Ballard’s archive also includes plans of and documents about the Lunghua Camp, which were sent to Ballard in the 1990s. Jim’s account of life in the Lunghua Camp is particularly evocative with its description of both the suffering and resilience that he witnessed, as well his own fascination with the Japanese invaders. Ballard also used Amherst Avenue where he lived with his family as the location for Jim’s family home. Just like Jim, Ballard spent his childhood exploring the city on his bicycle and, during the occupation, he and his family spent more than two years in the Lunghua Camp. The narrative follows the boy as he struggles to survive without his parents in Shanghai and, later, in the Lunghua Camp, where prisoners of war were interned until the end of the war. The book explores the horrors of war and occupation, and is told from Jim’s viewpoint. Jim’s life, and that of the rest of the international expatriate community which he is part of, is changed forever by the arrival of the Japanese army in 1943. The novel tells the story of Jim, a young boy living in Shanghai in the 1930s and ‘40s. Ballard’s most acclaimed novel and was, according to the author, the emotional centre of his work.
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