The Servants
by Michael Marshall Smith
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 53)
Read in July, 2008
An ultimately cutesy story but emotionally very immature. Some might say that's because the main character is 11; I won't allow the author to hide underdeveloped characters behind such a lame excuse. This book might work for young adult readers, but it is not a satisfying novel for adults.
The story centers on 11-year-old boy Mark, who has just moved from London to Brighton with his very ill mother and his new stepfather. Mark is having difficulty accepting the limitations of his mother's ...more
The story centers on 11-year-old boy Mark, who has just moved from London to Brighton with his very ill mother and his new stepfather. Mark is having difficulty accepting the limitations of his mother's ...more
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Read in August, 2008
recommends it for:
a delusional someone who really hates their stepfather
This was a very disappointing book. I expected more of a ghost story and less of a story about a boy who hates his stepfather.
Here's the book in a nutshell:
Mark moves with his sick mother and hated stepfather to a coastal town south of London. Mark really hates his step father. For some reason, the boy doesn't have to go to school because he's not in London, so he attempts to learn to skateboard. They order out Chinese a lot, and Mark spends lots of time hating his stepfather. And somewhe...more
Here's the book in a nutshell:
Mark moves with his sick mother and hated stepfather to a coastal town south of London. Mark really hates his step father. For some reason, the boy doesn't have to go to school because he's not in London, so he attempts to learn to skateboard. They order out Chinese a lot, and Mark spends lots of time hating his stepfather. And somewhe...more
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Read in January, 2008
This book was easy to read and follow, although there were some unconventional interactions with characters and places from the past. The 11 year old main character, Mark, was able to grow and learn to understand people's imperfect relationships with each other. He could see that people and events from the past are always part of the present. He grew from a young child with selfish needs to one who could step outside his own needs to understand those of his Mother and new stepfather. These a...more
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Read in August, 2008
This quick little read is reminiscent of a Twilight Zone episode--a young boy finds himself displaced in a huge old house in Brighton, England with a new step-father he can't stand and an ailing mother. He befriends the little old lady who lives in the basement, and she literally gives him a key to an experience both strange and addictive. It seems like a straight up ghost story at first, but then something REALLY strange happens and it becomes....fantasy? Science fiction? A bit of both? It...more
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Read in April, 2008
recommended to Loz by:
Breannerecommends it for: Everyone
I loved this book. It was wonderful. Marshal-Smith has a wonderful way of throwing all your expectations into his books with each line you read then turning those ideas on their heads.
I will say i didn't enjoy it as much as a couple of his other novels but it was engaged thoroughly until the end. I liked how just because bad stuff happened in the book, there wasn't a magical resolution to the real problems, despite the servants predicament and the main characters visiting them.
I enjoyed th...more
I will say i didn't enjoy it as much as a couple of his other novels but it was engaged thoroughly until the end. I liked how just because bad stuff happened in the book, there wasn't a magical resolution to the real problems, despite the servants predicament and the main characters visiting them.
I enjoyed th...more
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This is a well-written story about a boy dealing with his parents' divorce, new step-father, mother's cancer and some supernatural goings-on in the basement of their new house in Brighton. The supernatural aspects of the ending didn't entirely make sense to me, but the portrayal of an 11 year old boy dealing with all these upheavals in his life felt very true.
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Read in October, 2007
I really enjoyed it. It's a quick read and I felt I could be exploring the upstairs/downstairs world of The Remains of the Day....or.....the dark fantasy of Pan's Labrynth. It really depends on which direction you let your mind wander.
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Read in January, 2007
recommends it for:
Anyone who likes thoughtful ghost stories
A very creepy little book about ghostly servants living in the basement of a house in England. The creepy old lady in the basement just adds to the fun.
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Read in June, 2008
Aside from a few regrettable F-bombs dropped into the proceedings at odd moments, Smith has written a fine young adult ghost story.
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Really good, creepy little novel. Loved the English seashore on the off-season setting.
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my expectations are too high for me to actually enjoy this.
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