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Stu Hennigan's 'Ghost Signs: Poverty and the Pandemic'

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    Stu Hennigan's 'Ghost Signs: Poverty and the Pandemic'

    This book deserves a thread of its own. I'd qualify it as the most important book published in the UK over the past five years, a latter-day Road To Wigan Pier. Or, as I tweeted this morning: "a shocking, devastating portrait of chronic, heart-breaking poverty in northern England. Every UK citizen should read it and ask how one of the world's wealthiest countries can be in such a desperate state."

    And, it's published by a small indie press - Bluemoose Books.

    Hennigan's a librarian in Leeds, but when he's furloughed during the pandemic, he volunteers to deliver food parcels and meds to those forced into self-isolation and unable to leave the house. He knows the city well from his work, but it still doesn't prepare him for the levels of deprivation he finds every day, several times a day. And he knows that his fellow volunteers are finding exactly the same thing. Hard stares and threats from locals who mistrust anyone from any kind of authority, even when it's attempting to help them. Emaciated addicts, lonely and sick OAPs, and starving families living in busted, inhabitable shit-holes. The smell of weed and dog shit everywhere. Some people so grateful that it makes the author lachrymose, depressive and sleep-deprived. And reading what he encounters every day, it's no wonder.

    We all know the UK's poverty stats, and about the still growing gap between the well off and those living on nothing, but few of us, I imagine, ever go to the no-go areas described in this book, because they're no-go for a reason, and we don't have to unless it's in our line of work. So even if we think we know about this stuff, we don't, but you will after reading this book. It's repetitive, true, but that doesn't make it any less compelling - in fact, the more you read, the more you're knocked back by the graphic descriptions of what Hennigan finds. A startling piece of work.

    #2
    There's an article here in the local press about how people living in one of the most deprived areas of Valencia have had hosepipes which they using to cool themselves down confiscated by the local pigs. Many of these people have no jobs, live in debt and certainly have no access to decent public facillities. Slight thread derail, but just to ram home that poor areas are affected everywhere.

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      #3
      A sister book to Hennigan's, which is a completely different work, but a part of the same problem: diseased Britain. Richard Beard's Sad Little Men (first published last year) is a brilliant polemic against Britain's private schools and the kind of self-entitled, arrogant pricks it tends to produce. Beard should know - he was at Radley at the same time Cameron and Johnson were at Eton. Sent away from home at the age of eight to prep school and never allowed to show 'weakness' in the form of being homesick or wanting motherly love. A lot of it's heartbreaking when you think how much of a normal childhood he missed out on (though the writer's not in it for sympathy - he sounds like he's still working through his anger at having been forced to spend his youth in these fucking mad-houses). At one point he goes home to his mum (his dad's dead) to ask her 'What were you thinking?' She blames dad, a patriarch who'd brook no dissent. And adds the cliché about wanting what was best for them...

      There's a piece here from Beard (author of the excellent The Day That Went Missing, an account of seeing his younger brother drown as a child, and about the British propensity to hide grief rather than process it) explaining why he wrote the book, and why private schools produce the wrong kind of leaders and the wrong kind of people.

      He references a lot the 10-part BBC documentary from 1980 about Radley, which I just watched on YouTube. I remember seeing some if it at the time and being horrified by the ostentatious maths teacher adding cricket questions to his test. So you'd be marked down if you didn't know who'd made a century for Middlesex the day before. Some if it's hilarious now, though, especially the part when the headmaster (the "warden") explains his views on why the issue of homosexuality is now "a dead letter" (it's because of all the scantily clad women in ads and the availability of soft porn, apparently). There are update documentaries from 1987 and 2013, but I haven't watched those yet.

      Meanwhile, Hennigan's book seems to be getting a lot of attention, which is how it should be - he was on the front page of the Yorkshire Evening Post earlier this week. My sister bought it on my recommendation, then leant it to my cousin, who promptly bought a copy each for both her sons because "they need to know about this sort of stuff, though I doubt they'll actually read it."

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        #4
        'Ghost Signs' short listed for Parliamentary Book Awards. Up against Marina Hyde and Matt Hancock. Winner to be announced at House of Commons on 22.2.23.

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          #5
          Originally posted by imp View Post
          'Ghost Signs' short listed for Parliamentary Book Awards. Up against Marina Hyde and Matt Hancock. Winner to be announced at House of Commons on 22.2.23.
          Hyde will win. No-one wants to draw attention to what Hennigan has to say.

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            #6
            I really hope they make the unpredictable and braver choice, but you're probably right.

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