Cover Image: Hungry Ghost

Hungry Ghost

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

I absolutely loved this graphic novel!! Brought many tears, and hope in my heart. Having grown up with an eating disorder and still having poor thoughts, this is the kind of book I hope to get in my students hands. Thank you so much NetGalley for the ARC! I will be getting this for my school library.

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A young teens journey to self love thru discovering she can only be herself. As she strives to be the ‘good’ daughter each day, she realizes she is failing herself.

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Hungry Ghost was a well-written graphic novel depicting the way an eating disorder can wreak havoc on your life, no matter how you try to hide it, and the small steps you can take to love yourself again.

I have never had the exact disorder Hungry Depicts, but my relationship with food and my mother are both unhealthy, and very intertwined, so I felt like this was relatable regardless. However, I also felt like other parts of this graphic novel were sort of background drama that didn’t quite fit with the point of the main plot.

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This is a beautifully told story of a young girl trying to live up to her mother’s expectations of her. I appreciate that there are learning resources at the end of the book as well as ways to seek help. I would absolutely recommend this.

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All Val can think about is her body, food, calories, and staying thin. Her mother reminds her at every opportunity to watch her weight and stay thin, and Val equates her ability to stay thin with being the good daughter her mother wants.
This coming of age story centered on bulimia is an important one. Sometimes, loved ones cause damage they don't understand, and helping yourself and surrounding yourself with understanding, supportive friends is the only way to save yourself.

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As someone with an eating disorder, this graphic novel definitely hit close to home.
Hungry Ghost tells the story of a teenaged girl who’s about to go off to university, she struggles with eating as her mother is obsessed with her weight and diet culture and thus projects it onto her daughter.
The art in this was beautiful, and the story was equally as gorgeous. However, I didn’t like the ending as much as i wished i could.
To not go into too much spoilers, I’ll leave it at this.
There is no obligation to love and forgive someone who hurt you, no matter how hard they’re “trying” to love you. If their words are hurting you, and they refuse to try and fix their mindset and their actions, then they do not truly love you in the way that you deserve.
Don’t settle for anyone who treats you poorly, and that includes family.
4/5 stars.

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I'd say this is important for teenage girls, but more important for the parents of teenage girls. Very sad but with a hopeful ending

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A wonderful graphic novel about what it’s like for someone with a eating disorder. Val is constantly thinking about food but not in a good healthy way but worrying about calorie counting and purging. Val’s mom is always making comments about her weight and what she is eating. After her father dies in a plane accident, she starts thinking about her life.
This would be a great resource for looking at and explaining eating disorders. It doesn’t show any consequences of eating disorders but shows someone trying to get help. I recommend this book for night school students.

Thank you Netgalley for allowing me to read this book.

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Deep and beautiful, I found myself very moved by the story even though I don't often get too involved with graphic novels (but I want to and this was just the perfect example!). The art is just stunning.

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This was such a poignant, heartbreaking portrayal of how much disordered eating and body image can effect people. The story follows teen Valerie Chu, who has been struggling with body image issues her whole life, stemming from her mother's pressures for her to stay thin and be "gwai" (good/obedient). Valerie tries to maintain the facade of perfection through her appearance and her studies, but inside she is filled with constant turmoil surrounding her body and food, to the point where Valerie turns to purging in order to control her food intake. After tragedy strikes in Valerie's family, she must come to terms with her body image struggles and decide which is more important: being thin, or being happy.

I thought that this was such an important, beautifully executed book. Victoria Ying does an amazing job in portraying disordered eating in her story without glorifying it to readers, and showing how much disordered eating can consume ones thoughts and life. I loved the friendship between Valerie and Jordan, and I thought that their reconciliation at the end was handled very well. The artstyle was beautiful, and I loved the color palette that Ying uses throughout the story. Overall, I loved this book and think that it's an important addition to any library collection.

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A beautifully drawn and plotted graphic novel that managed to inter splice strong thematic elements and keep up great entertainment value.

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The beginning of the story was bit to depressive.
I'm so glad that the main character finds her way out and stop struggling.

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This was a beautiful graphic novel that tackled so many complex and difficult issues, and did so in an insightful and beautiful way.

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Thanks to NetGalley and First Second Books for the ARC!

The art is truly gorgeous. The first half has genuinely great set-up, but I feel like the second half is a little too rushed for my liking. I wish there was a little more time for the resolution. That being said, it is still a good book that I would highly recommend.

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A fantastic story with beautiful artwork. I loved the characters so much and the friendships in these pages as well as how much hurt a family member can cause but still love you. I loved everything about this book.

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I really enjoyed this one, but it felt a little superficial. I didn't feel super engaged with the main character's emotional journey even though it was an intense one. I honestly felt more of a connection with her best friend. The art was stunning. Ultimately, I will still purchase/rec at my library.

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Valerie’s mother is the worst. She’s a controlling parent whose messed up relationship with perfection, food, and the importance of other peoples opinions leads her daughter to self hatred and disordered eating.

This book was hard to read because of the content. The self hatred, doubt, mental health struggles, death, and the disorder at the center of it all. At the same time it was full of acceptance, self love, hope, and friendships.

The heavy nature of this book is buoyed by the absolutely gorgeous illustrations and colors. It was beautiful to absorb and experience. Visually stunning.

Obviously there are some significant trigger warnings with this one but if it’s something you can read after acknowledging that, you should. Outstanding!

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Hard hitting topic but represented well in this graphic novel. Thank you to the publisher and Netgalley for the opportunity to read and review

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Beautiful pale green, blue and pinks color this realistic look at an Asian American high school girl dealing with an eating disorder and parental expectations. The characters and the issues are well done and thoughtful. Highly recommended for teens. I loved her friendship with Jordan.

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Let me start out by saying that the illustrations and color palette used are gorgeous. I love the pastels and how personal the story feels because of the color choices.

Reading this story transported me back to high school, in the midst of my own eating disorder. The author doesn't shy away from any of the terrible parts of disordered eating, whether it's purging, or the distance it creates in your relationships. The way Victoria Ying describes Val's journey with her eating disorder is so real, for myself, and for so many others out there; it's amazing to see it captured so perfectly in both words and artwork. I also felt that the grief aspect of the book was tied in well to keep with a realistic reaction to what Val goes through.

That being said, I wish there was a little more. It felt a little short to me, just straight into the trip, home, and then the wrap-up. I would have liked to see a bit more of Val's journey into recovery, or even just more scenes before Paris.

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