![]() The project awakens something primal in the male members of the group. Inspired by an ancient tribe that was said to have built a defensive “ghost wall” out of human bones, the campers collect rabbit and sheep skulls, intent on constructing a small replica. Worse, when he sees Silvie bathing topless in a stream, he takes her aside and beats her with a belt. Most everyone tries to keep the mood light, but Bill, a stickler and a sexist, criticizes the students’ store-bought tents and expects all involved to observe outmoded gender roles. They pick berries, gather mussels, and cook their meals over an open fire. The reenactment is meant to mimic life as it was lived 2,500 years ago, and so the participants-Bill, his wife, Alison, and their daughter, Silvie an archaeology professor and a few of his students-are roughing it in a wooded area near the North Sea. He channels his rage and insecurities into historical reenactments, one of which is at the heart of Moss’s harrowing novel. ![]() ![]() “That’s where you come from,” he told Silvie, “those folk, that’s how it used to be.” Unfortunately, Bill is consumed with the crackpot idea that his once-pure country has been sullied by immigration. A bitter man who abhors the modern world, Bill Hampton rhapsodized about an exhibition of Bronze Age artifacts. ![]() 144 pages.Įarly in Sarah Moss’s Ghost Wall, the narrator, a smart seventeen-year-old named Silvie, recalls accompanying her father to a history museum near their home in northern England. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |