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Past Caring
Past Caring

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Author: Robert Goddard
Publisher: Corgi Books
Category: Book

List Price: £7.99
Buy Used: £0.01
You Save: £7.98 (100%)



New (22) from £3.47

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 14 reviews
Sales Rank: 9011

Media: Paperback
Pages: 524
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6
Dimensions (in): 6.9 x 4.2 x 1.2

ISBN: 055213144X
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN: 9780552131445
ASIN: 055213144X

Publication Date: July 17, 1987
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: Well read but in good order

Also Available In:

  • Audio Cassette - Past Caring
  • Paperback - Past Caring
  • Hardcover - Past Caring
  • Paperback - Past Caring
  • Hardcover - Past Caring
  • Audio Cassette - Past Caring: Complete & Unabridged (1930's Trilogy)
  • Audio CD - Past Caring: Complete & Unabridged (1930's Trilogy)
  • Hardcover - Past Caring

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  • Into the Blue (TV Tie in)

Customer Reviews:   Read 9 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars never wanted it to end   February 25, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

when I finished this book I threw it across the room in anger. I wanted to know more and more. A Goddard book is a journey, an adventure. I happily went along. But I couldn't leave the house until I was done reading it. The voices of the flawed narrators are compelling. In particular - take a look at what he does with Aubrey... a cypher made flesh. Wonderful.


4 out of 5 stars One of Robert Goddard's best   October 28, 2007
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Martin Redford is an unemployed and divorced ex-schoolteacher of foundered promise and dismal prospect. So when Alec Fowler suggests that Martin comes to visit him on the island of Madeira with the promise of a prospective job offered by his South African friend Leo Sellick, he eagerly accepts.
It turns out that when Sellick became the owner of his house, the Quinta do Porto Novo, he came across a manuscript written by its previous owner, Edwin Strafford. Strafford had been appointed Home Secretary in 1908 at the age of thirty-two. Why did he resign two years later without explanation before becoming British Consul on Madeira? Why was he abruptly rejected by his fiancee, suffragette Elizabeth Latimer? Who or what betrayed Edwin Strafford in 1910? It is going to be a twisty path for Martin Redford, now Leo Sellick's employee, to find the answers to these questions and many others.
A good plot and a sound historical background are the qualities of this entertaining adventure story. Paul Shelley is the excellent reader of this novel for BBC Audiobooks.



5 out of 5 stars Rivetting   September 29, 2007
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

I loved this book. I couldn't put it down for the first 400 pages. There are however more than 500 pages, the last of these seemed a bit of an anticlimax. Perhaps I'd been emotionally drained by then. By this point however the mystery which compels you to keep reading has been revealed. Goddard seems to struggle to bring it all to a satisfactory end but don't let that put you off reading this excellent novel. I could have happily stopped contented at what Goddard achieves before the last fifth of the book.


5 out of 5 stars Past Caring   July 30, 2007
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

His best book ever. Wish somebody would bring out a cd instead of a tape.


4 out of 5 stars First novel by a fine storyteller   July 29, 2005
 20 out of 21 found this review helpful

A down at heel, disreputable former teacher is enlisted to research a mystery which has spanned the first half of the 20th century ... and beyond. As he delves into the past, his own failures come back to haunt him. It seemed, at first, to be an excuse for a bit of a jaunt and a chance to earn some spare cash; it quickly turns into a real mystery in which the teacher must anticipate threats to his own life and the total disruption of his world.

Robert Goddard does an excellent job of taking the Liberal Government's pre-World War One constitutional crisis and making it the backdrop for his mystery. Prime Minister Asquith is not one of the most memorable of British politicians, and the crisis occasioned by Lloyd George's welfare policies is forgotten by all but those few historians specialising in the era.

Goddard, nevertheless, brings it alive and makes it both comprehensible to the non-historian and relevant to the plot. Using themes of political rivalry between Asquith, Lloyd George, and Churchill, and the radical intervention of the Suffragette movement, he constructs a highly entertaining page-turner of a novel.

He handles the exposition of the history very well. This is no fluffy 'costume drama': the themes of rivalry, jealousy, intrigue, and political manipulation are timeless, and Goddard sets them up neatly and convincingly.

His hero is flawed. He has a past ... he seems unlikely to have a future. He's no conventional thriller hero - if it came to a fight between him and an aged nun, I'd put my money on the nun. He is, effectively, a nondescript little bourgeois with contacts from his Cambridge days - he has all the social graces and some of their advantages, but he's squandered his opportunities because of his flawed character.

Goddard develops his unheroic hero quite well - this is Goddard's first novel, in later books his characterisation becomes more acutely constructed and managed. If there is a fault in this work, however, it is in the dialogue, which can be a bit sterile. Virtually all the characters talk with the same voice - polite, Oxbridge tones with little real emotion and much elaborated rationalisation.

Nevertheless, it's a very good tale, well told (in the main), and, like all good first novels, it's a useful yardstick against which to measure the writer's emergent talent. I interviewed Goddard some years ago. He's a very pleasant, articulate, knowledgeable, and likeable man - you suspect an evening in his company over a few beers would be highly entertaining. He also writes exceedingly good thrillers - very English (as a Scot, I do not always use this as a derogatory term), with an enthralling ability to grasp history and relate it to the present.

Excellent, enjoyable page-turner of a novel. Like all Goddard's works, a fine book to take away with you for a weekend or to accompany you on a long plane or train journey while an expert storyteller transports you into another world.



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