Book Review – Hungry Ghosts by Kevin Jared Hosein

About the Book

Book cover Hungry Ghosts by Kevin Jared Hosein

The music was still playing when Dalton Changoor vanished into thin air…

On a hill overlooking Bell Village sits the Changoor farm, where Dalton and Marlee Changoor live in luxury unrecognisable to those who reside in the farm’s shadow. Down below is the barrack, a ramshackle building of wood and tin, divided into rooms occupied by whole families. Among these families are the Saroops – Hans, Shweta, and their son, Krishna, who live hard lives of backbreaking work, grinding poverty and devotion to faith.

When Dalton Changoor goes missing and Marlee’s safety is compromised, farmhand Hans is lured by the promise of a handsome stipend to move to the farm as watchman. But as the mystery of Dalton’s disappearance unfolds their lives become hellishly entwined, and the small community altered forever.

Format: Hardback (352 pages) Publisher: Bloomsbury
Publication date: 16th February 2023 Genre: Historical Fiction

Find Hungry Ghosts on Goodreads

Purchase Hungry Ghosts from Bookshop.org


My Review

As well as being a BBC2 Between the Covers book club pick and being longlisted for The Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction 2024, Hungry Ghosts is one of the books on the longlist for the Swansea University Dylan Thomas Prize 2024. The shortlist will be announced on Thursday 21st March 2024.

Hungry Ghosts has been described as ‘a mesmerising novel about violence, religion, family and class’ and as ‘biblical in scope and power’. I wouldn’t disagree with either of these although the comparison that came to my mind was a Shakespearean tragedy such is the story of cruelty, revenge, betrayal, hate and lust that unfolds.

The novel focuses on four main characters: Hansraj Saroop and his wife, Shweta; their son, Krishna; and Marlee, the wife of rich businessman Dalton Changoor whose disappearance remains an unresolved mystery for much of the book but is also the catalyst for a chain of events that will bring far-reaching consequences. Other characters, such as Krishna’s cousin, Tarik, and Lata, the daughter of one of the families who share the Saroop’s cramped living space, play important roles in the story. They are not just shadowy figures in the background but are vividly brought to life. Robinson, one of the other workers on the Changoor estate, was a character that particularly stuck in my mind. If there’s anything close to ‘a good man’ in the book, he’s a candidate.

As we learn, many of the characters have experienced violence and cruelty in their lives, often as children at the hands of their fathers. They carry the legacy of those experiences in their actions: sometimes perpetuating them, sometimes seeking to rise above them. Loss – of parents, of children – is a persistent backdrop to the characters’ lives. One loss in particular is a source of grief that Shweta lives with daily but which Hansraj seems unwilling or unable to acknowledge. It’s a ‘hungry ghost’ that feeds upon her every day.

Many of the characters seek to better themselves and to get more from life than what fate has dealt them so far, which in most cases is not very much. Shweta longs for a house of her own that she doesn’t have to share with other families, that offers more privacy than a flimsy partition and that doesn’t leak when it rains. Krishna, an intelligent young man, knows the local school cannot provide the education that will allow him to forge a life beyond the village. He resents the prejudice directed at his family and is frustrated at his father’s seeming acceptance of it. Marlee is one person who has made a new life for herself but it has come at a cost. There will be a cost to others as well.

The story may be bleak but the writing is anything but. You get the sense that every sentence has been thought about and lovingly crafted. The author has an obvious love of language, including some unfamiliar words (‘rufescent’ ‘thaumaturgy’ ‘eutrophic’ ) that had me reaching for the dictionary.

Hungry Ghosts has scenes that are harrowing and difficult to read but the sheer power of the narrative propels you through them. I can see why it has garnered so much praise.

My thanks Henrietta at Midas PR for inviting me to be part of the blog tour celebrating the books on the Swansea University Dylan Thomas Prize 2024 longlist and to Bloomsbury Publishing for my review copy.

