First published in 2010, this is Kaaberøl's (coauthor,
The Boy in the Suitcase) first Madeline Karno mystery. The title may be a trifle misleading as the doctor of death—the late 19th-century equivalent of a coroner—is not the prime character here. Instead, young Maddie's role as assistant to her pathologist father is intensified when he is temporarily sidelined with a broken leg and arm. In this time period autopsies are socially and ethically uncomfortable, but a series of murders requires studies of bacteria and the dead to solve them. Madeline is sent to probe secrets behind convent walls, inside hidden diaries and Bibles, and within a historical tradition of raising wolves. The story focuses both on the apparently loosely connected deaths and Madeline's desires to avoid the limited options traditionally available to women. A bit slow at times but well read by Nicola Barber.
VERDICT Recommended for historical fiction listeners. ["With its intriguing cast of complex characters, this is sure to please fans of historical mysteries": LJ 1/15 review of the Atria hc.]
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