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Orphans in the Dark
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18239 |
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BOOK WORLD
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10 / 1990 |
3,570 Words |
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Bruce Fulton Bruce Fulton is a translator of Korean literature and a former
Peace Corps volunteer in Korea. |
PARAMUI NOK (SPIRIT ON THE WIND)
O Chong-hui
Seoul: Munhakkwa Chisong Publishing Co., 1986
287 pp., 3,200 won ($4.50)
MANCH'WIDANGGI: CHE 20 HOE TONGINMUNHAKSANG
SUSANG-JAKP'UMJIP
(MEMORIES OF MANCH'WI HOUSE: THE TWENTIETH TONGIN LITERATURE PRIZE ANTHOLOGY)
Kim Mun-su and others
Seoul: Choson Daily Publishing Co., 1989
333 pp., 3,900 won ($5.75)
A high school girl rifles the desks of her classmates in their dark, empty classroom. With the proceeds she visits a toy shop and adds to her collection of dozens of plastic self-righting dolls. One day she sees her pregnant mother enter a dance hall and consort with unfamiliar men. The girl stops in the toy shop on her way home and asks the crippled owner if she can stay with her overnight. After a sexual encounter they sleep together.
Thus begins what is surely one of the most remarkable debuts in modern Korean literature - O Chong-hui's “The Toy shop Woman” (1968). Published when O was barely twenty as the prizewinning story in the annual newcomers' literary contest sponsored by the Chungang Daily in Seoul, it is a far cry from the stories of adolescent love and friendship O had written as a middle school student. A precociously morbid study of abandonment and loneliness, it prefigures much of what was to come
... (1996 of 20481 Characters)
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