The Book Case is Portsmouth Library Service's website for readers, guiding you through the overwhelming choice of what to read next and inviting you to share your reading experiences through reviews and recommendations.
Please add your comments below and share your book thoughts and suggestions with the rest of the reading community.
Who can contribute and how?
Everyone can contribute to this wiki by leaving comments at the bottom of any page, in order to share your views and thoughts.
However, if you want to get more involved by creating and maintaining new pages for The Book Case, please let us know be clicking on the Join this Wiki button. Sign up, and then click on the Apply to be a Writer button.
If you have a passion for Science Fiction and Fantasy, or if you want to share your love of the Crime genre, you can create your own pages with all the support you need. For further information on the editorial process, please navigate to the So you want to be a writer? page. We look forward to hearing from you!
We would also love to support local creative writers. Sign up and then apply to be a writer if you want the opportunity to share news and views or even work with your readers.
What's new on The Book Case?
Kingston Prison Library reading group have joined us. Read some of their book reviews on The Book Case
The Man Booker shortlist has been announced, one of our members has posted a review of one of the titles.
"The little stranger is set in post-war England. The protagonist, Dr Faraday, is a GP and confirmed bachelor. The centre of his life used to be a grand stately home, Hundreds Hall, where his mother worked as a servant. This estate has now fallen on hard times and the once wealthy family now lives in near poverty, grubbing a living through their farm. The sharp contrast between the family's straitened circumstances and their semi-opulent surroundings (albeit now very much in disrepair) is played out through much of the novel and the reader even manages to feel sorry for them. Faraday enters their lives again unexpectedly when he's called to attend to a medical call-out there. What he finds is upsetting for him when he bears in mind his rather more glamorous memories of the place. Mrs Ayres, the widowed lady of the house, is well groomed yet deluded, Roddy (the heir to the crumbling estate) suffers from 'nerves' and his sister Caroline is frumpy, sensible and plain with no chance of marrying a catch. As he inveigles his way into their lives, becoming increasingly indispensable, a ghost story soon emerges. A phantom 'something' is plaguing Roddy, literally driving him mad. Hundreds house is haunted and the family are keen to find an explanation. The ultra-rational Faraday soon becomes an annoyance to the reader as his refusal to accept what's staring him in the face has you screaming in frustration at the pages. The atmosphere is spooky, yet understated. You soon come to understand you can't trust Faraday's narration of events, his assumptions (that you initially accept) are cleverly turned on their head later into the novel when you realise just what a twit he really is. For fans of Sarah Waters, this book is a treat. It's also an insightful look into a period of social upheaval in Britain."
Book reviews and recommendations. We have book reviews on a theme, plus general suggestions from other readers
Gossip on what library reading groups in Portsmouth are currently reading, including a full list of our past, present and future reading adventures, with reviews
For a full overview of everything we have to offer, take a look at our sitemap.
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