![The Ghost Road](/sites/default/files/styles/2_3_media_tiny/public/images/the_ghost_road.jpg?itok=oU7sUneY 93w, /sites/default/files/styles/2_3_media_small/public/images/the_ghost_road.jpg?itok=eBlJDPP5 115w, /sites/default/files/styles/2_3_media_medium/public/images/the_ghost_road.jpg?itok=IuRMGnMC 149w, /sites/default/files/styles/2_3_media_large/public/images/the_ghost_road.jpg?itok=whIoGJ3R 162w, /sites/default/files/styles/2_3_media_x_large/public/images/the_ghost_road.jpg?itok=yLFUSBkV 205w, /sites/default/files/styles/2_3_media_huge/public/images/the_ghost_road.jpg?itok=BB7Zz059 269w)
By Pat Barker
1995 Booker Prize judges
Pat Barker’s First World War Regeneration Trilogy had already built up a head of critical steam, so there was a sense of rightness when the final volume, The Ghost Road, triumphed.
Barker’s win was acclaimed as an example of right winner, right book – not always the case. She saw off two former winners – Salman Rushdie (The Moor’s Last Sigh) and Barry Unsworth (Morality Play) – on her way to a victory that she saw as a means of promoting fiction generally rather than just her own work.
Her themes – the pity of war, sympathy for the shell-shocked and homosexuality, ambivalence to empire – were adroitly handled and hit a receptive moment in time.
Winner The Booker Prize 1995
By Pat Barker
By Tim Winton