Famine and starvation are terrible experiences that make a man do
terrible things that he never imagined to do in all his life. John Kelly draws
that very picture in his book The Graves Are Walking with magnificence.
John Kelly’s research shows that the death toll was staggering during the
potato famine of 1845 where more than one million Irish people died due to
starvation and disease and those who tried to run faced death on their journey
to a so-called New World. The scholar Terry Eagleton calls
it an event “with something of the characteristics of a low-level
nuclear attack” which was clearly the worst disaster of the 19th
century. The author conveys all the feelings
of the horror of that world to the readers in a very dramatic and convincing
way.