The Hunger (Katsu novel)

Last updated
The Hunger
The Hunger by Alma Katsu.jpg
Author Alma Katsu
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreHistorical fiction; horror
Publisher Putnam
Publication date
6 Mar 2018
Pages384
ISBN 978-0-7352-1251-0

The Hunger is a 2018 historical horror novel by Alma Katsu. It is a reimagining of the events of the Donner Party which includes supernatural elements. It received critical praise and was nominated for the 2018 Bram Stoker Award for Best Novel as well as the 2019 Locus Award for Best Horror Novel.

Contents

Plot

In a prologue set in April 1847, a scouting party is sent to find the last survivors of the Donner Party, including Lewis Keseberg. They find a cabin surrounded by human bones.

In early 1846, the Donner Party begins their journey near Springfield, Illinois. The story gradually reveals that many members of the wagon train are fleeing events from their past. George Donner's wife Tamsen has had multiple affairs. His daughter Elitha hears the voices of spirits. Medically trained Edwin Bryant hopes to interview Native Americans regarding a supernatural disease. James Reed was having an affair with another man; he fled when his affair partner demanded hush money. Charles Stanton is haunted by the death of his fiancée Lydia, who committed suicide.

From the beginning, horror seems to follow the party; a young boy disappears and his mutilated corpse is found several miles down the road. Bryant leaves the group, pursuing rumors about a demon haunting Truckee Lake. Tamsen Donner and Stanton begin an affair, but he later leaves Tamsen in favor of the younger Mary Graves. The party decides to follow a new trail, which turns out to be more difficult than expected. They find several human corpses along the way and suspect that they are being followed by wolves or bears. Caravan member Luke Halloran claims that he is starving and attacks Tamsen; she stabs him to death. Tamsen and her daughters see frightening creatures in the dark; however, the men do not believe them.

James Reed has an affair with a teamster named Snyder. When Reed ends the affair, Snyder threatens to tell Reed's wife. Reed stabs Snyder to death. Keseberg wants to hang Reed, but he is ultimately banished from the caravan.

By November, the party has become snowbound in the Sierra Nevada. Most of them camp by Truckee Lake. The Donners lag behind and camp by Alder Creek. At Truckee Lake, a disease outbreak causes several pioneers go insane, killing and eating their companions. Keseberg begins to sexually assault the children at Truckee Lake, including Elitha Donner. When Elitha's lover Thomas intervenes, Keseberg arranges to have him killed.

Stanton decides to flee. He and several others, including Mary Graves, make snowshoes and attempt to reach safety in California as members of the “Forlorn Hope”. Stanton is attacked by a half-man, half-beast; he is seriously injured and infected with the madness. Mary Graves and the others are forced to abandon him in the snow. He commits suicide rather than waiting to be eaten.

Bryant explores an abandoned prospecting camp which contains several mutilated skeletons. He learns that the Keseberg family was involved. In a flashback, it is revealed that the men of the Keseberg family are “cursed” with a disease that causes them to become violent and hunger for human flesh.

George Donner dies at Alder Creek. Tamsen and her children trek to Truckee Lake. Keseberg admits that he has encouraged the survivors there to cannibalize the corpses of those who have starved. He is holding the monsters at bay by feeding them pieces of the corpses as well. He admits that he is a carrier of the disease; he will not transform into a monster, but he can pass the disease to others. Tamsen knows that there is not enough meat for the others to survive until the snow melts. She offers to let Keseberg kill her and feed her to the survivors in order to save her daughters.

By March 1847, James Reed has gathered the first rescue party. He saves his daughter and several other survivors. The book ends with more rescue parties on the way.

