Author is gay and about hunger book

Simple, repetitive prose

In Hunger: A Memoir of (My) Body, Roxane Gay explores the interconnectedness between her rape, trying to feel sound in her own body, and gaining weight. Queer writes: “This is a book about my body, about my hunger, and ultimately, this is a book about disappearing and being lost and wanting so very much, wanting to be seen and understood. This is a book about learning, however slowly, to allow myself to be seen and understood.”

Gay holds nothing assist. As she says: “I’ve been forced to watch at my guiltiest secrets. I’ve cut myself expansive open. I am exposed. That is not relaxed. That is not easy.” She isn’t hyperbolizing here—this memoir digs deep into her self and her body. As a reader, I was initially uncomfortable being drawn into such a personal story, but Gay handles this love well. She lays it bare without giving gratuitous details—she says it’s still hard to talk about. I can see why. It’s hard to decipher about the terrible thing that was done to her and how she’s still healing from it, but it’s important to read in order to understand Gay’s narrative throughout her memoir and the effect that these things have on women on a societal level.

Simp author is gay and about hunger book

Roxane Gay, Author of HUNGER

Early in my writing career, I had this concept for a novel, nonfiction. The title? LIVING IN THE BODY.

I shared the idea with a friend…it’s been years, I don’t recall details. But the friend replied with a frown and a question…What did I mean? What would I be trying to say?

If I needed to think the thought through, I did learn more studying Anatomy and Physiology. But the term was still there…something I needed to explore. Why? Maybe because I’m human; maybe because it became more clear when I was in nursing academy. I had always honored my body, the miracle of the five senses, the amazing process of eating to maintain life, all the organs that provide LIVE ITSELF: beating hearts; brains that guide our choices; senses that help us navigate the world. Where would we be without smell, sight, hearing, taste, touch? Our bodies, no matter their shape and form, carry us through life. If they become or are defective, we learn to cope. With the facilitate of modern medicine, people with harm to their somatic senses can still navigate the world. But what will your future be, if at a new age, say twelve, someone, or maybe more than

Hunger: A Memoir of (My) Body by Roxane Gay

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Content warnings for rape and body issues, both of which are presented in a straightforward but not euphemistic manner from the point of view of the person going through them.

This was a difficult book to obtain through because it is not comfortable (see content warnings above) but if you are ready to be uncomfortable, this is a book that can crack you open emotionally. How the reader fills in the cracks is up to them; part of the goal of this text is to force us literarily through that same process that Gay went through herself. This was a deeply visceral experience, both in the smooth, straightforward writing, and the reading of the text by the author in the audiobook edition.

I’ve enjoyed Roxane Gay’s other work, and I follow her on Twitter, so I had some notion of what I was in for. This volume is much less tongue-in-cheek and much more personal than Bad Feminist was. It is a great example of deeply affective writing that is deceptive in its perceived simplicity. It’s NOT easy in any way, shape, or form. This caring of writing comes from deep familiarity with both the form and function of

Hello, fellow bookworms! Today I’m unveiling Book #7 in the Finding Delight Novel Club. If you’re modern to this series, I’m reading books and sharing about them with you here. I plan to post 4 times for each book. The current pick is Hunger: A Memoir of (My) Body by Roxane Gay.

“This body is resilient. It can endure all kinds of things. My body proposals me the power of presence. My body is powerful.”

Synopsis

In this intimate and searing memoir, the Fresh York Times bestselling storyteller Roxane Gay addresses the experience of living in a body that she calls ‘wildly undisciplined’. She casts an insightful and critical eye on her childhood, teens and twenties – including the devastating act of violence that was a turning indicate in her young experience – and brings readers into the present and the realities, pains and joys of her daily life.

With the bracing candour, vulnerability and authority that have made her one of the most admired voices of her generation, Roxane explores what it means to be overweight in a time when the bigger you are, the less you are seen.

“Living in my body has expanded my empathy for other people and the truths of their bodies. Certa

Buy the book

IndieBound, Powell’s City of Books, iBooks, Kobo, Barnes & Noble, Amazon

Praise

It turns out that when a wrenching past is confronted with wisdom and bravery, the outcome can be empathy and enlightenment—both for the reader who has lived through this kind of unimaginable pain and for the reader who knows nothing of it. Roxane Gay shows us how to be decent to ourselves, and decent to one another. Starvation is an astounding achievement in more ways than I can count.

Ann Patchett, Commonwealth and Bel Canto

At its simplest, it’s a memoir about being heavy — Gay’s preferred term — in a hostile, fat-phobic world. At its most symphonic, it’s an intellectually rigorous and deeply moving exploration of the ways in which trauma, stories, want, language and metaphor shape our experiences and construct our reality.

New York Times

Wrenching, deeply moving. . . a memoir that’s so heroic , so raw, it feels as if [Gay]’s entrusting you with her soul

Seattle Times

Gay turns to memoir in this powerful reflection on her childhood traumas…Timely and resonant, you can be sure that Hunger will touch a nerve, as so much of Roxane Gay’s writing does.

Newsday

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