Swansea University Dylan Thomas Prize

In three words: Intense, powerful, moving
Try something similar: Fortune by Amanda Smyth


About the Author

Author Kevin Jared Hosein
Photo credit: Mark Lyndersay

Kevin Jared Hosein is a Caribbean novelist. He has also worked as a secondary school Biology teacher for over a decade. He was named overall winner of the Commonwealth Short Story Prize in 2018, and was the Caribbean regional winner in 2015. He has published two books: The Repenters and The Beast of Kukuyo. The latter received a CODE Burt Award for Caribbean Young Adult Literature, and both were longlisted for the International Dublin Literary Award. His writing, poetry, fiction and non-fiction have been published in numerous anthologies and outlets. He lives in Trinidad Tobago.

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My Week in Books – 17th March 2024

My Week in Books

On What Cathy Read Next last week

Monday – I shared my review of Our Souls at Night by Kent Haruf, my book club’s choice for last month.

Tuesday – Once again I strayed from this week’s ‘official’ Top Ten Tuesday topic instead sharing a list of the Ten Books by Irish Authors.

Wednesday – I welcomed author Karen Jewell to my blog to talk about her debut novel, In the Garden of Sorrows. And as always WWW Wednesday is a weekly opportunity to share what I’ve just read, what I’m currently reading and what I plan to read next… and to take a peek at what others are reading. 

Thursday – I published my review of the first in a new historical adventure series about Roman general Agricola, Invader by Simon Turney.

Friday – I shared my review of Sufferance by Charles Palliser.


New arrivals

Two eARCs and a prize from the Bookmarks team for reaching Emerald level

Under the Banner of ValorUnder the Banner of Valor by Gary Corbin (eARC courtesy of the author) 

When a fanatical sniper takes aim at women entering family planning clinics, Val risks everything to protect her closest friend.

Valorie Dawes and the WAVE Squad get called into action after Clayton’s family planning clinics receive ominous threats: Close the clinics, or else.

Valorie takes this threat personally, as her closest friend since childhood, Beth, discloses that she’s pregnant and is considering an abortion.

Can Val support her friend and keep her safe from the armed madman? Or will Beth’s stubborn recklessness thrust her into harm’s way?

Bonjour, SophieBonjour, Sophie by Elizabeth Buchan (eARC, Corvus via NetGalley)

It’s 1959 and eighteen-year-old Sophie is determined that now is the time for her real life to start. Her existence in the village of Poynsdean, Sussex, with her austere foster-father, the Reverend Osbert Knox, and his frustrated wife Alice, is stultifying. She finds brief excitement in an illicit love affair, but soon realizes that if she wants to live life on a bigger canvas she must take matters into her own hands.

She dreams of escape to Paris, the Wartime home her mother fled before her birth. Getting there will take spirit and ingenuity, but also offers the chance to discover more about her family background, and perhaps find a place where she can finally belong.

When Sophie eventually arrives in the city of her dreams it’s both everything she imagined, and not at all what she expected.

Burma SahibBurma Sahib by Paul Theroux (Penguin)

Before George Orwell was Orwell – the pen name he took on becoming a writer – he was Eric Blair, an unlikely policeman in Burma.  Nineteen years old, unusually tall, highly intelligent, a diffident loner fresh from Eton, Blair stood out amongst his fellow trainees in 1920s Mandalay.

It was here, over five years in the narrow colonial world of the Raj – a decaying system steeped in overt racism and petty class conflict – that Eric Blair became the George Orwell we know: an anti-imperialist, a socialist and a writer of rare commitment.

The inner journey he made in these years is remarkable, but in the absence of letters or diaries from the period, this richly complex transformation can only be told in fiction, as it is here by Paul Theroux in one of his most striking and accomplished novels. 

Drawing on all his powers of observation and imagination, Paul Theroux brings Orwell’s Burma years to radiant life, tracing the development of the young man’s consciousness as he confronts both the social, racial and class politics of his colonial colleagues, and the reality of the Burma beyond, which he yearns to grasp.

Through one writer, we come to understand another – and to see how what Orwell called ‘five boring years within the sound of bugles’ were in fact the years that made him.


On What Cathy Read Next this week

Currently reading


Planned posts

  • Book Review: Hungry Ghosts by Kevin Jared Hosein
  • Book Review: Diva by Daisy Goodwin
  • Book Review: Clear by Carys Davies