This book is not self-help. It is not affirmation. It is not healing language softened for comfort. These poems move through hunger, obsession, devotion, rage, eros, loss, and reclamation as sacred states—not problems to be solved.
Drawing from ancient goddess lineages, descent myths, and embodied ritual, Hungry Woman speaks to those who have been told they are too much, too intense, too desiring, too alive.
This book is not self-help. It is not affirmation. It is not healing language softened for comfort. These poems move through hunger, obsession, devotion, rage, eros, loss, and reclamation as sacred states—not problems to be solved.
Drawing from ancient goddess lineages, descent myths, and embodied ritual, Hungry Woman speaks to those who have been told they are too much, too intense, too desiring, too alive.