Hungry Ghosts
by C J Barker
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Pub Date 28 Mar 2024 | Archive Date 18 Apr 2024
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Description
The lives of Vic Woods and Ruth Wolfe, working-class teenagers from Liverpool and London, are profoundly disrupted by the arrival of World War II. Ruth’s journey leads her to aerial photographic interpretation, though her aspirations for advancement are denied, while Vic’s wartime experiences with bomber command haunt him long after the war is over. Their post-war marriage and tumultuous relationship with their son, James, make for a gripping narrative of trauma, conflict and, ultimately, love.
Set against the backdrop of World War II and the social upheaval of the late 1960s, Hungry Ghosts transports readers into the drama of two pivotal eras in history, exploring the intergenerational impact of war, particularly on the intricate relationships between fathers and sons.
Hungry Ghosts is not just a war story; it’s a timeless exploration of family bonds and the indelible scars left by war.
A Note From the Publisher
Available Editions
EDITION | Ebook |
ISBN | 9781835740682 |
PRICE | £3.99 (GBP) |
PAGES | 360 |
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews
War’s horrendous toll evidences itself early on in life for Vic Woods and his wife, Ruth, the two principal characters of C.J. Barker’s “Hungry Ghosts,” with Vic’s mother presumed dead in a Luftwaffe bombing of Liverpool and Ruth’s sailor brother Jim turning up missing in action. But the war's toll on the two will make itself felt even more up close and personal with the devastation that Vic sees as a bombardier over Dresden, with the images from it and thoughts of what it must have been like for people on the ground so devastating that they will haunt him for the rest of his life and factor into his constant abuse of Ruth.
A way he’ll find to cope, though, will be through photography, with his career taking off after the war with an image he captures of a veteran throwing himself off London Bridge and then later, during Vietnam, with a photo of a nun immolating herself in protest of the war.
So celebrated will his pictures become that they’ll be the stuff of an autobiographical book, “World On Fire,” though his son will be less than enthusiastic about the acclaim, wondering in particular why Vic didn’t put down the camera to help the nun.
A legitimate question about journalism in general, whether an observer should intervene in particularly horrendous situations, and one of particular interest to me as a retired journalist, even if in the case of the nun, as in certain other horrific occasions (the famous picture of the Vietnamese general shooting a Viet Cong prisoner, for instance), the possibility or desirability of intervention is debatable (would you really have wanted to save the nun a minute or two after she went up in flames?). Still, Barker's novel is a worthy consideration of the issue, along with the auxiliary question of what draws some people to war journalism – or in the parlance of the book, what makes Vic a “hungry ghost,” always “chasing after something, anything to fill the void.”