Description

Book Synopsis
The Good Doctor Guillotin follows five characters to a common destination--the scaffold at the first guillotining of the French Revolution: Dr. Guillotin, of course, a physician and member of the National Assembly, involved in many important events, including the Tennis Court Oath. Nicolas Pelletier, the first victim--or "patient," as they were sometimes called, since the new beheading machine was seen as a humanitarian medical intervention in the state's technique of dealing death. Father Pierre, the cure who accompanies Pelletier in his last days, a man torn between his religious commitment, and an equally strong commitment to the poor and their revolution. Sanson, the famous executioner of Paris who, 9 months later would execute the king and retire from remorse. Tobias Schmidt, builder of the new machine, a German piano maker working in Paris, a freethinker predicting the Terror that will follow, but allowing himself to initiate it. The revolution, after all, had reduced the sale of pianos. Various other interesting figures briefly appear: Damiens, Mozart, Mesmer, Louis XVI, the Marquis de Sade, Marat, Robespierre, Demoulins among them. The eighteenth century narrative is divided into several sections, each introduced by an essay in the author's voice, the first on five-ness and Pentagons; a second on hope and Utopia; a third on revolutionary violence; and a fourth on capital punishment. This is no "historical novel." It is, rather, a fictive meditation on a contemporary conundrum using an eighteenth century drum.

Trade Review
"Like most of Estrin's work, the novel is about much more than its title indicates--the nature of revolution, science and the state, poverty and freedom...the results are entertaining, intellectually stimulating, and not exactly predictable. Check it out." -- Ron Jacobs author of Dissident Voice "...atmospheric. Readers with an interest in history and politics will find the story especially fascinating." -- ForeWord Magazine

The Good Doctor Guillotin

    Product form

    £10.99

    Includes FREE delivery

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Tue 30 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Marc Estrin

    Out of stock


      View other formats and editions of The Good Doctor Guillotin by Marc Estrin

      Publisher: Unbridled Books
      Publication Date: 12/11/2009
      ISBN13: 9781932961850, 978-1932961850
      ISBN10: 1932961852

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The Good Doctor Guillotin follows five characters to a common destination--the scaffold at the first guillotining of the French Revolution: Dr. Guillotin, of course, a physician and member of the National Assembly, involved in many important events, including the Tennis Court Oath. Nicolas Pelletier, the first victim--or "patient," as they were sometimes called, since the new beheading machine was seen as a humanitarian medical intervention in the state's technique of dealing death. Father Pierre, the cure who accompanies Pelletier in his last days, a man torn between his religious commitment, and an equally strong commitment to the poor and their revolution. Sanson, the famous executioner of Paris who, 9 months later would execute the king and retire from remorse. Tobias Schmidt, builder of the new machine, a German piano maker working in Paris, a freethinker predicting the Terror that will follow, but allowing himself to initiate it. The revolution, after all, had reduced the sale of pianos. Various other interesting figures briefly appear: Damiens, Mozart, Mesmer, Louis XVI, the Marquis de Sade, Marat, Robespierre, Demoulins among them. The eighteenth century narrative is divided into several sections, each introduced by an essay in the author's voice, the first on five-ness and Pentagons; a second on hope and Utopia; a third on revolutionary violence; and a fourth on capital punishment. This is no "historical novel." It is, rather, a fictive meditation on a contemporary conundrum using an eighteenth century drum.

      Trade Review
      "Like most of Estrin's work, the novel is about much more than its title indicates--the nature of revolution, science and the state, poverty and freedom...the results are entertaining, intellectually stimulating, and not exactly predictable. Check it out." -- Ron Jacobs author of Dissident Voice "...atmospheric. Readers with an interest in history and politics will find the story especially fascinating." -- ForeWord Magazine

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account