Sign in or 

|
portsmouthlibraries |
Latest page update: made by portsmouthlibraries
, Nov 1 2007, 7:28 AM EDT
(about this update
About This Update
54 words deleted view changes - complete history) |
|
Keyword tags:
book
recommendation
review
synopsis
More Info: links to this page
|
| Started By | Thread Subject | Replies | Last Post | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anonymous | my respect | 0 | Oct 24 2009, 7:19 AM EDT by Anonymous | ||
|
|
Thread started: Oct 24 2009, 7:19 AM EDT
Watch
thanks for you, it's really a nice novel
|
||||
| Anonymous | Heart of the matter | 0 | Oct 22 2009, 6:15 PM EDT by Anonymous | ||
|
|
Thread started: Oct 22 2009, 6:15 PM EDT
Watch
This 1948 story of moral decay was one of Graham Greene's greatest popular and critical successes, though not one of his own favorites. His hero Scobie is a colonial police commissioner in West Africa. He endures a loveless marriage and a nondescript career patiently enough until he falls in love with a young shipwreck survivor who, literally, washes ashore at his feet. To send his wife on an extended holiday to South Africa, he borrows money from a Syrian merchant, who then uses his position to blackmail Scobie into turning a blind eye to his smuggling. Once his wife returns home, Scobie finds that he can no longer reconcile his affection for his mistress with his duties as a husband, a policeman, and a Catholic, and is pressed to a desperate resolution of his confusions
|
||||
| Anonymous | A good read | 1 | Dec 12 2008, 5:50 AM EST by Anonymous | ||
|
|
Thread started: Dec 10 2008, 9:30 AM EST
Watch
This was a book chock full of similies and metaphors, which I don't think tend to be used so much today.
"..... his brain was like a sieve through which the rubbish fell all day long......" The heat, the lack of trust, the gossip, the damp, spread throughout the book and affected everyone. The story was dated and the characters not particularly likable, but the scenes were set so vividly, that I forgave Greene the OTT bits (like the goodbye scenes and the religious bits) which didn't work for me. I think it described the conditions of the many people who sought fame and fortune working for the ruling class of the time, in foreign lands, very well indeed. |
||||