Ji-won’s world collapses when her father’s affair destroys her family. Her mother is shattered, her sister adrift, and Ji-won herself is failing classes and drowning in nightmares filled with rooms of severed eyes. But soon, the nightmares bleed into reality.
Her mother’s new boyfriend, George, is arrogant, condescending, and fetishizes every part of their Korean-American identity. Ji-won despises him and decides he does not deserve her family’s adoration. As bodies begin to turn up around campus, Ji-won’s hunger sharpens into something she can no longer ignore.
Part feminist horror, part family drama, this psychological descent is as violent as it is mesmerizing.
Because Ji-won is learning that sometimes rage has teeth. And sometimes hunger has eyes.