Friday, 1 May 2026

Wish You Were Here - Tense Right to the End

Wish You Were Here, by Graham Swift, is set in 2006 and opens with Jack Luxton, a former Devon farmer and now owner of a seaside caravan park, receiving the news that his younger brother Tom, has been killed in Iraq. Jack hasn't seen or heard from his brother for many years and his reaction to the news opens up a gateway to the past that Jack had thought he'd left behind. Jack must go to the mainland to receive his brother's remains and arrange his funeral back in the village they were brought up in. This opens up painful memories of their youth, their dairy farm (which went through the terrible times of Mad Cow Disease and Foot and Mouth), their father and their dog - all the things Jack has fought hard to repress. Jack, with the help of his wife Ellie (who Jack has known from childhood as she grew up on the neighbouring farm), have turned their backs on all the grief of their former lives - but it all comes barrelling back with the news of Tom's death and threatens to overwhelm the life they have made on the Isle of Wight. This is a story that is hard to get a grip on to begin with as it flits between the past and present. But slowly and surely, the threads start to pull together and the tension really starts to build towards the climax and it becomes something of a page-turner! Grimness and a sense of doom pervades and there aren't many bright spots to alleviate things, which can be hard to take, but I'm glad I persisted. The characters are not always sympathetic, and it's hard to like them on occasion. However, life is messy and complicated and we don't always act in our own best interests either, so maybe I shouldn't be so hard on them. It is worth the effort to keep going with this book as the tension ramps up hugely towards the end and I really didn't know what was going to happen. If you don't mind trauma and perhaps feeling little drained by the time you put this book down, then this could be for you. 

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 368 print pages.

Price I paid: Free, borrowed from my husband.

Formats available: print, unabridged audio download, ebook.


No comments:

Post a Comment