E-News

We provide news about Korean writers and works from all around the world.

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  • Descartes's Descendants: The Novels of Bae Myung-hoon and Kim Bo-young | LIST
    English(English) Article

    list_Books from Korea / -

    Descartes's Descendants: The Novels of Bae Myung-hoon and Kim Bo-young   By Bok Dohoon on Nov 02 2014 00:17:49 Vol.20 Summer 2013 As science fiction continues to work at gaining respect as a literary genre in Korea, two young writers are at the forefront, bringing imagination and a touch of realism to their explorations of human existence.   Emerging Writers In the Korean literary scene where realism has traditionally dominated, science fiction was, in both quantity and quality, relatively underrepresented. Moreover, at times science fiction was not recognized as literature and cherished only by a small fan base. In the 2000s, a trend began in the Korean literary scene: the active exploration of fantasy and the future. These explorations led to discoveries of a new reality. A new generation of writers started traversing the line between the fantastic and the real, intermixing elements from realism and fantasy. In novels, protagonists that were aliens, zombies, clones, and "pseudo-human[s]" began appearing. These creatures problematized the humanistic value system and humanity as a race. The settings of these works escaped the familiar reality and expanded into a computer-generated virtual reality, outer space, and post-apocalyptic worlds. In the midst of these changes and developments, science fiction entered into Korean fiction. In addition, readers and literary critics focused more attention on this genre. The young writers who have received the most attention are undoubtedly Bae Myung-hoon and Kim Bo-young. These two authors write science fiction, but their works also span broadly over the genres of fantasy, children's literature, and detective novels. Nonetheless, the majority of their works, and the ones that received the most attention, are science fiction.

  • The Best New Books To Read This April
    English(English) Article

    Bustle / April 01, 2021

    Spring has finally arrived, and it’s bringing a bevy of new books to a shelf near you. The most anticipated books of April 2021 include new releases from Charlie Jane Anders, Jhumpa Lahiri, and Helen Oyeyemi — just to name a few. If you’re looking for a new read from one of your favorite authors, you’re in luck this month. Jhumpa Lahiri is publishing her first novel since 2013, and Sally Thorne’s back with an all-new rom-com you’re sure to love. Helen Oyeyemi’s latest book is just as dreamy as you’d expect, and Brittney Morris has written a speculative new YA novel that’s all too timely.

  • April Is Full of New Sci-Fi and Fantasy Books to Add to Your Autumn Reading List
    English(English) Article

    GIZMODO / April 01, 2021

    This month we’ve got teenage telekinetics, magical twins, shapeshifters, supernatural detectives, space adventures, palace intrigue, fantasy epics, monsters, and more — plus the first-ever YA fantasy novel by Gizmodo co-founder Charlie Jane Anders. Read on!

  • The 25 Best Books of April Will Take You Around the World (and Beyond)
    English(English) Article

    POPSUGAR / April 01, 2021

    Forget spring showers: this year, April is bringing a boatload of must-read new books in every single genre you can imagine. Looking for moving and inspiring nonfiction? Prepare to be blown away by Little and Often by Trent Preszler. Want to get lost in a funny mystery/romance novel that's also about the unbreakable bonds of family? Then Dial A for Aunties by Jesse Q. Sutanto is the book for you. More into fantasy, magical realism, or historical fiction? This month's new releases include incredible books in those genres, too. Forget making plans this April: just tell everyone you need to spend some quality time curled up with the 25 new books on this month's must-read list.

  • Our pick of the latest science fiction for April 2021: tales of time bending and worlds ending
    English(English) Article

    The Times & The Sunday Times / April 22, 2021

    Have you ever felt you were born in the wrong era? Want to skip to the year your pension plan matures? Then leap on a ship bound for the Orbit of Waiting: it’ll draw a close-to-light-speed, time-dilating helix around the sun and then return to the place it departed from. In I’m Waiting for You, the title story in this dazzling and accomplished collection from the South Korean writer Kim Bo-young, a young passenger sails around the Orbit of Waiting, marking time before he can be reunited with his bride-to-be, who’s sailing back from Alpha Centauri. The couple’s missed connections and crossed letters begin as farce, then rapidly take on an epic scale as the weeks, then the months, then the years shoot by,

  • REVIEW: I’M WAITING FOR YOU AND OTHER STORIES BY KIM BO-YOUNG
    English(English) Article