Reception

Publishers Weekly gave the novel a starred review, calling it "a brilliant retelling" and adding that "fans of Dan Simmons’s The Terror will find familiar and welcome chills." [1] Alison Flood of The Guardian called The Hunger "an absorbing, menacing thriller" as well as "a nerve-jangling, persuasive story of survival and desperation". [2]

Steph Cha of USA Today gave the novel 3.5 out of 4 stars, particularly praising Katsu's "sharp, haunting language" and "acute understanding of human nature". The review noted that the supernatural elements "almost relieve the tension and horror of the story" with "some of the darkness pushed onto external threats, or disproportionately contained in one sociopathic villain." [3]

Kirkus called the novel "two-thirds of a terrific book". Their review stated that "Katsu creates a riveting drama of power struggles and shifting alliances", while the characters' intertwined narratives "create a sense of claustrophobia, a feeling that the coming tragedy isn’t just an accident of bad weather and poor leadership, but a matter of fate." Nevertheless, the review stated that the "final act of the novel ... fails to deliver" and that "the cannibalism—the thing that makes the Donner Party the Donner Party in history and popular consciousness—becomes boring". [4]

Writing for Locus , John Langan called the novel a great example of historical fiction which "impart[s] a vivid immediacy to past events, making them live in the reader’s mind, allowing her to draw near to them." Langan also praises Katsu for avoiding the trope of "the supernatural threat to the European settlers functioning as a stand-in for the native peoples". Instead, Katsu links the disease to earlier incursions by settlers, and "the ravenously hungry monsters emerge as a trope for the appetites that drove many of the settlers to leave their homes and join the wagon train". [5] Also writing for Locus, Stefan Dziemianowicz praised the way in which Katsu fleshes out the historical narrative, "providing its players with backstories and motivations". This review praised Katsu's decision to frame the hunger in terms of disease rather than a strictly supernatural interpretation, allowing for multiple questions that Katsu leaves "tantalizingly unanswered". [6]

The novel was a finalist for the 2018 Bram Stoker Award for Best Novel [7] and the 2019 Locus Award for Best Horror Novel. [8]

Related Research Articles

Robert Rick McCammon is an American novelist from Birmingham, Alabama. One of the influential names in the late 1970s–early 1990s American horror literature boom, by 1991 McCammon had three New York Times bestsellers and around 5 million books in print. Since 2002 he's written several books in a historical mystery series featuring a 17th-century magistrate’s clerk, Matthew Corbett, as he unravels mysteries in colonial America.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Donner Party</span> 19th-century group of American emigrants who became trapped in the Sierra Nevada mountains

The Donner Party, sometimes called the Donner–Reed Party, were a group of American pioneers who migrated to California in a wagon train from the Midwest. Delayed by a multitude of mishaps, they spent the winter of 1846–1847 snowbound in the Sierra Nevada mountain range. Some of the migrants resorted to cannibalism to survive, primarily eating the bodies of those who had succumbed to starvation, sickness or extreme cold, but in one case two Native American guides were deliberately killed for this purpose.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Stephen Graham Jones</span> Native American fiction author

Stephen Graham Jones is a Blackfeet Native American author of experimental fiction, horror fiction, crime fiction, and science fiction. His works include the horror novels The Only Good Indians, My Heart is a Chainsaw, and Night of the Mannequins.

Donner Party timeline provides an almost day-to-day basic description of events directly associated with the 1846 Donner Party pioneers, covering the journey from Illinois to California—2,500 miles, over the Great Plains, two mountain ranges, and the deserts of the Great Basin.

<i>Swan Song</i> (McCammon novel) 1987 novel by Robert R. McCammon

Swan Song is a 1987 horror novel by American novelist Robert R. McCammon. Published June 1, 1987, it is a work of post-apocalyptic fiction describing the aftermath of a nuclear war that provokes an evolution in humankind. Swan Song won the 1987 Bram Stoker award, tying with Stephen King's Misery.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lucy Taylor</span> American horror novel writer (born 1950)

Lucy Taylor is an American horror novel writer. Her novel, The Safety of Unknown Cities was awarded the Bram Stoker Award for Best First Novel and the International Horror Guild Award for Best First Novel in 1995, and the Deathrealm Award for Best Novel in 1996. Her collection The Flesh Artist was nominated for the Bram Stoker Award in 1994.

Hunger is a prolonged condition in which insufficient amounts of food are available.

Thomas Piccirilli was an American novelist, short story writer, editor, and poet, known for his writing in the crime, mystery, and horror genres.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Paul G. Tremblay</span> American author and editor

Paul Gaetan Tremblay is an American author and editor of horror, dark fantasy, and science fiction. His most widely known novels include A Head Full of Ghosts, The Cabin at the End of the World, and Survivor Song. He has won multiple Bram Stoker Awards and is a juror for the Shirley Jackson Awards.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">David J. Skal</span> American cultural critic (1952–2024)

David John Skal was an American cultural historian, critic, writer, and on-camera commentator known for his research and analysis of horror films, horror history and horror culture.

