Hungry Ghosts: A BBC 2 Between the Covers Book Club Pick

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Hungry Ghosts: A BBC 2 Between the Covers Book Club Pick

Hungry Ghosts: A BBC 2 Between the Covers Book Club Pick

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The more I thought about this book, the more it grew on me. I would have given it five stars had it not been so crushingly violent in places, so let's call it 4.5. The sequel to It Ends With Us (2016) shows the aftermath of domestic violence through the eyes of a single mother.

HUNGRY GHOSTS | Kirkus Reviews HUNGRY GHOSTS | Kirkus Reviews

In both the family and the country, old sins and hatreds are neither forgotten nor forgiven and, instead, spin into a cycle of recrimination and violence. While members of the family and citizens of the country might try to flee relatives or emigrate from Sri Lanka, they bring their sorrows with them. I was very moved by Funny Boy, however due to some issues I couldn’t recommend it. Here’s my review. However, Shyam Selvadurai’s writing is so beautiful and I wanted to read another book of his, as I hoped that I would be able to recommend it. This is why I chose to read The Hungry Ghosts. It fit into the Asian Lit Bingo challenge as well. Hungry Ghosts opens with four boys doing a blood pact that will make them brothers for the rest of their lives. Do they know what this pact means? How will it impact their individual lives? That is exactly what we find out in this book.

The question then, is how to break the cycle. The Buddhist parables, with their talk of karma and fate and insistence on bribing monks, are dangerous and silly. They may add a Sri Lankan flavor to the book that pleases Selvadurai's Western readers with its exoticism and his Sri Lankan readers with its familiarity. Giving offerings to a temple or paying off a con-man isn't going to bring either national or familial reconciliation. This is an account of dark, bleak, violent humanity, riven by injustice of class, race, religion, gender, with graphic accounts of killings, beatings and maimings of humans and animals. There is little, if any, hope to be found here.

In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts: Close Encounters with Addiction

This is the kind of book that, upon entering the final chapter, the reader takes a deep breath, holds it, and only lets it out when the last word is read. There is so much to anticipate in the last moments of the story, that it is almost unbearable to breathe.

Beyond the Book

The plot pivots on Dalton Changoor’s disappearance, which prompts Marlee to pay Hans extra to keep watch overnight – money Hans wants to buy his family a plot of land for a house in Bell. Shweta realises, too late, she never “exactly agreed” to Hans taking the post. There isn’t a dud moment or misplaced word. Hosein – a biology teacher who writes poems and stories by night – has a poet’s gift for similes (“the dawnlight appeared as a single painted fingernail hoisting itself over the mountain range, glowing hot and focused as a soldering iron”). But his writing is at its electric best when the weather is as stormy as his characters’ emotions. Shyam Selvadurai writes in such a way that you are transported into a fictional place but still feel like the events are not fictional at all. The story is gripping. It was an emotional journey and my feelings were all over the place. It’s a very realistic book that will give you different perspectives into the conflicts that shaped Sri Lanka into the country it is today and how historical events impacted the lives of various people. At first, this seems like a fairly common retelling of the immigrant experience; however, Selvadurai then flips the immigrant experience around and uses it to explore the coming-out experience in Shivan's homeland. How the two experiences mirror and contrast each other makes for a fascinating and engrossing comparison.

Hungry Ghosts by Kevin Jared Hosein review – lyrical

Tirokudda Kanda: Hungry Shades Outside the Walls (Pv 1.5), translated from the Pali by Thanissaro Bhikkhu. Access to Insight, 8 August 2010.Retrieved on 24 October 2011 . this book is well written technically and the premise initially intriguing. but then the sense of fatalistic doom crept in and stayed till the very end.

Reader Reviews

This book was quite an emotional ride for me, as were the other two books I have read by this author. It is dense, thought-provoking, and cathartic literature without much effort needed from the reader to be so. Definitely one of the best books I have read in 2013. Themes of class, inequality, friendship, death, family relationships are dealt with in ways that open up discussion and debate. This novel has so much depth. The characters were all so alive, they were breathing, living people. I felt like they weren’t fictional at all, and I was very invested in Shivan’s (MC) life and also in his mother’s and sister’s lives. Shivan and his grandmother have a very intricate and elaborate relationship, which is influenced by cultural and family values, as well as the fact that Shivan is multiracial (Sinhalese-Tamil) and gay. Selvadurai was born in Colombo, Sri Lanka to a Sinhalese mother and a Tamil father--members of conflicting ethnic groups whose troubles form a major theme in his work. Ethnic riots in 1983 drove the family to emigrate to Canada when Selvadurai was nineteen. He studied creative and professional writing as part of a Bachelor of Fine Arts program at York University.



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