Taste of Hunger, The

by Barbara Joan Scott

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"The taste of hunger is a family saga about a family of Ukrainian immigrants, the insatiable power of desire, unsettling Baba Yaga fairytales, and a moment of violence that changes everything. In Saskatchewan in the late 1920s, a fifteen-year-old Ukrainian immigrant named Olena is forced into marriage with Taras, a man twice her age, who wants her even though she has refused him. Stuck in a hardscrabble life and with a husband she despises, fiercely determined Olena sets off a chain of show more events that pulls everyone around them, including their two daughters, into a vortex of simmering bitterness and anger -- and a murder that leaves aftershocks in its wake for years to come. Barbara Joan Scott has masterfully crafted a novel about our deepest desires and the lengths we'll go to chase our most insatiable needs. The Taste of Hunger explores the pulls of family, the justification of anger, and the possibility of redemption."--Provided by publisher. show less

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2 reviews
The heartbreaking catastrophe currently playing out in Ukraine has forced the scattering of that country’s peoples across the globe. But what we see happening in 2022 is only the most recent iteration of an exodus that has been ongoing for centuries: Ukrainians leaving their homeland to escape starvation, conflict and persecution. Barbara Joan Scott’s novel, The Taste of Hunger, set in the early decades of the previous century, is the story of Taras Zalesky, a young Ukrainian immigrant “fleeing the aftermath of the Great War,” whose journey brings him to Canada. In 1926, after an injury puts an end to his tenure working in the Ontario mines, he drifts westward and finds himself in Saskatchewan. Here, a chance encounter with a show more fellow Ukrainian in a hotel bar determines his future path. The man is fed up working the poor plot of land he received from the government, and Taras is only too willing to take the failing homestead off his hands. While traveling north to his new home, another encounter, this time with a Ukrainian family, further seals Taras’s fate: at a dilapidated farm where he stops for water, he meets 15-year-old Olena, who lives with her drunkard father Metro and her short-tempered aunt Varvara. Olena—smart, beautiful, filled with dreams, longing for an education and a possible life elsewhere—is instead forced by her father to marry Taras Zalesky, who is twice her age, a man of brute instinct and base urges for whom she feels nothing but contempt. Despite their differences, Taras and Olena work hard to carve a life for themselves out of the unpromising Saskatchewan wilderness. But, though dependent on one another for corporeal and spiritual sustenance, there is little affection between them. Years pass, Olena becomes pregnant and gives birth. But she never warms to her husband: he can satisfy her physical needs, but in every other respect she is frustrated and is soon appalled by what she has become. Eventually, they sell their land and move to the town of Eldergrove, where they take over a general store. By this time, they have two children: daughters June and May. The children give Olena purpose, but her hunger for a different kind of life never fades and she is always on the alert in case a means of escape presents itself. For his part, Taras embarks on a series of casual affairs. But, though a serial philanderer, he remains a jealous husband who is tormented by thoughts of his beautiful young wife being unfaithful. Scott’s taut, moving, sometimes brutal narrative, which crosses generations and is told from multiple perspectives, is a tragic tale of two people fatally mismatched but thrust together by circumstance whose moral failings wreak misfortune on all who come within their sphere of influence. At a crucial moment, Taras’s and Olena’s hunger for gratification outside the marriage results in a horrific act of violence, and both are left harboring a dreadful secret. In her debut novel, Barbara Joan Scott tells a story filled with fierce passion, wayward desire and thwarted dreams, a story that skirts the edges of melodrama without making the plunge. The Taste of Hunger also provides a compulsive read and leaves us pondering the darkness that resides in every human heart. show less
What a great story. Taras, a Ukrainian immigrant to Canada, finds himself owning property in Saskatchewan through a chance encounter with a fellow immigrant. On his way to his new farm, he stays with another Ukrainian family and falls in love with their 15 year old daughter, Olena.

Olena doesn't want to marry a man twice her age. In fact, she doesn't want to marry at all...she wants to go to school. But, there is no money for that and her father forces her into the marriage. Taras loves her, but she can never develop such feelings for him. She tries to prevent, or end, pregnancies without telling him. She is cold to him, and he engages in meaningless affairs while jealously watching Olena's behaviour. Years pass, with Olena's inner show more longings for another life simmering just beneath the surface. And Taras continues to hope she will love him.

Eventually, with two daughters (June and May), the family moves to town and runs a store. Here is where new possibilities bring longings to the surface and violence explodes. The aftermath of that violence changes the relationship between Taras and Olena. So well written as the full impact of what has happened is revealed slowly, over time.

Well done! Lovely writing that is subtle, until it explodes.
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Common Knowledge

People/Characters
Taras; Olena; June; May; Marie
Important places
Saskatchewan, Canada

Classifications

Genres
General Fiction, Fiction and Literature, Historical Fiction
DDC/MDS
813.6Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English2000-
LCC
CT274 .G4 .S368Auxiliary Sciences of HistoryBiographyBiographyNational biography
BISAC

Statistics

Members
10
Popularity
2,141,702
Reviews
2
Rating
(4.00)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
2
ASINs
1