<i>The Donner Party</i> (2009 film) 2009 film

The Donner Party is a 2009 American period Western drama film written and directed by Terrence Martin, and starring Crispin Glover, Clayne Crawford, Michele Santopietro, Mark Boone Junior, and Christian Kane. It is based on the true story of the Donner Party, an 1840s westward traveling group of settlers headed for California. Becoming snowbound in the Sierra Nevada mountains, with food increasingly scarce, a small group calling themselves "The Forlorn Hope" turned to cannibalism. The Forlorn was the working title for the film.

Adam Nevill is an English writer of supernatural horror, known for his book The Ritual. Prior to becoming a full-time author, Nevill worked as an editor.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alma Katsu</span> American writer

Alma Katsu is an American writer of adult fiction. Her books have been translated into over a dozen languages, and have been published in the United Kingdom, Brazil, Spain, and Italy.

The Bram Stoker Award for Best Young Adult Novel is an award presented by the Horror Writers Association (HWA) for "superior achievement" in horror writing for young adult novels.

<i>The Changeling</i> (LaValle novel) 2017 fantasy/horror novel by Victor LaValle

The Changeling is a 2017 fantasy horror novel by Victor LaValle. The novel received critical acclaim, winnings awards including the 2017 Dragon Award for Best Horror Novel, 2018 August Derleth Award, 2018 Locus Award for Best Horror Novel, and 2018 World Fantasy Award for Best Novel. The novel was adapted into a television show of the same name which premiered in 2023.

<i>Paperbacks from Hell</i>

Paperbacks from Hell: The Twisted History of ‘70s and ‘80s Horror Fiction is a 2017 non-fiction book by American writer Grady Hendrix. It was first published by Quirk Books on September 19, 2017 in print and ebook. An audiobook release by Blackstone Audio followed on January 9, 2018.

S. P. Miskowski is an American horror writer and playwright.

Dale Frederick Bailey is an American author of speculative fiction, including science fiction, fantasy and horror, active in the field since 1993. He writes as Dale Bailey.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lewis Keseberg</span> Survivor of the Donner Party (1814–1895)

Johann Ludwig Christian Keseberg, also referred to as Lewis Keseberg, was a member of the Donner Party of 1846–1847. He was the last survivor to be rescued from the Donner campsite. His reputation and his involvement in cannibalism allowed him to be remembered as "the most infamous and vilified member of the Donner Party."

Tamsen Eustis Dozier Donner was an American pioneer, most notable for her key role as a member of the infamous Donner Party. Donner was described as having been "a little woman" and "a good shot with a pistol". As the party encountered worsening conditions, she repeatedly refused to leave her dying husband, George Donner. She subsequently became the last victim to perish in the ordeal and possibly the last to be cannibalized.

References

  1. "The Hunger". Publishers Weekly. 1 Jan 2018. Retrieved 8 Jan 2024.
  2. Alison Flood (24 Apr 2018). "Thrillers review: The Hunger; All the Beautiful Lies; Paper Ghosts". The Guardian. Retrieved 8 Jan 2024.
  3. Steph Cha (6 Mar 2018). "'The Hunger' relives horrors of Donner Party cannibalism, with supernatural twist". USA Today. Retrieved 8 Jan 2024.
  4. "The Hunger". Kirkus. 6 Dec 2017. Retrieved 8 Jan 2024.
  5. John Langan (29 May 2018). "John Langan Reviews The Hunger by Alma Katsu". Locus. Retrieved 8 Jan 2024.
  6. Stefan Dziemianowicz (18 Jul 2018). "Stefan Dziemianowicz reviews The Hunger by Alma Katsu". Locus. Retrieved 8 Jan 2024.
  7. "2018 Stoker Awards Winners". Locus. 13 May 2019. Retrieved 9 Jan 2024.
  8. "2019 Locus Awards Finalists". Locus. 7 May 2019. Retrieved 9 Jan 2024.