Ratings51
Average rating3.9
what a wild ride this was. reminds me heavily of Stoner by John Williams, but Hunger didn't pull me in as much.
Definitely worth a read if you are into books that don't have a solid conclusion or are about the mundanity of life.
I've read many stories about hunger and poverty in general but none of those was so profoundly beautiful like this. They were bare, rough, so much real. But this is something unique.
Thoroughly enjoyed.
hahahah it was great he was crazy and he knew he was crazy but he was still crazy and he ate wood and he almost got laid even tho he was totally decrepit.
This was a torment to read. Such was the pride and the hunger of the main character. As a bohemian writer it is difficult to survive and eat in a place that wants to eat you. Back then it was Oslo. These days other cities.
What drives human beings to commit the acts they do? What is the basis for the striking and irrational outbursts of the downtrodden?
“Hunger” explores the randomness of human behavior and speculates what effect despair can have on this behavior.
Our hero is a downtrodden writer who is intelligent but irrational. He is often homeless and starving. This unnamed (except when he gives fake names to the police) protagonist is unwilling or unable to use the scraps of money he earns to better his station in life.
The novel is spent inside the protagonist's mind, bouncing from lucid moment to raving moment. The reader is shown the rational and irrational reactions this man has to his environment and his situation.
I'm not sure if the thoughts and actions of this man of “Hunger” are relevant or accurate in regards to the homeless of today, but they did cause me to reflect on the results that despair and homelessness may affect. The writing is intense and I couldn't help become captivated by what thoughts and actions the protagonist would cook up. I wanted him to succeed, but the tone of the novel made it clear from page one that mere survival was the best to hope for.