Sacred Hunger Audiobook By Barry Unsworth cover art

Sacred Hunger

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Sacred Hunger

By: Barry Unsworth
Narrated by: David Rintoul
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Man Booker Prize Winner, 1992

Sacred Hunger is a stunning and engrossing exploration of power, domination, and greed. Filled with the "sacred hunger" to expand its empire and its profits, England entered fully into the slave trade and spread the trade throughout its colonies.

In this Booker Prize-winning work, Barry Unsworth follows the failing fortunes of William Kemp, a merchant pinning his last chance to a slave ship; his son, who needs a fortune because he is in love with an upper-class woman; and his nephew, who sails on the ship as its doctor because he has lost all he has loved. The voyage meets its demise when disease spreads among the slaves and the captain's drastic response provokes a mutiny. Joining together, the sailors and the slaves set up a secret, utopian society in the wilderness of Florida, only to await the vengeance of the single-minded young Kemp.

©1992 Barry Unsworth (P)2012 AudioGO Ltd.
Historical Fiction Literary Fiction Fiction African American Sailing Genre Fiction
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Compelling Characters • Historical Authenticity • Brilliant Performance • Profound Themes • Complex Storytelling

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This is a well written, compelling, and entertaining historic novel. It has some memorable characters and an important underlying moral. The Audible performance is excellent by David Rintuol. I have heard him narrate other books and he has performed them in the same professional and dramatic way that makes the work come to life, contributing to an enhanced appreciation of the work. Nothing about this novel or this performance disappointed me.

A great adventure of hope and moral

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The two characters that kept me going was Billy Blair and Michael Sullivan. the story would peak my interest then flounder. the ending was unsatisfactory.

floundering a bit

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This was a gem of a book. In it lies incredible historical writing that illustrates a darker period of British commerce. The story captures your heart with a collection of incredible characters spread over a decade with intrigue, sadness, and humor. The triangular trade of the 18th century is amplified by the author to reflect the greed of many on the backs of West African slaves, and the incessant hunger for profit deemed the “Sacred Hunger”.

The story revolves on the voyage of the “Liverpool Merchant”, its crew and the disease ridden onboard slaves. The main characters include the ship doctor Matthew Paris, a likable polymath of sorts, and the profit driven Captain Thurso, an evil opposite of Paris. Into this mire the author introduces the cousin Erasmus Kemp, a forlorn and vengeful character driven to undo a wrong. The description of the sufferings of the slaves are harrowing as is their murders. Yet the creation of the utopian community in Florida’s backwaters, all but brief, hints at a glimpse of humanity in an otherwise very dark age.

The narration of this book is simply fantastic. A very worthy Booker winner in 1992, sharing the price with the “The English Patient”.

Super listen - great Booker winner!

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I may not be the best person to give a review for this book, but since it took me over six months to finish I wanted to prove to the book that I retained something from the six hundred pages it took to get there. The historical fiction part is great: a few hundred slaves on a ship gets "lost" and the slave traders are on the hunt to get their property back. There's even a quest for vengeance, family honor, and a love lost along the way but the endless descriptions of the waves, the ship itself, and the accents (specifically the Asian and Island accents) were just too much. Great narrator when his voice was normal, but I was also reading the book at the same time I was listening to the audible and let's just say that reading it was only slightly less offensive. I'm glad I finished the book after such a long, arduous six months but I doubt I'll ever pick it up again. Just my two cents...and my six months.

Takes so long to get to the point

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This story is written like a classic from Dicken’s or other great writers. The narration is excellent and creates the atmosphere of listening to a play on stage. My reservation in my overall rating is because of the ending which I think is stereotyping black culture in a manner that is demeaning, while it would’ve been much better had Paris’s son been elevated through his intelligence inherited both from his mother and father.

Great story and wonderfully narrated

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