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| View Larger Image | Sacred Hunger by Barry Unsworth
| | List Price: | $14.95 | | Price: | $10.17 | | You Save: | $4.78 (32%) |  | | Available: | Usually ships in 24 hours |  | |  | | Sales Rank: | 32112 | | Studio: | W. W. Norton & Company |  | | Binding: | Paperback | | Number Of Pages: | 629 | | Publication Date: | December 31, 1969 | | Publisher: | W. W. Norton & Company |
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EDITORIAL REVIEWS | Product Description In this Booker Prize-winning work set in colonial America, Unsworth follows the failing fortunes of William Kemp, a merchant pinning his last chance to a slave ship; his son, who needs his father's fortune; and his nephew, who sails on the ill-fated ship. |
CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 4.5 based on 39 reviews)
| Greed , power and the forces that counteract them  Barry Unsworth's historic novel that won the Booker Prize is an exceptional literary accomplishment and well worth the prize. The word 'vast' would be a good way to describe the novel since it has multiple vividly drawn characters selected from a broad range of social classes and conditions. It is also vast in chronological scope as it covers several 18th century decades in the lives of the characters. It is also vast in venue or setting in that the stately homes of wealthy Liverpool are contrasted with the back-water dens of prostitution and criminality of water-front Liverpool; tenuous military outposts in Sierra Leone on the African coast are contrasted with back-river slave trading posts; a utopian colony in colonial jungle Florida is contrasted with the decadent gentlemen's clubs where the sons of wealthy merchants flaunt their inherited wealth, influence politicians to help maintain their privileged status, and systematically humiliate the lower classes.
The novel is both historic and social commentary in addition to the well constructed multi-chaptered narrative plot. There are no artistic literary games played with the reader. Rather, the narrative is a well constructed chronologically ordered structure on which Unsworth can build both character development and analysis but also commentary on the nature of social structures developed by the powerful to suppress those with less power. In this regard the novel could be called `old fashioned' in narrative structure yet subtle and disarming in its underlying message and content.
Unsworth displays incredible ability to both describe place with vivid yet not overblown language. Likewise he has great ability to reveal character through dialogue. It is his ability to replicate the language of the wealthy capitalist, the bar-maid or the hardened sailor that helps him use dialogue to reveal class, intellect, and character. The use of pidgin-English on the African Coast, aboard the slave ship, and in the Florida utopia is vivid and direct. The final quarter of the book uses pidgin-English extensively but the reader quickly masters the dialect and is amused by the witty turn of phrases.
For this review I would like to discuss the four major male characters in the book: William Kemp, Erasmus Kemp, Matthew Paris, and Captain Saul Thurso.
William Kemp is a character well known in capitalistic paternalistic western society. He is the father, the provider, the manager, the risk taker, the stable and controlling force within his family, business, and community. Yet William Kemp's great investment in a slave ship fails and William Kemp decides not to face the consequences of his mismanagement that long lay hidden behind his respectable upper class facade. The section of the novel whereby Mrs. Kemp manages the scandal and crisis that is left by her husband's stigmatizing death is a telling passage. Here we see stiff Erasmus, their young adult son, unable to navigate the confines and social constriction of a stigmatized death, which his mother in her lower social role as a woman can.
Erasmus Kemp is an odd fellow, a brittle and vulnerable personality that is never relaxed in his own skin or in the world. When he is young he becomes enraged at his older cousin picking him up to keep him from becoming wet from an incoming tide. When he falls in love, he is so object driven that he eventually drives away the affection of his love, Sarah Wolpert. He is so unsure of his status as a privileged rich young man that he is threatened when his love, Sarah, has a different opinion than he, or when Sarah's mother dares to discuss taxation and business with males, or when his own `weak' mother manages a family scandal far better than he does. He seems forever driven to maintain his own inflated yet fragile self evaluation and the shallow image he portrays to the world. Thus much of his life is driven by a struggle for self definition. He must have a challenge or antagonist in order to understand the borders of his self-image.
His cousin, Matthew Paris, is the most developed character in the novel. Here we see a broken man. As a bright young physician he was willing to get into a power struggle with a powerful vicar over evolution. This power struggle then resulted in the loss of his profession, his incarceration and public humiliation, the death of his wife without him present, and a lifetime of restricted potential due to his record as a convict. Paris learned hurtful lessons about intellectual pride in the face of social power and realizes that his intellectual gift and self-regard set him up for a conflict which he could not win and for which his poor wife paid part of the awful price. Pride and intellect was the motivating force that initially allowed him to confront hypocrisy with truth. However after his great loss, he is not certain that pride was to his benefit and may have undermined his efforts. He is thus better prepared to assess consequences when he is faced with another social power and evil injustice in the person of Captain Saul Thurso.
Captain Thurso is a fascinating character for he is hard as a rock, unmoved by any human emotions, reacting against any perceived threat like a barking border dog, and so ego-maniacal that he see the forces of nature personally against him. It is his hard cruelty that eventually causes Matthew Paris, the ship's doctor, to respond against tyranny even though his last foray against tyranny resulted in incredible personal loss. Because his egotism has been fragmented, Matthew Paris is better able to bide his time, measure consequences, and recognize when a final blow has been dealt.
