Thief-taker Simon Westow, who normally retrieves stolen goods, stretches his remit to include stolen bodies in 1824 Leeds.
Wealthy engineer Joseph Clark hires Simon and his helper, Jane, to find the body of Gwendolyn Jordan, his best worker's 10-year-old daughter, which has been stolen from her coffin. They start by tracking down the dress she was wearing, which is worth more, according to the law, than the body. Simon and Jane have built up a large network of people who notice things, so they have their informants look for the seller while they check cemeteries themselves. Meantime, much-married Amanda Parker wants to hire the pair to find Thomas Rawlings, who she claims cheated her out of 50 pounds. Though they have a bad feeling about the job, especially when Mrs. Parker wants Jane to pose as a prostitute, they decide to give it a few days. Jane’s ability to vanish into the background makes her perfect at following people, and her skill with a knife has kept her safe. When they find Rawlings murdered, they suspect a connection with the body snatchers but resolve to tell no one until they can learn the names of the malefactors. It turns out that Harold Ackroyd, Peter Kingsley, and a muscleman known as the Irishman have stolen many more bodies than anyone suspected. Simon and Jane trace Ackroyd to a remote house, but their plan to catch the body snatchers fails, and the stakes are raised dramatically when the Irishman throws Jane off a bridge, turning a game of cat and mouse into a struggle over life and death.
An action-packed mystery that provides interesting historical details about despicable crimes.