Megan Curran Rosenbloom[1] (born 1981)[2] is an American medical librarian and expert on anthropodermic bibliopegy, the practice of binding books in human skin.
Rosenbloom received her Master of Library and Information Science from the University of Pittsburgh in 2008.
[7] Through her library work, Rosenbloom had access to a large number of old and rare medical books that were also about death.
[7] She began doing public lectures on the way the history of medical advancements is intertwined with the use of nameless corpses and met Caitlin Doughty; together they curate Death Salon events.
[11][12] As a member of the Anthropodermic Book Project, Rosenbloom and her colleagues Daniel Kirby, Richard Hark and Anna Dhody use peptide mass fingerprinting to determine if the binding on books is of human origin.