Retrato do autor
6 Works 264 Membros 9 Críticas

Obras por EJ Koh

The Liberators (2023) 36 exemplares
A Lesser Love: Poems (2017) 13 exemplares
Red (2013) 5 exemplares
The Liberators 1 exemplar
NOT A BOOK 1 exemplar

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Conhecimento Comum

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Críticas

This book is a surprisingly short and spare telling of 30+ years in the life of a woman, Insuk, who flees South Korea for California with her husband Sungho after her own father is arrested and disappears. There, they build a life with Sungho's mother and their own son Henry. We see their struggles with each other, with cultural expectations, work, with missing a united Korea.

Koh does this all in just over 200 pages--we get Korean history, a family's history, with activists and immigrants' frustrations, Henry's frustrations as first generation, and the DIL-MIL relationship.

LARB's Radio Hour has an interesting interview with EJ Koh about this book. I admit the history in it is sparse, but I have read a surprising amount of Korean and Korean diaspora lit in the last 10 years or so, so this fit right into a framework I already have (Pachinko, Crying in H Mart, When Spring Comes to the DMZ, The Girl Who Wrote Loneliness, Don Mee Choi's poetry, and more).
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
Dreesie | 2 outras críticas | Feb 4, 2024 |
I love a book that surprises me with beautiful writing, unexpected turns of phrases, and inventive storytelling. This short novel is one of those books. The story follows a South Korean family across thirty years, with backstories revealing the trauma of Korean history. It’s an emotional read.

Korea’s legacy of war, colonization, division, dictatorships, and missing persons has shattered the lives of the characters. Immigration to America does not fulfill their dreams. The Korean American community is still emotionally and culturally linked to the old country, and some dream of the reunification of their country which had been divided by America after the Korean war.

There are many memorable scenes, including the family watching the 2018 Olympics opening ceremony; during the traditional releasing of doves some landed on the Olympic cauldron; when it was lit, they were burned alive.

The Liberators is a fantastic read.

Thanks to the publisher for a free book.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
nancyadair | 2 outras críticas | Nov 9, 2023 |
 
Assinalado
Andy5185 | 4 outras críticas | Jul 9, 2023 |
Lovely, introspective prose; it's clear the author is a poet.

This book is a series of vignettes from Koh's life and matriarchal family history, interspersed with letters sent to her from overseas by her mother. The breezy monologue of the mother's letters belie the family's sadness, forced by money and dual nationalities to live apart for nine years. Many of the stories here may feel familiar to Korean immigrants who have had to live in separation, from behaving completely unbothered to coming to terms with heartbreak.

While the chapters hop around without smooth transitions or cohesion (e.g., still reeling from the Jeju massacre story and then bam, talk of Bora and KPop idol training), I appreciate that Koh didn't try to be comprehensive of her entire life and instead focused on the most poignant moments.
… (mais)
½
 
Assinalado
jiyoungh | 4 outras críticas | May 3, 2021 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
6
Membros
264
Popularidade
#87,286
Avaliação
½ 3.7
Críticas
9
ISBN
14

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