Michael du Preez graduated from medical school in 1958 and went on to become a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons. Since retiring in 2001, he's spent over a decade researching the life of Dr James Barry. He lives in Cape Town, South Africa. Jeremy Dronfield is a writer, biographer and novelist. He lives in Ely, Cambridgeshire.
'A scintillating portrait of Barry's life...that feels almost Dickensian in style.' Guardian 'An astounding story - of obstinacy, ambition, genius, fearlessness and pioneering feminism.' Daily Mail 'Thoroughly engaging.' Sunday Times, Books of the Year 'Gripping, unusual, moving.' Times, Books of the Year 'A comprehensive account.' London Review of Books 'Fascinating'. History Today 'Thoroughly researched, stimulating...Highly recommended'. The Lady 'Fascinating' Irish Independent 'An irresistible little byway in 18th-century medical and social history'. Oldie 'An elegant and sensitive biography...du Preez and Dronfield have done Margaret Buckley and her alter ego proud in this absorbing book.' The Times 'At each turn of this quite gripping biography I found myself gasping in disbelief...the excavations of Michael du Preez...and Jeremy Dronfield...have yielded startling new evidence about the period...Their research is authoritative and prodigious'. Literary Review 'This fantastic book is so much more than a biography of a very remarkable woman. The thread of her personal story weaves its way through a meticulously researched record of a fascinating period in world history...compulsive reading.' -- Dame Margaret Turner-Warwick, first female President, Royal College of Physicians 'A cracking story'. -- Maggie Fergusson Spectator 'This is a fascinating account of the life and career of Dr James Barry as a doctor working in the early nineteenth century. Although Dr Barry obtained a Diploma from this College in 1813 it is only now through this book we are able to fully understand and recognise her achievements.' -- Clare Marx, President, the Royal College of Surgeons of England 'I found the book immensely enjoyable. It's a fascinating story, told with verve, sensitivity and skill - the result of an awe-inspiring amount of research and detective work, managed with delicacy and flair. I felt the book had a real feel for the times and I appreciated its firm historical grounding, and the way in which imagination and a rigorous approach to fact played so well together. A marvellous read, and a story worth telling.' -- Rodney Bolt, author of The Impossible Life of Mary Benson 'This is the extraordinary and remarkable story of the transformation of Margaret Bulkley, a red-haired Irish girl from Cork, into Dr James Barry, physician, medical reformer, friend of the rich, friend of the poor and fearless and irascible scourge of the stupidity, complacency, ineptitude and greed of Britain's Colonial establishment. Dr James Barry kept his great secret for over fifty years and the truth that he was, in fact, a woman was only revealed to an incredulous public after his death. Meticulously researched and written with great verve, this biography is about as good as it gets.' -- Neil McKenna, author of Fanny & Stella: The Young Men Who Shocked Victorian England 'Extensively researched, a fascinating story of a woman taking extreme measures to work in a man's world.' -- Richard Hollingham, author of Blood and Guts: A History of Surgery