"...an example of a morbid topic turned into a page turning and ironically uplifting read...." Read more
"...Roach does a great job of presenting that information in a way that is detailed and humorous, while also keeping the reader's attention...." Read more
Customers enjoy the book's humor, describing it as drily witty with perfect pacing, and one customer notes how the tone remains buoyant and comic throughout.
"...She is a clever writer, and she makes the sorts of observations of her grim material that the Mystery Science Theater bots might make...." Read more
"...best things about this book, besides just the mere content, is the witty style in which Roach employs...." Read more
"...subject with compassion and respect even as we get a sense of her offbeat comedy and sometimes awkward situations and encounters...." Read more
"...job of presenting that information in a way that is detailed and humorous, while also keeping the reader's attention...." Read more
Customers praise the writing style of the book, noting its stream of consciousness approach and down-to-earth tone.
"...a gift for conveying complex things quickly, and managing to even tell stories, is just testament to her skills as a writer, and the deservedness of..." Read more
"...The chapters are deliberate and in depth and they address a wide range of topics from impact studies for car safety to human composting as a new..." Read more
"...be done with them is explored in a reporter like fashion and is highly readable and you will fly through this book,guaranteed...." Read more
"...And the stories deserve to be told...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's historical content, particularly how it explains the scientific use of cadavers and chronologically describes human treatment of death.
"...like a key part of why the book works; after all, death is a fundamentally personal event, and there’s little way to read Stiff and not spend time..." Read more
"...Stiff is very informative on the history and uses of cadavers while also providing entertainment through Roach’s unique style of writing...." Read more
"...She is cavalier with death, with bodies, with their dismemberment, with cannibalism...." Read more
"...You walk away educated about death (not about dying, which she explains is quite different), but with an intense respect for the human cadaver...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's pacing, finding it engaging despite its uncomfortable subject matter, with one customer noting it's not a horror story.
"...Her digressive footnotes and odd asides are still evident, her willingness to ask questions no less charming, and her ability to bring a light tone..." Read more
"...This break out book, takes on a sensitive subject that, like many of her subsequent works, leaves readers fascinated and a bit squeamish...." Read more
"...Overall, Stiff is a wonderful read. It's interesting, gross, humorous, informative and so much more...." Read more
"...book a four out of five stars, the one star being this hard to describe nagging feeling that I felt while reading the book...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's respectful approach, noting that it maintains a serious tone throughout. One customer specifically mentions how the author treats the subject with compassion and dignity.
"...Yet she treats the subject with compassion and respect even as we get a sense of her offbeat comedy and sometimes awkward situations and encounters...." Read more
"...it informative and actually kind of a fun read while still being respectful...." Read more
"...in a way that is hilarious and a little morbid, but ultimately still respectful and extremely informative...." Read more
"...The author makes an sincere effort to be respectful and yet gives the reader a fairly descriptive and somewhat difficult account of the paths we..." Read more
Customers have mixed reactions to the book's gruesome content, with some finding it morbidly fascinating while others find it too crass.
"...The book is quite explicit and at some times, so much so that it was nauseating, yet it keeps you wanting more...." Read more
"...Additionally, the book contains numerous gory stories about blood and death, but the real meat of the book is in Roach’s main point of the history..." Read more
""Being dead is unsightly, stinky, and embarrassing", states author Mary Roach, but she also shows us just how interesting it can be in this..." Read more
"...There are several sections that discuss experiments on animals – the same or similar experiments that are being done on cadavers – that was very..." Read more
Reviews with images

Mary Roach can make any topic humorus and engaging and there is no finer example than Stiff!
