Category: brief reviews

The Hunger We Pass Down by Jen Sookfong Lee [Horror Review]

Posted 12 April 2026 in brief reviews /4 Comments

The Hunger We Pass Down
by Jen Sookfong Lee
Source: paperback/library
Published: Sept 2025
Publisher: Erewhon Books (Kensington Books)

Length: 384 pages
Genre: Horror
Target Age: Adult
Representation: Chinese Canadian protagonist

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Even with my experiences reading Lee’s earlier novel The Conjoined (a woman finds the bodies of two foster children in her recently deceased mother’s freezer) as well as the more recent experience of reading Alicia Elliott’s And Then She Fell (a new mother deals with everyday racism and mental illness), I somehow did not expect this book to be so bleak and dark. The story covers five generations of Alice’s family: Gigi (a comfort woman in China during WWII), Gigi’s daughter Bette, Bette’s daughter Judy, Alice, and Alice’s daughter Luna. I have never read a book that so incisively tells a story of those “haunted by the past”.

The writing impressed me. It’s been a long time since I read The Conjoined, but I think a side-by-side comparison would show clear growth in The Hunger We Pass Down. It completely sucked me in while building gloomy tension, growing more foreboding as the story progressed.

The embroidered peonies, once pink, were now an unsettling fleshy colour, the shade of skin that had never been seen in direct light, that folded in on itself in secret.

The Hunger We Pass Down, pg 81

The speculative horror elements take time to reveal themselves, but even before the reader gets the full picture, plenty of moments invoke a sense of dread. The supernatural horror becomes more real as the story progresses.

***spoilers in the next section re the story’s conclusion***

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The reveal of what actually happened to Alice’s father when he died was unexpected for me. The ending also shocked me in a way that I haven’t experienced from a book in a long time. I was not expecting the turn to physical violence. It left me in a reading coma for a couple days. That felt like Real Horror – sad and tragic with no sense of hope at all.

Personally, I wasn’t a fan of the perspective shift with the conclusion being from Luna’s POV. I’m not arguing argainst portraying the sad, bleak regression that Luna experiences at the close of the book, but I would have liked a little more resolution from Alice’s POV since the bulk of the book follows her experience. Still, I can begrudgingly accept the storytelling point made with this shift.

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***end spoilers**

💭 The Bottom Line: An exemplar of the striking stories being told in contemporary horror today, The Hunger We Pass Down offers a devastating read about one family of women’s experience with intergenerational trauma and family demons.

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Have you read any family-focused horror lately?

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A History of Children’s Books in 100 Books and The Karluk: The Great Untold Story of Arctic Exploration [Non-fiction Reviews]

6 April 2026 / brief reviews / 8 Comments
A History of Children’s Books in 100 Books and The Karluk: The Great Untold Story of Arctic Exploration [Non-fiction Reviews]

Both of these non-fiction reads were owned books I picked up last year as part of my personal challenge to read owned books. Both books I acquired in 2017 or 2018, when I lived in Vancouver. They have finally got their moment. Only one of them was worth my time, though. 😅 A History of Children’s Books in 100 Booksby Roderick Cave and Sara AyadSource: hardcover/ownPublished: Sept. 2017Publisher: Firefly Books Length: 272 pagesGenre: Non-fictionTarget Age: […]

Feral and Hysterical: Mother Horror’s Ultimate Reading Guide to Dark and Disturbing Fiction by Women by Sadie Hartmann [Non-Fiction Review]

14 March 2026 / brief reviews / 6 Comments
Feral and Hysterical: Mother Horror’s Ultimate Reading Guide to Dark and Disturbing Fiction by Women by Sadie Hartmann [Non-Fiction Review]

Feral and Hysterical: Mother Horror’s Ultimate Reading Guide to Dark and Disturbing Fiction by Womenby Sadie HartmannSource: softcover/libraryPublished: Aug. 2025Publisher: Page Street PublishingLength: 208 pages Genre: Non-fictionTarget Age: AdultRepresentation: All featured authors pronouns are she/her and/or they/them (included in this book with their permission) What genre would you pick up a reading guide for?

2025 Middle Grade Reads Round Up [Brief Reviews]

21 January 2026 / brief reviews / 12 Comments
2025 Middle Grade Reads Round Up [Brief Reviews]

This post shines a little spotlight on all the middle grade titles I read and didn’t review in 2025 – including ones I didn’t care much for. (I published a similar post last week for adult reads that I enjoyed in 2025.) I’ve split this list into speculative and realistic. Speculative The Lost Ryū by Watanabe Cohen Historical fantasy featuring a world where everyone has a dragon companion. The dragons […]

Sona and the Golden Beasts by Rajani Larocca [MG Review – Contains Spoilers]

17 January 2026 / brief reviews / 4 Comments
Sona and the Golden Beasts by Rajani Larocca [MG Review – Contains Spoilers]

Sona and the Golden Beastsby Rajani LaRoccaSource: hardcover/libraryPublished: Mar 2024Publisher: Quill Tree (HarperCollins)Length: 400 pages Genre: FantasyTarget Age: Middle gradeRepresentation: Secondary world is an India analogue and explores themes related to British colonization