The Servants

Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book The Servants by Michael Marshall Smith, HarperCollins e-books
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Michael Marshall Smith ISBN: 9780061982576
Publisher: HarperCollins e-books Publication: October 6, 2009
Imprint: HarperCollins e-books Language: English
Author: Michael Marshall Smith
ISBN: 9780061982576
Publisher: HarperCollins e-books
Publication: October 6, 2009
Imprint: HarperCollins e-books
Language: English

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.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

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.

More books from HarperCollins e-books

Cover of the book Dreamcatcher by Michael Marshall Smith
Cover of the book Sally's Hair by Michael Marshall Smith
Cover of the book Almost a Goddess by Michael Marshall Smith
Cover of the book Scared to Death by Michael Marshall Smith
Cover of the book When a Stranger Loves Me by Michael Marshall Smith
Cover of the book Truth & Beauty by Michael Marshall Smith
Cover of the book After All These Years by Michael Marshall Smith
Cover of the book The Best Four Years by Michael Marshall Smith
Cover of the book Voyage by Michael Marshall Smith
Cover of the book Shane Comes Home by Michael Marshall Smith
Cover of the book Read This Next by Michael Marshall Smith
Cover of the book History on a Personal Note by Michael Marshall Smith
Cover of the book Setting the Table by Michael Marshall Smith
Cover of the book Leonard Bernstein by Michael Marshall Smith
Cover of the book Michael Tolliver Lives by Michael Marshall Smith
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy