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HUNGER is a psychological horror novel about addiction, emptiness, and the thing that answers when you have nothing left to feed it.
Evan Marrow used to have a life that made sense: music, love, and momentum kept him moving. Now his days shrink to cold coffee, flickering lights, and an apartment that feels smaller every time he blinks. He leans on an online recovery group to keep from disappearing, typing his way through grief one post at a time.
Then the words start to move without him.
Other users begin repeating his phrases. Strangers hear his voice where it does not belong. Threads echo conversations he never remembers typing. It feels less like sharing and more like broadcasting for something watching from the dark between his sentences. The hunger inside him feels older, sharper, and suddenly very interested in being heard.
As reality slips, Evan starts to see others like him: people who starved more than their bodies and came away craving the void itself. Their meetings are quiet, their devotion absolute. They tell him hunger is not a symptom, it is a calling. The more he isolates, the more his body weakens and his perception sharpens, tuned toward whatever lives behind the screen and inside his head.
The thing inside his words is patient. It knows every addict's secret truth: whatever you feed long enough begins to own you.
HUNGER is not about food. It is about what we consume to survive loneliness, what we worship when nothing else fills the ache. It follows the slow collapse of a man trying to rebuild after losing everything worth living for, only to discover that the emptiness he fears is the one thing that answers back.
Written in raw, rhythmic prose, this novel drags the reader down a spiral where therapy becomes ritual, relapse becomes sacrifice, and desire rots into devotion. It explores the thin line between recovery and surrender, love and self-erasure, faith and infestation.
Perfect for readers who love psychological horror, existential fiction, and literary thrillers in the vein of Requiem for a Dream, The Troop, The Silent Patient, and House of Leaves.
Every craving has a cost. Every silence has a voice. HUNGER is the confession of a man who stared into the void and found it starving for him.