The I Index

Ghost Flames: Life and Death in a Hidden War, Korea 1950-1953

Next in the queue

54

/100

I Index Overall Rating

Readers

70/100

Critics

37/100

Scholars

N/A

Author:

Charles J. Hanley

Publisher:

PublicAffairs

Date:

August 25, 2020

A Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist remembers the "forgotten war" on the Korean Peninsula through the eyes of 21 individuals who experienced it—soldiers and civilians, refugees, men and women, young and old, witnesses both to atrocity and to heroism.

What The Reviewers Say

Michael Rodriguez,
Library Journal
Hanley is back with [a]...compelling and groundbreaking narrative history of the Korean War.
Arthur Herman,
The Wall Street Journal
As Mr. Hanley’s narrative gathers force, he seeks to share out the blame equally between the two sides—or, as he terms them, 'the communist and capitalist powers'—for the war’s staggering record of suffering. Whether he makes his case persuasively is doubtful, but he does manage to show that all wars are hell, not least the forgotten ones.
Robert S. Davis,
The New York Journal of Books
The book is a fast and engrossing haunting read that thoroughly educates while pulling on the heart strings. It blends military campaigns with real politic, while never losing sight of the people in the context of the immorality and savagery of war..
Francis P Sempa,
The Asian Review of Books
It is by its nature incomplete and anecdotal. While it reveals a part of the war that is often left out of conventional histories, by being selective it can distort history.