Anthropodermic Bibliopegy and the Highwayman’s Confession
Anthropodermic bibliopegy, or the practice of binding books in human skin, dates back to at least the 17th century. Perhaps the most extraordinary example of this art is an 1837 book titled “Narrative of the life of James Allen, alias George Walton, alias Jonas Pierce, alias James H. York, alias Burley Grove, the highwayman. Being his death-bed confession, to the warden of the Massachusetts state prison.” Walton had always insisted that he was the “master of his own skin,” and upon his execution, he requested that his memoirs documenting his life of crime and perdition be bound in his epiderm. Inscribed on the cover are the words “HIC LIBER WALTONIS CUTE COMPACTUS EST” — “This Book by Walton Bound in His Own Skin.”
Walton asked that two copies be made. One was to be given to the doctor who attended to him in prison, the other to John Fenno, a survivor of one of Walton’s highway assaults, whose courage under fire Walton had particularly admired.The Fenno copy now resides in the Boston Athenaeum. The complete story is told in “A Book Bound in Human Skin,” a 1924 article in the Boston Transcript. The complete text of the Walton’s memoir is also online.
* More examples of anthropodermic bibliopegy
* Previously in the Proceedings: The Feather Book of Dionisio Minaggio.
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