Hungry Ghosts

  • Hungry Ghosts
    By Peggy Blair

    “What about the Trojans?” Ramirez asked. “It's interesting imagery when you put it in the context of the apple we found in LaNeva's stomach,” said Apiro. “Adam and Eve tasted an apple and gave up immortality. Aphrodite bribed Paris of ...

  • Hungry Ghosts: Mao's Secret Famine
    By Jasper Becker

    Exposes the horrible result of Mao's attempted utopian engineering in China between 1958 and 1962, uncovering a bloody trail of terror, cannibalism, torture, and murder

  • Hungry Ghosts
    By Chris Carter, Ellen Steiber

    The ninth in a stylish new series of novelizations of classic episodes from the phenomenally successful cult TV show The X-Files created by Chris Carter.

  • Hungry Ghosts
    By S. E. Grace

    And a beak in Mac's face. “My grandmother cleaned Schrödinger's cat's litter box!” chirped the starling as she danced a little jig. Then, flew away. Bet your grandmother knew where the bodies were buried too, thought Mac.

  • Hungry Ghosts: China's Secret Famine
    By Jasper Becker

    This story aims to unravel the story behind the ten-year-old estimate that at least 30 million people had starved to death in China between 1958 and 1962. It is based...

  • Hungry Ghosts
    By John D. Greenwood

    Hungry Ghosts is volume three in the Singapore Saga, a series of historical fiction covering the early years of Singapore, and follows Forbidden Hill and Chasing the Dragon.

  • Hungry Ghosts
    By Stephen Blackmoore

    Blackmoore can’t write these books fast enough to suit me. BROKEN SOULS is hyper-caffeinated, turbo-bloody face-stomping fun.

  • Hungry Ghosts
    By Andy Rotman

    One of the earliest sources about hungry ghosts is the ten stories about them in the Avadanasataka (One Hundred Stories), a Buddhist scripture from the early centuries of the Common Era, and these ten stories are elegantly translated in ...

  • Hungry Ghosts
    By Sally Heinrich

    Set in contemporary Singapore and Australia, and nineteenth-century China and Australia, this sprawling tale by Sally Heinrich touches on issues of Chinese immigration to Australia from the 1800s to the present.