Hunger and Thirst kept me up late at night, it frightened and enthralled me. Atmospheric, psychologically vivid, and unputdownable.
- Alice Winn, author of In Memoriam, Tin House
From the celebrated author of Bitter Orange and Swimming Lessons comes an eerie and captivating new novel of complicated friendship and the desperate, sometimes disastrous need to belong.
9781963108729
English
320
Hardcover
June 2, 2026
5-1/2 x 8-1/2
1987: After a childhood trauma and years in and out of the care system, sixteen-year-old Ursula finds herself with a new job delivering mail at a local art school, a bed in a halfway house, and—delightfully— some new friends, including wild-child, Sue. When Ursula is invited to join a squat at The Underwood, a mysterious house whose owners met a terrible end, she can’t resist this hodgepodge family. But as Sue’s behavior and demands become more extreme, Ursula who has always been hungry—for food—and more importantly for love, acceptance and belonging, carries out her friend’s terrible dare. And, for this, Ursula finds herself literally haunted.</br>
Thirty-six years later, Ursula is a renowned, reclusive sculptor living under a pseudonym in London when her identity is exposed by true-crime documentary-maker, Emma Zahini who is digging into an unsolved disappearance. But it is not only the filmmaker who has discovered Ursula’s whereabouts, and as her past catches up with her present, Ursula must work out whether the monsters are within her or without.</br>
From critically acclaimed and award-winning author, Claire Fuller, Hunger and Thirst is a compelling and chilling tale of loneliness and female friendship, of the dangerous line between wanting and needing, and of how far a person will go to truly belong.
“I was enthralled by the creeping horror, rapt, utterly unable to put this book down, haunted as I was reading it and haunted still. Claire Fuller, a master of psychic suspense, has done it again.”
—Lindsay Hunter, author of Hot Springs Drive
“Harrowing and tender in turn….Ursula’s desperate hungers live in all of us, and Claire Fuller illuminates them in exquisite, exacting prose. This is the kind of book to clear a weekend for, the kind of resonant nightmare that lingers long after its end.”
—Hayden Casey, author of A Harvest of Furies