    Where to Kim? / April 21, 2021

    I’m Waiting for You and Other Stories by Kim Bo-Young is an immersive, sci-fi short story collection that takes you to another time and place. Find out what a talking wall and Artificial Intelligence have in common, and how AI and gods share some similarities. Location: linked to South Korea, but not necessarily taking place there (aside from some sightseeing in a scifi version of Seoul)

  • REVIEW: I’M WAITING FOR YOU AND OTHER STORIES BY KIM BO-YOUNG
    English(English) Article

    Where to Kim? / April 21, 2021

    I’m Waiting for You and Other Stories by Kim Bo-Young is an immersive, sci-fi short story collection that takes you to another time and place. Find out what a talking wall and Artificial Intelligence have in common, and how AI and gods share some similarities. Location: linked to South Korea, but not necessarily taking place there (aside from some sightseeing in a scifi version of Seoul) I'm Waiting for You and Other Stories synopsis A stunning collection of short fiction by one of South Korea’s most treasured writers, available in English for the first time. In the title story, an engaged couple working in distant corners of the galaxy plan to arrive on Earth simultaneously and walk down the aisle together. But small incidents wreak havoc on their vast journeys, pushing the date of their wedding far into the future. As centuries pass on Earth and the land and climate change, one thing is constant: the desire of the lovers to be together. Through two pairs of interlinked stories, Kim Bo-young explores the driving forces of humanity – love, hope, creation, destruction, and the very meaning of existence.

  • 10 new books to read in April
    English(English) Article

    Fortune.com / April 01, 2021

    A mind-bending new collection of short stories from an internationally acclaimed author; a novel about gaming that doubles as a critique on the culture of violence against women in a post–2016-election world; and a guide to some of the world’s most fascinating places from one of America’s most beloved travelers and TV personalities of the last two decades. Here is a selection of new nonfiction and fiction works being published in April. Think Like a Breadwinner: A Wealth-Building Manifesto for Women Who Want to Earn More (and Worry Less) by Jennifer Barrett Available April 6 Touted as a new kind of manifesto for working women, with guidance on establishing a better work/life balance and managing personal finances, financial expert Jennifer Barrett posits what it means to be a breadwinner in the 21st century. She stresses the importance of women generating and accumulating their own wealth, underscoring the freedom and power that comes with being your own breadwinner.

  • Here Are the 15 New Books You Should Read in April
    English(English) Article

    Time Magazine / April 01, 2021

    The best new books arriving in April tackle a wide range of subjects, from a sweeping anthology that illuminates the history of Black farmers in the United States to the firsthand account of an EMT in New York City. This month welcomes the return of award-winning authors like Jhumpa Lahiri and Haruki Murakami as well as the first novels from Morgan Jerkins and JoAnne Tompkins. Here, the best books to read in April. We Are Each Other’s Harvest: Celebrating African American Farmers, Land, and Legacy, Natalie Baszile (April 6) In her new anthology, Natalie Baszile examines the relationship between Black farming and American culture through essays, photographs, first-person accounts and more. Together, these pieces dissect the legacy of Black farmers in the U.S. and the impact of land loss and food injustice over generations. In illuminating how these farmers persevered in the face of such challenges, Baszile creates a moving collection about identity, food and community.

  • Michelle Zauner, aka Japanese Breakfast, grapples with the loss of her mother in ‘Crying in H Mart’
    English(English) Article

    The Seattle Times / April 15, 2021

    In 2016, Oregon-raised Michelle Zauner released her first album under the alias Japanese Breakfast, “Psychopomp.” That same year, she won an essay contest in Glamour. The title of the essay, “Love, Loss, and Kimchi,” hints at some of the ways Zauner coped with profound grief: food, and by channeling creativity — two passions she shared with her mother, who passed away two years prior. Zauner’s new memoir, “Crying in H Mart,” grew from that essay, and the 2018 New Yorker article that shares the book’s name. In the memoir, Zauner chronicles the loss of her mother, who died from cancer when the author was in her early 20s. But to simply call it a grief memoir flattens what is truly a multidimensional work. This story is a nuanced portrayal of a young person grappling with what it means to embody familial and cultural histories, to be fueled by creative pursuits, to examine complex relationships with place, and to endure the acute pain of losing a parent just on the other side of a tumultuous adolescence. “Her memory was the archive of my existence,” Zauner says of her mother over Zoom on a recent spring afternoon. “This book is very much an ode to my mother.”