Spike Island: The Memory of a Military Hospital Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

Spike Island: The Memory of a Military Hospital Book

You might expect the biography of a building to be a dusty, hollow affair, especially one no longer standing, but Philip Hoare's Spike Island demolishes that pre-conception with poetic relish. The building is Netley's Royal Victoria Military Hospital, built in the Spike Island region of Southampton and completed in 1863. Florence Nightingale railed vociferously against its design--correctly, it was to prove. It was huge, using over a million red bricks and home to a thousand patients; postmen used to ride their bikes along the quarter-mile corridors that American GIs later drove their jeeps down. As the pink of the Empire it was built to serve faded from the map, Hoare relates, with veritable scholarship and dark exuberance, the horror tales that reverberated around its walls, from early psychiatric experimentation to the tragedy of World War I shell-shock victims. Wilfred Owen was a patient at Netley after the Somme, while doctors included Dr WH Rivers, who featured in Pat Barker's Regeneration Trilogy, and a young RD Laing, who developed his distaste for brutal psychiatric method working there. Even Dr Watson revealed, at the start of A Study in Scarlet, that he had attended a Netley course for army surgeons. Hoare invests his tale with a gothic splendour, from the introductory history of the nearby Cistercian abbey that subsequently inspired operas, prints and tales, to his own pre-occupations, as a youth, with Mervyn Peake's Gormenghast, David Bowie and then punk. At times he wears a brooding decadence on his sleeve like chevrons, as befits the author of Noel Coward and Wilde's Last Stand, but by bolstering his narrative with personal ballast, revealing intimate glimpses of growing up in a backwater, and the deaths of his brother and father, he also provides an evocation of the suburbs comparable to Edward Platt's Leadville. To a rewarding degree a reconciliation of Hoare with his origins and childhood environs, Spike Island speaks of the nature of fear and creeping memory, and lingers in the mind as hauntingly as the ghostly, shadowy presences it so movingly traces.--David VincentRead More

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  • Foyles

    The story of Netley in Southampton – its hospital, its people and the secret history of the 20th-century. Now with a new afterword uncovering astonishing evidence of Netley's links with Porton Down & experiments with LSD in the 1950s.It was the biggest hospital ever built. Stretching for a quarter of a mile along the banks of Southampton Water, the Royal Victoria Military Hospital at Netley was an expression of Victorian imperialism in a million red bricks, a sprawling behemoth so vast that when the Americans took it over in World War II, GIs drove their jeeps down its corridors. Born out of the bloody mess of the Crimean War, it would see the first women serving in the military, trained by Florence Nightingale; the first vaccine for typhoid; and the first purpos- built military asylum. Here Wilfred Owen would be brought along with countless other shell-shocked victims of World War I – captured on film, their tremulous ghosts still haunted the asylum a generation later. In Spike Island, Philip Hoare has written a biography of a building. In the process he deals with his own past, and his own relationship to its history.

  • 1841152943
  • 9781841152943
  • Philip Hoare
  • 26 March 2010
  • Fourth Estate
  • Paperback (Book)
  • 432
  • (Reissue)
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