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The Hungry Heart is a searching novel of emotional appetite, social aspiration, and the moral compromises by which modern men and women try to secure love. Phillips writes in the realist mode of the early twentieth century, attentive to money, manners, marriage, and the subtle coercions of respectability. The book belongs to the American naturalist-reform tradition, yet its power lies less in melodrama than in its unsparing analysis of private longing within a competitive social order. David Graham Phillips, an Indiana-born journalist and novelist, brought to fiction the habits of a muckraking reporter. His celebrated attacks on political corruption, especially in "The Treason of the Senate," sharpened his sense that public institutions and intimate relationships were governed by similar systems of power. That background helps explain the novel's suspicion of conventional morality and its sympathy for those trapped by class, gender expectation, and economic dependence. Readers interested in Edith Wharton, Theodore Dreiser, or the social problem novel will find The Hungry Heart a rewarding and incisive work. It is recommended for anyone seeking fiction that treats romance not as escape, but as a revealing test of character and society.