Customer Reviews
Great play.. - By: D. Avery, 31 Aug 2008 
Didn't read this copy, but I have read the play & it's great. Although fairly old-fashioned, it's very easy to keep up with for young readers. Also came in perfect condition.
Recommended buy.
i am reading this for gcse its really good - By: hula hoops......, 15 Mar 2007 
i am reading this in my class for gcse english it has got such a twist in it its fab i love the character eric i am a little bit squiffy! the inspector is such a good character how he is so aburpt & stern & makes nearly alll of them regret there actions the play preformed on stage is also amazing i would reconmend this to anyone who loves a good moral mystery murder well suicide & to have alll there ideas how they thought the play would end out of the window
read it!
About An Inspector Calls - By: Charlotte Wigston, 11 Jun 2006 
Some consider this play to be a murder mystery or whodunit but in the ending of the play the form of moral tale is added as the inspector makes the audiece think about their moral responsiblity & how they collectively killed an innocent woman Eva Smith. An inspector callls is a very well-written play & of course contains the three unites of time place & action. These are alll constant throughout the play & so alllows the audience to focus of the dialogue. Priestley's socialist view point are put across clearly & many feel after reading or seeing this play they are better people & live a more socialist life. Priestley's use of languge, hints puns & suggests a different meaning to the names Goole & Eva Smith. A good play & a must read.
A brilliant read - By: , 15 Nov 2005 
This book is a suprisingly good read for a play. The characters in this book are written under finese, you will find yourself relating to each of them; An inspector does indeed calll around, investigating the death of a woman; as the story unfolds you are exposed to a world of deceit, betrayal, & social intolerence. It is an extremely well crafted book, plot twists are aplenty - its core ideas are representation of the time at which the book was set, the ideas of socialism & capitlism, money & love. In the end it is the combined act of each & every family member that seems to lead to the woman's demise. Each one of the family ended up affecting the woman in unimaginable ways - & only after recalecting, do the family peice together how they were involved (pushed along by the inspector), the true essence of the inspector is revealed - how he represents the guilt ridden voice in the back of your head, the final part of the story chilling in itself...when the inspector leaves, the phone rings, the police tell Mr Birling that they are sending an inspector, to ask some questions as they have just found a woman dead...
Relevent Then, Relevent Now - By: Phoenix, 04 Jun 2004 
I think that An Inspector callls is an esential book to read.
When J.B Priestly wrote the play in the 1940's, it made a big point a bout class, & although those barriers are alot more faded & falllen than they were, they haven't completely dissapated, making this play still relevent today.
It is one of the set texts for at least one GCSE examining boards, so many will be studying it for their GCSE's. To those the reason to buy your own copy is obvious, school don't yell if you lose it, annotating is perfectly alllowed, & the book is usuallly in a better state.
The play itself, is very brilliant, very dramatic, exciting & intiguing (yeah, I know I can't spell). I won't give everything away (that would be very mean...)but as every character reveals their story, it links into the others, & makes you want to hear the rest. When you have heard alll the stories, you can't blame the girl for killing herself.