Spike Island: The Memory of a Military Hospital by Philip Hoare
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 the Second World War, GIs drove their jeeps down its corridors. Born out of the bloody mess of the Crimean War, rising literally out of its own foundations - its bricks made from clay excavated on the site - Netley's hospital would serve a century's worth of conflict before it met its own demise just one hundred years later. In this work, 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.