
The novel follows a nameless young writer drifting through the cold streets of late‑19th‑century Oslo, his mind consumed by an unrelenting hunger that is as much mental as it is physical. Each day becomes a battle between the need for food and the desperate urge to finish a manuscript that might finally earn him recognition. Hamsun paints the city as a harsh, indifferent backdrop, where every empty pantry and distant café mirrors the protagonist’s mounting anxiety.
In his relentless inner monologue the reader hears the clash of pride and poverty, the absurd rationalisations that keep him moving forward even as his body weakens. The narrative captures the thin line between brilliance and madness, turning ordinary moments—waiting for a tram, stealing a bite of bread—into vivid explorations of willpower and self‑deception. As the hunger deepens, the story invites listeners to feel the raw, unsettling beauty of a mind on the edge.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (353K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-06-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1859–1952
A Nobel Prize-winning Norwegian novelist, he helped reshape modern fiction with intense, inward-looking books such as Hunger and the later classic Growth of the Soil. His legacy is powerful and complicated, with major literary influence alongside deep controversy over his support for Nazi Germany.
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