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The Servants by Michael Marshall
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The Servants

by Michael Marshall

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1021260,339 (3.5)None

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Showing 12 of 12
Creative premise, and interesting resolution, though somehow, not as compelling as some of his other work. ( )
  ohwhatastorm | Nov 18, 2009 |
The novel is definitely aimed at young readers. The main character is Mark, an eleven year old who is bored and restless. His parents have divorced and his mother has remarried. They recently moved to Brighton, a beach resort town. It is the off season and there aren’t many things for him to do. The weather is bad and his mother and stepfather never leave the house because his mother is very ill. Mark constantly argues with David, his stepfather. The house they live in has a basement apartment where a little old lady lives. Mark gets to know the lady and she explains to him that the basement of the house is where the servants lived and worked. He takes the key to the door that leads to the servant’s area and discovers that they are all still working there.

The servants working below stairs are an allegory of what happens when people struggle against one another instead of working together. The below stairs becomes a disorganized mess and Mark explains to the servants what their rolls are so that they can function smoothly again. He learns to stop constantly pushing to live the way he did when his parents were together. He starts to flow with the changes instead of struggling against them. This symbolism even stretches to his skateboarding where he learns to relax instead of trying to hard.

The story is written well and it was a very fast read. I bought it because it was nominated for the 2008 World Fantasy Award. The problem is there isn’t much fantasy here. It’s more about a young person learning to deal with life’s ups and downs. The story isn’t frightening and the servants aren’t ghosts. They are just there to illustrate a point. ( )
  craso | May 11, 2009 |
I think I would have liked The Servants better if I had been able to read it in one sitting. In putting down and picking it back up, I felt like I lost the thread of the narrative and certainly any ambiance and suspense that was building. Overall, the writing was good and there were moments that drew me any - Mark venturing into the servants quarters on his own for the first time - but I never could get over my dislike for the protagonist. This made it hard to sympathize and care what happened. The character never felt fully developed.

I will say that after reading the synopsis, I think that I was unfairly comparing this book to The Book of Lost Things and expecting something very similar. In the end there was no comparison for me. ( )
  bookgirlokc | May 1, 2009 |
My expectations are too high for me to actually enjoy this.It was alright, not a proper return to MMS's form but more interesting than the Micheal Marshall books he's been writing lately. ( )
  stephenaturton | Mar 9, 2009 |
To start this review I think I need to say that this story is not frightening in the way I expected it to be. Anyone expecting vengeful ghosts in the attic will be disappointed. But hopefully they will then realise, like I did, that they are reading an absolute gem of a book and decide they don't care that it is so different.

Eleven year old Mark lives with his mother and step-father in a mostly converted house in Brighton, a place he has previously taken holidays with his mum and real dad. Mark's mum is sick and David, his step-father, doesn't seem to care about Mark unless it is a way to impress Mark's mum. Mark is left to wander the streets and meets the nameless old lady who lives in a self contained flat in the basement of their house. She reveals a secret to Mark that soon becomes a spooky obsession.

I found the book to be charming, spooky in places and scary in a more human way than any amount of ghosts and phantoms could have made it. It was well written and the characters were believable and I think it showed perfectly how helpless and angry a child experiencing divorce, remarriage, illness and isolation can feel. It was a great read for me and perhaps even one that my eleven year old nephew could also enjoy. ( )
2 vote Jodyreadseverything | Mar 5, 2009 |
This is a lovely little ghost story told from the point of view of an 11-year-old boy whose parents have gone through a divorce and remarriage over the past year. He's been forced to leave London for a cold lonely life in Brighton and fears that his mother's new husband has less than good intentions. Visits with the old lady who lives in the basement apartment distract him and then transport him to another world that is also falling apart before his eyes.

I read this the day I bought it over the course of about 2.5 hours. The horrors downstairs at first echo the anger upstairs but perhaps get a bit heavy-handed towards the end, then the story wraps up very quickly, bumping it from 4 stars to 3.5. However, it was a very good read and something I will recommend to friends. ( )
  cabri | Feb 15, 2009 |
Life lessons for an 11 year old, with a bit of the supernatural thrown in.
Lots of tea drinking,skate boarding, and few scary thrills.
Easy read, but hardly worth the trouble. ( )
  sogamonk | Nov 9, 2008 |
When I became aware of some of the symbolic significances in this book I realised it was a much deeper book than I first thought. ( )
2 vote Libbeth | Oct 19, 2008 |
The Servants tells the story of a young boy simultaneously resolving the fetters of the ghosts that haunt his home and coming to terms with his step-father. Michael Marshall Smith writes well. His skill shows in The Servants by creating a very distinct atmosphere with a minimum of words. Excellent craftsmanship doesn't save this book from boring this reader. Nothing frightening happens in this story.

I'd call The Servants as worthwhile reading only if you want to study technique. Otherwise, skip it for something scary. ( )
  JayDugger | Apr 27, 2008 |
No picture available yet. This adult novel is a quiet psychological thriller. Maybe thriller is too strong of a word. But this one reminded me of two shorts stories--"The Yellow Wallpaper" and "The Rocking Horse Winner." The strange things are happening in the mind of young Mark, an eleven year old boy who is dealing with a dad who left, a mom who remarried, a step-dad he doesn't want, and his mom's sickness. She has cancer and doesn't want to leave the house. Mark is left on his own, skateboarding and eventually visiting the strange old lady in the basement flat. Maybe there are ghosts who in the servants' quarters with her. But maybe not. Who knows? ( )
  sarahthelibrarian | Aug 28, 2007 |
Showing 12 of 12

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