The Hunger

  • The Hunger
    By Dennis C. Reid

    The Hunger explores the realm of sex and landscape in words that flow together the way water moves around rock.

  • The Hunger
    By Susan Squires

    AN UNDENIABLE DESIRE The year is 1811, and the vampire Beatrix Lisse has spent six hundred years trying to atone for her sins.

  • The Hunger: A Chronicle of Billy Mann
    By Jason H. Jones

    “Thanks for seeing it my way, Lawrence. I promise you I'll keep plugging away at this.” She reached her hand out to shake, but he just let it stay there like a dead fish. “I'm afraid you don't understand, Lana.

  • The Hunger
    By Ciana Stone

    She unplugged the machine. "What time?" "Oh, around seven, seven-thirty." "I'll be ready." She said absently as she turned the machine over. The bottom of it looked like the plastic had been melted in places. "Is everything okay?

  • The Hunger
    By Carol Drinkwater

    THE HUNGER is the exciting tale of a girl swept up in the fight for a free and fair Ireland, set at the time of the Potato Famine.

  • The Hunger
    By Whitley Strieber

    Eternal youth is a wonderful thing for the few who have it, but for Miriam Blaylock, it is a curse -- an existence marred by death and sorrow.

  • The Hunger
    By Alma Katsu

    "A retelling of the fate of the Donner Party, with a Walking Dead style twist"--

  • The Hunger
    By John Whitman

    With Boba Fett in hot pursuit, Zak and Tash Arrand land on a planet filled with swamp creatures, where they find the half-crazed remnants of a shipwrecked survey team whose existence is guarded by Yoda. Original.

  • The Hunger
    By Alma Katsu

    Evil is invisible, and it is everywhere. That is the only way to explain the series of misfortunes that have plagued the wagon train known as the Donner Party.

  • The Hunger
    By Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch

    Fifteen-year-old Paula’s perfectionism drives every facet of her life, from her marks in Grade 10 to the pursuit of a "perfect body.

  • The Hunger
    By Alma Katsu

    Evil is invisible, and it is everywhere. That is the only way to explain the series of misfortunes that have plagued the wagon train known as the Donner Party.