A Certain Hunger is a debut novel by writer Chelsea G. Summers. It tells the story of serial killer Dorothy Daniels, a successful food writer who also eats men. Published in print by Unnamed Press on December 1, 2020, A Certain Hunger was widely praised, drawing comparisons to Raymond Chandler and Bret Easton Ellis.
Author | Chelsea G. Summers |
---|---|
Audio read by | Hillary Huber |
Language | English |
Publisher | Amazon Audible Originals, The Unnamed Press |
Publication date | December 1, 2020 |
Pages | 240 |
ISBN | 978-1-951213-14-5 |
Publication history
editSummers began writing the novel in 2011, spurred by heartbreak as well as a desire to move away from the first-person non-fiction she had previously been writing; it ultimately took her six years to finish the book.[1] A Certain Hunger was first published as an audiobook on the Amazon Audible Originals label in the fall of 2019.[2] On December 1, 2020, Unnamed Press published the first print edition.[3]
Plot
editThis article needs an improved plot summary. (December 2020) |
The book follows food writer Dorothy Daniels, who is also a convicted serial killer. Daniels narrates the story of her crimes from prison, moving back and forth in time between her life behind bars and the life that led to her imprisonment: specifically the food she ate, including eating men.
Themes
editIn The New York Times, Amy Silverberg noted the feminist argument conveyed by the murderous protagonist: "Why is it that women have been kept out of so many industries, including Patrick Bateman-style serial murders? Because, Dorothy thinks, people don't want to believe women can do the job. ‘Feminism comes to all things,’ she says, ‘but it comes to recognizing homicidal rage the slowest.’"[4] Writing in The New Republic, Josephine Livingston also emphasized this dimension of the novel, saying it complicates "‘ironic misandry’ schtick" and transforms it "into something complicated and engaging." Instead of a conventional "rape-revenge plot, [the] precision and passion Dorothy bring to murder have a stronger relation to her obsession with food: She has an intense sexual relationship with a kosher butcher, for example."[5]
Silverberg notes too that A Certain Hunger is "also a history of the internet, and how it has democratized writing and ‘steamrolled the playing field’ of criticism broadly."[4]
Style
editIn The New Republic, Livingston compares Summers’s epicurean sensibilities with Patrick Süskind's writing in his novel Perfume, likewise "the story of a lone-wolf killer gifted with an extraordinary sensory palate, which eggs him on to violent frenzy." Suskïnd's protagonist Grenouille detects smells with an intensity and attention to detail akin to the way Daniels "experiences flavor [...] and in both books the collective weight of sensory images slowly creates something like an ethic of murder, posing violence as a creative act with an inevitable relationship to other forms of art—murder as a tribute to beauty."[5]
In The New York Times, Silverberg noted the book's noir style, saying, "A Certain Hunger has the voice of a hard-boiled detective novel, as if metaphor-happy Raymond Chandler handed the reins over to the sexed-up femme fatale and really let her fly."[4]
At the same time, critics noted the novel's comedic tone: Vanity Fair called it a "satire of a particular brand of foodieism."[6] In the Los Angeles Times, Bethanne Patrick says Summers's “obviously ironic blitheness in fact calls back to Sondheim and Swift."[7]
Reception
editThe novel's publication drew broad praise from critics, with a "rave" response on literary review aggregator Book Marks, based on eight reviews.[8] A Certain Hunger received a starred review in Publishers Weekly, which described the novel as "fiendishly entertaining" and praised Summer's "shocking and darkly funny novel" as a "feminist-horror version of American Psycho."[9] Writing for Times, Silverberg said, "With Summers's writing, I kept rereading sentences only as a double take, whispering to myself, ‘Man, this lady is screwed up’— which is, I'd argue, its own kind of pleasure."[4] In The New Republic, Livingston called the book "a toothsome morsel" and "a swaggering, audacious debut, and a celebration of all the wet, hot pleasures of human contact."[5]
References
edit- ^ Summers, Chelsea G (2019-03-09). "How to Write a Novel (and Heal Your Ravaged Heart)". Medium. Retrieved 2020-12-02.
- ^ "A Conversation With Chelsea G. Summers, Author Of 'A Certain Hunger'". Audible.com. December 10, 2019. Retrieved December 2, 2020.
- ^ A CERTAIN HUNGER. Kirkus Reviews. 2020.
- ^ a b c d Silverberg, Amy (2020-12-01). "Why Can't Women Be Serial Killers, Too?". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-12-02.
- ^ a b c Livingstone, Josephine (2020-11-18). "When the Protagonist Is a Literal Man-Eater". The New Republic. ISSN 0028-6583. Retrieved 2020-12-02.
- ^ Shaw-Ellis, Daisy; Weir, Keziah (December 2, 2020). "The Books and Totes That Will Get You Through This Winter". Vanity Fair. Retrieved 2020-12-02.
- ^ Patrick, Bathanne (16 December 2020). "Review: Salt, fat, acid, humans: A tangy new entry in the cannibal lit canon". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 10 January 2021.
- ^ "A Certain Hunger". Book Marks. Archived from the original on 2020-11-29. Retrieved 2021-01-10.
- ^ "A Certain Hunger". Publishers Weekly. September 21, 2020. Retrieved 2020-12-02.