The utopian world in back river jungle Florida is exceptionally written, for here black slaves, impersonally chained like animals aboard ship, become human beings of vivid character and motives. The final third of the book is brilliant as we see life in a utopia and see that even in utopia oppression of the weak by the strong will always rear its head. Even here Matthew Paris must outwit greedy power if he wishes to stand on the side of the weak.
Overall this book is a triumph. It is a beautiful historic novel, full of character and class, place and time, and the force of greed and power in opposition to the forces that must confront greed and power and face the consequences for doing so.
January 19, 2008 | | Not so sacred book  This is a very well-told story from which it is difficult to avert one's eyes once embarked upon the reading of it. But I have a few problems with the book as a whole, considered as a work of art. The stylism of the writing has some very high points, but they seem to me few and far between, making the reading of the work at times a jarring experience. I don't believe the book (thank heavens) is essentially a morality tale---If so, what is the moral? The "sacred hunger" of greed and trade certainly has a deeply plumbed negative side here, but so does a hankering after a distant Arcadia, as philosophised upon by Delbanco.--The problem really is essentially one of artistic overreaching, as exemplified by:
The Tempest--One other reviewer has mentioned the connexion between the 18th Century reworking of the play entitled The Enchanted Isle enacted (or attempted to be enacted) at the beginning of the narrative and the colony founded in Florida. The failure here is that the connexion is never worked out in the book. What are the themes of The Tempest? One can argue over this question until one is blue in the face. But I think almost all would agree that one of the themes is the unreality of the perceptible world. This is artistically worked out in the work of John Fowles (The Magus), almost every work of Iris Murdoch, and various 20th Century novelists. But Unsworth has let this literary connexion, so obvious, slide out of his purview. Perhaps he simply became tired of writing, but the glaring omission of any attempt to follow up on what seems to me an obvious intended theme at some point in the writing of the novel mars the experience of reading the book for me.
There are some marvellous passages:
"There are moments in anyone's life when some blend of circumstances, some consonance of surroundings and situation and character, show him in a light peculiarly characteristic, make him seem more peculiarly himself - to the observer, that is: the subject will not be aware of it. He seems to us then to be immobilized, taken out of time - or he steps, rather, into some much older story." P.165
Wonderful, if only such writing could be sustained! As it is, Sacred Hunger is a good story, but not, despite the prize, one of great literature.
October 17, 2007 | | Sacred Hunger  I have been reading for over 50 years: novels, history, philosophy, religion, travel, and more. This novel is in the top 3 that I have ever read. Dynamic, traumatic, true, feeling, heart-rending, uplifting, exciting, emotional, questioning, pathos in style, need I say more? If your heart can take some pain and understand the gain that can come from an experience, then you must go for this novel. Superb is a minor complement. And one can not read it over a weekend--it is too deep and fraught and breath-taking--you will need some time to take a breath and say WOW!--ready to go on to the next page of the story. Go for the depth of it. May 07, 2007 | | "But that sacred hunger we spoke of justifies all."  While the slave trade of the late 1700s provides the backdrop for this worthy novel, slavery is not its foremost theme. Indeed, the story's main character, Erasmus Kemp, is a well-to-do white man. The "sacred hunger" of which the title speaks is that certain something that lies deep inside each of us, the one that motivates and drives us to change the world...sometimes for the better, but more often for the worse. "Nothing a man suffers will prevent him from inflicting suffering on others. Indeed, it will teach him the way..." is a truth readers see their eyes opened to time and time again...first, in a utopian society forged by the Liverpool Merchant's uprisers that at its core is anything but utopian, and then again even more vividly in Kemp's stop-at-nothing revenge tactics. Harboring deep-seated anger over perceived past transgressions, the sum of his existence will boil down to one hate-filled moment. Readers will walk away from this novel contemplating their own reason for being and perhaps be inspired to embrace a more worthy sacred hunger of their own. February 20, 2007 | | the Inhumanity of Salvery 
Sacred Hunger is a very deep and engaging book, and portrays slavery as more inhumane than most of us ever would have realized.
The book's title is essentially synonymous with its theme-greed. Unsworth demonstrates how the desire for money and power led imperialist nations, such as England, to engage in such terrible practices. Unsworth effectively shows that the upper class's desire for economic prosperity can distort their view of humanity so much that they find putting a price on another human's life acceptable. Apart from the desire for money, Unsworth examines another area of greed-Revenge. Erasmus Kemp travels half way around the world, in search of his hated cousin, desiring only to see his death. Erasmus is left to feel quite empty when his cousin dies before Erasmus is able to see him hanged.
Sacred Hunger also contains profound irony. The reader learns that it was actually black Africans who were the ones selling the slaves to the European merchants. Accordingly, the most advanced and "civilized" nations were the ones who actually had laws that legitimized such a barbaric market.
Sacred Hunger is an excellent novel because it details the English slave trade from the point of view of the wealthy men who pioneered it, as well as the people who were subjected to its unimaginable cruelty.
February 02, 2006 | |
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