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on July 6, 2016Having read Mary Roach’s newest book, Grunt, in which she talks about the science of keeping soldiers alive, I decided to read her first one, Stiff, for two reasons. One was to see how much she’d changed as an author, but two – and the bigger reason – was a fascination with the subject. Stiff‘s subtitle is The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers, and the book is about exactly that: what happens to our remains after we die? Like she did with Grunt (and, I’m presuming, all of her books), Roach divides the book into independent chapters, each focusing on different aspects. There’s the bodies that end up in mortuary schools, as well as those that end up dissected by medical students. There are cadavers used as crash testers, those that end up at the Body Farm (where decay is studied, among other things), those that are used to help understand airplane crashes…and those that were used to understand what happened to Jesus and others who were crucified. And there’s much more to be found here, including bodies as compost, as art, and more.
It’s a fascinating subject, and one that put Roach on the map – and having read the book, it’s not hard to see why. Done wrongly, the book could seem insensitive, ghoulish, or just depressing. But Roach celebrates these cadavers, reminding the reader just how much has been gained from this research and just how important these bodies have been to not only medicine, but to our society as a whole. At the same time, she never shies away from the discomfort people feel; indeed, one of the most compelling threads in each chapter is discussing with the various people she meets how they manage to maintain a proper emotional balance when they’re working with the dead all the time.
Roach is more of a presence in Stiff than she is in Grunt; it feels like more of a first book, and something she might grow away from as she went. But that also feels like a key part of why the book works; after all, death is a fundamentally personal event, and there’s little way to read Stiff and not spend time thinking about what you would want done with your own remains, be it cremation, burial, donation, or more. And Roach builds her own debate into the book, concluding the book with a chapter that finds her pondering what to do with her own remains, having done all these studies and researches into our possible fates.
But lest that sound too heavy, Stiff is every bit as engaging and fun as you would hope from Roach’s reputation. Her digressive footnotes and odd asides are still evident, her willingness to ask questions no less charming, and her ability to bring a light tone to even heavy subject matters no less welcome. More than that, she finds depth and thoughtfulness to discuss beyond what you would expect, to the point where you get the impression that she could write a whole second book about bodies and never run out of things to say. That she does all this while being incredibly informative, demonstrating a gift for conveying complex things quickly, and managing to even tell stories, is just testament to her skills as a writer, and the deservedness of her reputation.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 7, 2003I defy anyone to dislike a book whose first sentence is "The way I see it, being dead is not terribly far off from being on a cruise ship." Mary Roach's grand tour of the afterlives of corpses makes for compelling--and very often hilarious--reading. The book opens with the first of many colorful scenes, a roomful of plastic surgeons practicing their grotesque (at the best of times) trade on a bunch of severed heads. "The heads have been put in roasting pans--which are of the disposable aluminum variety--for the same reason chickens are put in roasting pans: to catch the drippings." As this passage illustrates, the author keeps the tone of her book light. She is a clever writer, and she makes the sorts of observations of her grim material that the Mystery Science Theater bots might make.
But however light her touch, Roach is describing some truly horrific things. There is, for example, the body farm at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, where bodies go to rot for science, their skin sloughing off and their genitalia bloating in full view of researchers and their guests--who leave with their footwear uncleanably soiled with the "liquids of human decay." There is the graduate student who composted a ne'er-do-well to see how efficacious a means of disposal mulch-making might be for third-world countries. ("And because the man was buried whole, Evans had to go out with a shovel and rake to aerate him three or four times.") And there is Roach's attempt--failed--to verify the details of a 1991 Reuter's article which claimed that "a man who worked in a crematorium in Hainan Province was caught hacking the buttocks and thighs off cadavers prior to incineration and bringing the meat to his brother, who ran the nearby White Temple Restaurant." Roach hired an interpreter to facilitate her discussion with the director of the crematorium she believed had employed the buttock-hacker. But how to explain to the interpreter what she needed to know? "In the cab, I tried to think of a way to explain to Sandy what I was about to have her do. I need you to ask this man whether he had an employee who cut the butt cheeks off cadavers to serve in his brother's restaurant. No matter how I thought of phrasing it, it sounded ghastly and absurd. Why would I need to know this? What kind of book was I writing?"
For those with a strongish stomach, Mary Roach's book is, really, a delightful read. And eye-opening. And unlike most books, it may have the quite real effect of influencing your after-lifestyle choices.
Top reviews from other countries
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JojojoReviewed in Germany on September 29, 2015
5.0 out of 5 stars Stiff
Ein sehr schönes Buch über die verschiedenen Möglichkeiten was nach dem Tod mit einer Leiche geschieht. Zum Beispiel als Crashtest-Dummies, für Schönheits-OP-Übungen, etc. Ich dachte es würde mehr um die Prozesse im Körper nach dem Tod gehen (Verwesung etc.), aber da hatte ich mich nicht genug informiert. Statt dessen habe ich dennoch viel gelernt darüber, wofür Leichen genutzt werden und kann dieses tolle und auch leicht humoristische Buch nur weiter empfehlen!
- Unca Bob.Reviewed in Canada on September 16, 2022
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Book, but some people might consider it morbid !!!
As I said in the headline, some people might consider it morbid - it's all about cadavers...(dead bodies) !!!
This is the 2nd time I've bought the book, because I lost it about 10 years ago, but anyway, I personally "did not" find it morbid at all. I found it just very factual, scientific and mostly fascinating and that's why I'm buying it again. I'm really not even an avid reader, but I enjoyed the book that much. Anyhow, its "different strokes for different folks", but I thought the book was highly interesting and I would definitely reccommend it, but that's up to you. I offered it to a few friends to read and they found it too morbid, but I think if they had been just a bit more open minded and gave it a little bit of a chance, they would have really enjoyed the book, but "buyer beware"(You might find it morbid)... it's your choice - Good Luck.
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OUELLET, RaymondReviewed in France on September 1, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Stiff- The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers
A wonderful book, with lots of helpful and humorous information about the human body and what we can all look forward as we age and die!
I'm a big fan of Mary Roach's writing style and approach
- R UReviewed in Japan on January 1, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars Good condition
Good condition. Thank you!
- Nicola MansfieldReviewed in Canada on February 6, 2014
4.0 out of 5 stars Wanted to Read This For Ages
This is one of those books that I've wanted to read for a long time and had high expectations. I am well-read on the subject matter, it's one of my special interests, however I come to this topic with a Catholic worldview and that is where my review will differ from the average one. First off, when one has such high expectations for a book so highly lauded it's not surprising I was a bit let down. Mostly on the humour side. I have a dry sense of humour, not easily offended but I didn't find this "uproariously funny" like Publisher's Weekly did. Some of the humour made me chuckle but a lot of it fell flat, was full of puns (uck) and just not my type. I wouldn't read any of her other books unless the subject matter fascinated me and so far none of the others do. Anyway, humour aside, I found the book entirely captivating. Starting out historically I was in familiar territory and then topics became more modern describing their history up to expected new future advances. I enjoyed most the history; that is where my own special interests lie especially during the Victorian period. Next, I'm interested in forensics and really enjoyed the chapters on the body farm, airplane crashes and crash test specimens. At chapter 8 I became uncomfortable with the topic of brain death and organ donation because the author allowed her own moral opinion to flavour the discussion, something she hadn't done up to this point. The Catholic Church excepts brain death, as do I, however my convictions do not hold with taking organs from a breathing body that needs to be anaesthetised. But Roach uses this chapter to express her firm opinion otherwise and in her punny way calls the 54% of us (her statistic) who would not donate organs from a supposedly "brain dead" loved one, "heartless". It's preferable not to insult your reader; otherwise she was very respectful towards death, dignity and religion throughout. I found the chapter on the future ways of disposing of remains quite interesting. She presents two ways that may become popular: composting (which would not be accepted by my religion) and tissue reduction (which would be acceptable with the dehydration option). If this last process, which results in remains similar to cremations, is cheaper and involves less funerary pomp then I'm quite interested in it. An honourable and respectful funeral mass and internment is needed for the deceased (according to my religion) but fancy, expensive, funerary finery is nothing but a burden on the living. Certainly an interesting book but I think I'm at the point now where I need to look at the texts she used for research and read those types of books myself now, since this is a subject I'm actually interested in scholarly.