How Hunger Is Measured: A Childhood
A Novel of Temporary Arrangements (The Temporary Arrangements Series, Book 3)
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Narrateur(s):
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Nicholas O'Rourke
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Auteur(s):
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Ralph Clayton
À propos de cet audio
Set against the collapse and aftermath of post-Soviet life, the book follows a boy taken from a forgotten Siberian village and carried—politely, efficiently—into a world that will rename him, repurpose him, and decide his value without ever raising its voice. There are no heroes here, no redemption arcs, no lessons offered at a safe distance. What unfolds instead is a careful study of how people survive when survival itself becomes useful to others.
Violence appears rarely, and never as release. Care arrives disguised as containment. Stability is presented as generosity. The story moves through orphanages, trains, compounds, waiting rooms, and domestic spaces where decisions have already been made, long before anyone arrives to witness them.
Written in a cold, precise prose that refuses sentimentality, Child from Siberia examines the machinery of modern power—not as spectacle, but as routine. It asks what happens to identity when patience is mistaken for virtue, and endurance becomes a resource to be harvested.
This is not a coming-of-age story in the traditional sense. It is a record of how a child learns to live with nothing, and how others learn to own everything.
For listeners drawn to literary fiction, dark realism, and psychologically restrained narratives that linger long after the final line.
©2026 Ralph Clayton (P)2026 Ralph Clayton