Where have you been, Shyam Selvadurai?

Author talks about long road to publishing The Hungry Ghosts

Shyam Selvadurai will read from his new book, The Hungry Ghosts, at Vancouver’s Central Library May 8, as part of the Incite series produced in partnership with the Vancouver Writers Fest.

Selvadurai is around a lot these days — on newspaper covers, radio shows and in online articles. But recently, he has been a little scarce.

In 1994, the Canadian author published the award-winning Funny Boy, a coming-of-age novel set in his native Sri Lanka. It won a Lambda Literary Award and became a must-read for gays of a certain generation.

He followed up with Cinnamon Gardens in 1998, but he hasn’t published a novel since. Until now.

The title of The Hungry Ghosts borrows from a Buddhist term for ghosts that have a hunger that can never be sated.

The protagonist, Sivan, travels between Canada and Sri Lanka, exploring his sexuality and the complexities of two different worlds.

In the video interview below, Selvadurai talks with author Vivek Shraya about why it took so long to write The Hungry Ghosts.

Watch xtra.ca in the coming weeks for more from our feature video interview with Selvadurai.

On occasion, the number of editors and other staff who contribute to a story gets a little unwieldy to give a byline to everyone. That’s when we use “Xtra Staff” in place of the usual contributor info. If you would like more information on who contributed to a particular story, please contact us here.

Read More About:
Video, Culture, Books, Asia, Vancouver, Arts

Keep Reading

Alberta law aims to ban ‘ideology,’ non-government flags in schools

Bill 25, introduced in the legislature this week, will prohibit teachers and school districts from promoting or taking stances “social or ideological” issues

U.S. Supreme Court rules against Colorado conversion therapy ban

The landmark 8-1 decision could have sweeping repercussions on LGBTQ2S+ rights and health care regulation across America
Two photographs of trans organizer Alison Laing for Trans Day of Visibility

What trans visibility looked like in the 1950s

Photos of beloved organizer Alison Laing show how trans visibility has persisted for decades

There’s no excuse for ‘The Last of Us’ casting a cis actor to play trans

Putting the care into casting a young trans actor might be a challenge. It’s also an opportunity
Advertisement