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A haunting coming-of-age tale following the daughter of Vietnamese immigrants, Ronny Nyugen, as she grapples with the weight of generational trauma while navigating the violent power of teenage girlhood, for fans of Jennifer's Body and Little Fires Everywhere.
It's the summer before high school, and Ronny Nguyen finds herself too young for work, too old for cartoons. Her days are spent in a small backyard, dozing off to trashy magazines on a plastic lawn chair. In stark contrast stands her brother Tommy, the pride and joy of their immigrant parents: a popular honor student destined to be the first in the family to attend college. The thought of Tommy leaving for college fills Ronny with dread, as she contemplates the quiet house she will be left alone in with her parents, Me and Ba.
Their parents rarely speak of their past in Vietnam, except through the lens of food. The family's meals are a tapestry of cultural memory: thick spring rolls with slim and salty nem nuong, and steaming bowls of pho tai with thin, delicate slices of blood-red beef. In the aftermath of the war, Me and Ba taught Ronny and Tommy that meat was a dangerous luxury, a symbol of survival that should never be taken for granted.
But when tragedy strikes, Ronny's world is upended. Her sense of self and her understanding of her family are shattered. A few nights later, at her first high school party, a boy crosses the line, and Ronny is overtaken by a force larger than herself. This newfound power comes with an insatiable hunger for raw meat, a craving that is both a saving grace and a potential destroyer.
What Hunger is a visceral, emotional journey through the bursts and pitfalls of female rage. Ronny's Vietnamese lineage and her mother's emotional memory play a crucial role in this tender ode to generational trauma and mother-daughter bonding.
CHAPTER 1
Tommy had called it "The Big Summer." He never said things like that—things that were corny, optimistic, easy to disprove. They seemed juvenile. In my eyes, he was older than his years. His mind worked so quickly that it aged faster than the rest of him.
But Tommy could sense something coming.
"It's almost like you're on a roller coaster, climbing up toward something big at the top, you know?" he murmured one night. I turned to look at him on the other side of the room. He faced me from his bed. Moonlight slipped in through the window, cutting through the aisle that separated my side of the room from his.
"I kind of get it," I said, yawning. "I just think you're nervous about tomorrow."
Tommy didn't reply.
The next day, he graduated from high school. Ba, M?, and I were stuck sitting on the bleachers in the high school gymnasium. We were trapped somewhere in the middle, crammed on the far edge of a row.
It was sweltering hot. The gym reeked of sweat, tobacco, heavy cologne, ...
When a sudden tragedy rips their family apart, Ronny passes her summer in a numb haze and starts her freshman year with a heavy heart. In an attempt to feel like a normal teenager, she sneaks out one night to attend a party hosted by the most popular boy in school. What starts out as a typical high school rager turns nightmarish when Ronny is sexually assaulted. In retaliation, she bites the boy's earlobe off—and finds, to her surprise, that she doesn't mind the taste. This encounter awakens something in Ronny, who starts to sneak pieces of raw meat when her parents aren't looking, to satiate her desire. With echoes of Jennifer's Body (the cult classic film about a teenage girl who becomes a man-eating demon), What Hunger fuses a traditional coming-of-age narrative with a poignant exploration of intergenerational trauma. Catherine Dang navigates themes of cultural identity, the lasting effects of war, and adolescent feminine rage in a novel that is at times heartbreaking, at times funny, and wholly unforgettable...continued
Full Review
(658 words)
(Reviewed by Rachel Hullett).
E.K. Sathue, author of youthjuice
A hypnotic blend between a touching coming of age story and visceral exploration of adolescent rage, What Hunger made me laugh, flinch, and cry. I couldn't put it down.
In 1975, the US military withdrew from Vietnam after having signed the Paris Peace Accords two years prior. This marked the end of the Vietnam War, and it left millions of Vietnamese citizens vulnerable—those who had had close ties to the US military were now under threat of being persecuted by the new communist regime. An estimated 125,000 were evacuated that year to resettle in the States, and waves of immigration followed over the next several decades. As of 2022 there was a Vietnamese immigrant population of 1.3 million in the US.
The Vietnam War left lasting scars on those who were displaced. Though in many cases their immigration was aided by the US government, they were often met with racism and xenophobia by Americans ...

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