Blue Hunger
An exploration of love, loss, and identity in Shanghai
Viola Di Grado author Jamie Richards translator
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Scribe Publications
Published:9th Mar '23
Should be back in stock very soon
The novel explores themes of love, loss, and identity through the intense relationship between two women in Shanghai, encapsulated in Blue Hunger.
In Blue Hunger, an electrifying narrative unfolds, exploring the depths of loneliness and grief that transform into an all-consuming love. The story revolves around two women in Shanghai, who, while grappling with their turbulent pasts, find solace in each other amidst the chaos of their lives. Their world is filled with the pulsating nightlife of the city, yet it is marred by the decay of rotting food in their skyscraper apartment, symbolizing their inner turmoil.
As the plot progresses, Xu leads Ruben into a whirlwind of pleasure and pain, pushing her beyond her limits. The experiences they share in abandoned factories and dilapidated slaughterhouses challenge their understanding of identity and desire. The novel delves into the intoxicating blend of obsession and vulnerability, where language fades, and raw emotion takes precedence. Through vivid imagery and imaginative language, Blue Hunger captures the essence of what it means to truly love and lose.
Ultimately, this fever-dream of a novel confronts the taboos surrounding loss and desire, inviting readers to reflect on how identities are shaped and reshaped. It is a visionary work that resonates deeply, leaving an indelible mark on those who dare to explore its pages. Blue Hunger is not just a story; it is an experience that challenges the boundaries of love and longing.
‘I thoroughly recommend Blue Hunger by Italian novelist Viola Di Grado, translated by Jamie Richards. Di Grado’s prose is clean, efficient, and devastating as she explores queer love, displacement, and grief against the backdrop of Shanghai.’
-- Martin Doyle * The Irish Times *‘To read Blue Hunger is to enter a dreamlike state, guided by irresistible, evocative writing, immaculate details, and vivid emotions dripping with desire. Viola Di Grado offers us a brilliant, highly immersive story about the need to consume and be consumed, love, messiness, and the power of language. Blue Hunger is a wholly compelling piece of art, and Viola Di Grado is a genius.’
-- Jami Attenberg, author of The Middlesteins‘Viola Di Grado is, most importantly, a powerful and original writer; the fact that she also writes, movingly and with complexity, about members of the LGBT population, renders her work all the more singular.’
-- Michael Cunningham, author of The Hours‘Blue Hunger is a devastating study of the ways in which grief renders everything, even the self, foreign. A gorgeous grotesquerie of lust and despair backdropped by the writhing rhythms of Shanghai.’
-- Rachel Yoder, author of Nightbitch‘Di Grado is a real writer, so everything under the spell of her words is vibrant and evocative. Blue Hunger, a prose poem and a fearless descent into language and the realm of meanings, is about our experience in the acidic lights of the contemporary world.’
-- FIlippo La Porta * La Repubblica *‘Sticky, neon, and electric, Blue Hunger drips with desire, danger, and hunger in myriad forms.’
-- Jessica Andrews, author of Saltwater‘Blue Hunger’s is a disorientating world made strange by grief — a world where words have lost their meaning, and identity fragments. In luminous and startling prose, Viola Di Grado lays bare the risk inherent in human relationships, the capacity we have to inflict and enjoy pain as well as pleasure, and the disassembling power of grief. Bold and addictive, this is a carnal, sensual, drug-and-sex-infused trip of a novel.
-- Imogen Crimp, author of A Very Nice Girl‘Blue Hunger is a most vibrant novel about lust: beautifully written and full of sensuous images, Viola Di Grado’s book is a powerful literary journey into food and sex and the city. In depicting the constant foreignness of falling in love, Di Grado reveals herself as a true master of style.’
-- Claudia Durastanti, author of Strangers I Know and Cleopatra Goes to Prison’Haunting … An erotic and disturbing depiction of the effects of grief.’
* Kirkus Reviews *’Readers will be fascinated by the novel’s scenery, psychological acuity … Queerness, grief, isolation, dependence, and love merge in this novel of geographically-based healing and descent.’
* Booklist *‘Blue Hunger is a breezy yet dizzying fever-dream of a read. The narrator’s voice is deceptively quiet. The book feels like it has a flame lighting it from underneath. It moves with a steady, compact agility, like a ship gesturing towards a mid-sea battle … The final scene is a spectacular feat, managing to be both unexpected, and exquisitely tender.’
-- Jessie Tu * The Sydney Morning Herald *‘The language of Blue Hunger has a tour de force energy … Di Grado’s prose is exhilaratingly dynamic, made up of fragmented paragraphs that look and sound like prose poetry and that use poetic language in surprising and edgy ways. The translator, Jamie Richards, has done an excellent job in keeping up … Although Blue Hunger reads as an exercise in style, there is also substance here, particularly when it comes to the self-destructiveness so often bound up with what we call love.’
-- Maria Takolander * The Saturday Paper *‘A sensuous and biting account … It’s worth indulging in this visceral story.’
* Publishers Weekly *‘Italian author Viola Di Grado simulates the fever dreamlike state of an all-consuming love.’
* RUSSH *‘It’s lush, dreamlike, and once started, you won’t be able to stop thinking about it.’
-- Terri Schlichenmeyer * Los Angeles Blade *‘[T]his short but electrifying book captures the life of a young Italian woman in Shanghai as she finds herself captivated by a beautiful, enigmatic woman named Xu … Blue Hunger goes on to explore identity in a writhing blend of lust and pain … Her strength as a writer lies in the layers of metaphors that weave into a narrative fabric thick with intertwined meaning … [A] dizzying, intricate study of grief, displacement, obsession and desire under the glittering veneer of Shanghai.’
-- Fruzsina Gál * Aniko Press *‘Translated by Jamie Richards, the writing is simply gorgeous, luring the reader in even as the plot takes some decidedly visceral turns … It’s a fever-dream of a novel, a breathless, erotic, and often uncomfortable examination of what grief, loneliness, and a desperate search for answers can do … its combination of rich, evocative writing, and oft unsettling content makes it near impossible to look away from the page.’
-- Jodie Sloan * The AU Review *Praise for Hollow Heart:
‘A danse macabre for the millenials … In Hollow Heart, Di Grado elegantly and playfully thematises the emptiness of unquestioned vessels of meaning (which is to say, words) with the story of a girl who has taken her own life before she has even really lived it.’
* LA Review of Books *Praise for Hollow Heart:
‘The writing is pristine. Each sentence lures us further into the flies and blood-filled spirals of Di Grado’s dreamworld and, most importantly, we are willing to follow her.’
* The Independent *Praise for 70% Acrylic 30% Wool:
‘Viola Di Grado’s charming prose romps through chthonic worlds of nibbling insects, ammoniac seepage, and shattering depression, using language that is both glib and scrumptious.’
* Music & Literature *Praise for 70% Acrylic 30% Wool:
‘[Di Grado’s] black comedy, pungent metaphors, and controlled ambiguity announce the arrival of a considerable talent.’
* Times Literary Suppleme- Short-listed for The Polari Book Prize 2024 (UK)
- Long-listed for Nota Bene Prize 2024 (UK)
ISBN: 9781914484278
Dimensions: 210mm x 135mm x 16mm
Weight: unknown
224 pages