Episode Source Material:

Anthropodermic Books: 

The Anthropodermic Book Project – A research project to identify the world's books bound in human skinDark Archives: A Librarian’s Investigation into the Science and History of Books Bound in Human SkinThe macabre world of books bound in human skinAnthropodermic Bibliopegy – A Flay on Words – Odd Things ConsideredTanneries of human skin? MeudonAnthropodermic Bibliopegy: Books Bound in Human Skin'Dark Archives' Explores The Use Of Human Skin In BookbindingSeeking the Truth Behind Books Bound in Human SkinThe Hide That Binds | by Mike JayBooks Bound in Human Skin Aren't Fiction and a UCLA Librarian Has the StoryBooks Bound in Human Skin – The Practice Isn’t As Rare As You Might Think!A Book by Its Cover | Lapham's QuarterlyScience Confirms: Yup, This Book Really Is Bound in Human SkinThe Skin She Lived In: Anthropodermic Books in the Historical Medical LibraryIn a literal bindHay Library's Special Collections offer more than a human skin-bound bookAnthropodermic bibliopegy

Hans Holbein:

Hans Holbein's Dance of Death (1523–5) – The Public Domain ReviewHans Holbein: Dance of DeathDanse Macabre

Andreas Vesalius:

From the library's historical treasures < Yale School of MedicineL'Histoire de la reliure de Josse SchavyeThe self-publicist whose medical text books caused a stirPublic Dissection Was a Gruesome Spectacle(PDF) Stolen and lost copies of Vesalius's Fabrica

M. Adolphe Belot:

Mademoiselle Giraud, my wifeMademoiselle Giraud, Ma femme, and: Mademoiselle Giraud, My Wife (review)In the Flesh? Anthropodermic Bibliopegy Verification and Its Implications  

Burke and Hare:

The Worlds of Burke and Hare

James Allen

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. - Rare Books -

History of Anatomy

The study of anatomy in England from 1700 to the early 20th centuryHistory of anatomyHistory of medicine in FranceHuman cadaveric dissection: a historical account from ancient Greece to the modern eraMurder Act 1751