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3.0 

The Servants

By Michael Marshall Smith
The Servants by Michael Marshall Smith digital book - Fable

Publisher Description

For young Mark, the world has turned as bleak and gray as the Brighton winter. Separated from his real father and home in London, he's come to live with his mother and her new husband in an old house near the sea. He spends his days alone, trying to master the skateboard, while other boys his age are in school. He hates the unwanted stepfather who barged into Mark's life to rob him of joy. Worst of all, his once-vibrant mother has grown listless and weary, no longer interested in anything beyond her sitting room.

But on a damp and chilly evening, an accident carries Mark into the basement flat of the old woman who lives at the bottom of his stepfather's house. She offers tea, cakes, and sympathy . . . and the key to a secret, bygone world. Mark becomes caught up in the frenetic bustle of the human machinery that once ran a home, and drawn ever deeper into a lost realm of spirits and memory. Here below the suffocating truths, beneath the pain and unhappiness, he finds an escape, and quite possibly a way to change everything.

A richly evocative, poignantly beautiful modern-day ghost story, The Servants marks the triumphant return of Michael Marshall Smith—the first novel in a decade from the multiple award-winning author of Spares.

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20 Reviews

3.0
“If you love magical realism, ghost stories, novels about growing up or tales about family, I really think you'll like this one. In the story, the young protagonist, Mark, has to move from the bustle of London to the quiet of Brighton, and deal with a stepfather he doesn't like as well as his mother's deteriorating health. He is – understandably – angry and confused. But when he meets the old lady living in their basement apartment, and she shows him a hidden door through which he can see the ghosts of servants past, he begins to look at life, and conflict, through new eyes. This is one of those clever tales that keep you guessing at whether the otherworldly elements are really happening, or if they're simply metaphors – coping mechanisms Mark is using to deal with his mounting pain and trauma. I appreciated its emotional maturity and beautiful, introspective language. Ill health and grief can be tough topics, but the hopeful telling of this story made the overall vibe more uplifting than sad. What I loved the most was the idea that people have 'secret rooms' – there are parts of ourselves we present to the world, like showrooms at the front of a house, but our dark thoughts and secrets, and who we are outside of the perceptions of others, are hidden away like servants quarters, below ground perhaps, but always there. If you like hunting for double meanings, and are looking for a powerful, quick read, I recommend The Servants.”
“What a great story, very surprised to find myself tearing up as I turned the last page of this. I know many reviewers have drawn comparisons with "Tom's Midnight Garden" but to me it seems to be deeper than that (don't get me wrong, I LOVE "Tom's Midnight Garden" but think authors should be allowed to create a story with similar elements). You can take this as a simple ghost story, or uncover a lower layer that points to it being about the pains of growing up and feeling out of place, and it takes on an even more poignant tone. Mark has recently moved to Brighton with his mother Yvonne and his new stepfather David. Mark can't stand David, believes he is out to get him and that he wants to take over his mother's life. His mother is dangerously ill and therefore can do little except sleep all day and doesn't seem capable of standing up for Mark in anyway, therefore Mark chooses to go out to the pier to skateboard hour after hour, day after day. I think most of us who have divorced parents can relate to a new person coming into our parent's lives and seemingly 'taking over' the situation - especially if we are at an impressionable age (Mark is 11). One gloomy afternoon however, he becomes acquainted with the elderly woman who lives in the flat below Mark and is soon going there regularly to sit in her cosy living room to drink tea and eat rock cakes. What Mark discovers however, is that this woman has a special key that unlocks the dirty, seemingly unlived in servant's quarters at the back of the building, and what Mark uncovers there will change his life forever. I did find myself getting goosebumps numerous times whilst reading this, but I wasn't ever outright terrified - if anything it was quite a moving, haunting story, and sometimes those stay with you a lot longer than your average horror.”

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