
Ethnic riots in 1983 drove the family to emigrate to Canada when Selvadurai was nineteen. Selvadurai was born in Colombo, Sri Lanka to a Sinhalese mother and a Tamil father-members of conflicting ethnic groups whose troubles form a major theme in his work. He currently lives in Toronto with his partner Andrew Champion. Shyam Selvadurai is a Sri Lankan-Canadian novelist who wrote Funny Boy (1994), which won the Books in Canada First Novel Award, and Cinnamon Gardens (1998). It shows how racial, political and sexual differences can tear apart both a country and the human heart-not just once, but many times, until the ghosts are fed and freed. The Hungry Ghosts is a beautifully written, dazzling story of family, wealth and the long reach of the past. But throughout the night and into the early morning hours of his departure, Shivan grapples with his own insatiable hunger and is haunted by unrelenting ghosts of his own creation. As the novel opens in the present day, Shivan, now living in Canada, is preparing to travel back to Colombo, Sri Lanka, to rescue his elderly and ailing grandmother, to remove her from the home-now fallen into disrepair-that is her pride, and bring her to Toronto to live our her final days. The novel centres around Shivan Rassiah, the beloved grandson, who is of mixed Tamil and Sinhalese lineage, and who also-to his grandmother’s dismay-grows from beautiful boy to striking gay man. In Shyam Selvadurai’s sweeping new novel, his first in more than a decade, he creates an unforgettable ghost, a powerful Sri Lankan matriarch whose wily ways, insatiable longing for land, houses, money and control, and tragic blindness to the human needs of those around her parallels the volatile political situation of her war-torn country. It is the duty of the living relatives to free those doomed to this fate by doing kind deeds and creating good karma. In Buddhist myth, the dead may be reborn as "hungry ghosts"-spirits with stomach so large they can never be full-if they have desired too much during their lives.
