Reviews

Some Must Watch by Ethel Lina White

jessamine864's review against another edition

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5.0

This was so well written! So good but CREEPY!! Well worth a read. I'm not into horror of any kind or mildness but this was good. You really got to know the characters and then just when you thought you'd got it - it changed!! Lol.

b_b1987's review

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4.0

Although a fairly short book I have to say I could not put it down once I got started.
The book is rather creepy and the tension builds well, those that have seen The Spiral Staircase with Dorothy McGuire will notice some differences when it comes to reading it. Not a great master piece but certainly not the worst book I have read.
A tense quick read!

captainfez's review

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3.0

IT WAS A DARK AND STORMY NIGHT.

No, really, it was. That's the set-up for White's novel, famously made – with some alterations – into The Spiral Staircase in 1946. The film has, it seems, driven many to seek out the novel to sup at the story's source, though I'm coming at it from the position of a heathen non-watcher, which means I'm likely not as irritated by the material changes which some argue made the film.

Set in a stately home – well, a home fancy enough to have servants, at least – Some Must Watch is the story about a series of murders coming closer and closer to home. It's the story of a servant, Helen, a redhead with a surplus of pluck. She's not someone who enjoys servitude, and the house in which she serves is full of the usual odd bods that populate novels of this type: preoccupied professors, weirdly secluded relatives of advanced age, hard-working staffers and trouble-in-paradise lovers.

The cast is enough to ensure there's always some tension or special affection directed towards Helen, and it's surprising how well written and foregrounded – particularly given the date of publication – the relationships between women are in this work. Blokes remain much more of an outline, here, and it's quite refreshing.

This novel is a standard 1930s mystery – no more, no less. It's the sort of thing most either love or hate, though I was a bit more 'eh' about the whole proceeding. It is certainly effective at creating an atmosphere of dread, though this is sometimes undone by the dated caricatures that stand in for some of the characters.

The Victorian mansion and remote countryside in which the story unfurls offer a much more Gothic flavour than I would have expected from a whodunnit, and though I found the revelation of who actually did do it to be a little predictable, I enjoyed reading White's work. It's satisfying – no more and no less – but it's the kind of satisfaction that afternoons with tea and bickies sometimes demand.

elizabethchoi's review against another edition

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dark emotional mysterious tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
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