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Showing 1 - 13 of
13 matches in All Departments
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The Hole (Paperback)
Hye-Young Pyun; Translated by Sora Kim-Russell
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R395
R353
Discovery Miles 3 530
Save R42 (11%)
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Ships in 5 - 10 working days
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Oghi wakes in a hospital bed unable to speak or move. The car accident
that killed his wife has left him trapped in his own body and under the
control of his mother-in-law, as she grieves the loss of her only child.
Isolated from his friends and neglected by his nurse, Oghi’s world
shrinks to the room he lies in and his memories of his wife, a
sensitive woman who found solace in cultivating her garden.
But as Oghi remains alone and paralysed, his mother-in-law is hard at
work in the now-abandoned garden, uprooting what her daughter had
worked so hard to plant and obsessively digging larger and larger holes…
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Mater 2-10 (Paperback)
Hwang Sok-yong; Translated by Sora Kim-Russell, Youngjae Josephine Bae
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R724
R653
Discovery Miles 6 530
Save R71 (10%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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At Dusk (Paperback)
Hwang Sok-yong; Translated by Sora Kim-Russell
1
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R366
R331
Discovery Miles 3 310
Save R35 (10%)
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Ships in 9 - 17 working days
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In the evening of his life, a wealthy man begins to wonder if he
might have missed the point. Park Minwoo is, by every measure, a
success story. Born into poverty in a miserable neighbourhood of
Seoul, he has ridden the wave of development in a rapidly
modernising society. Now the director of a large architectural
firm, his hard work and ambition have brought him triumph and
satisfaction. But when his company is investigated for corruption,
he's forced to reconsider his role in the transformation of his
country. At the same time, he receives an unexpected message from
an old friend, Cha Soona, a woman that he had once loved, and then
betrayed. As memories return unbidden, Minwoo recalls a world he
thought had been left behind - a world he now understands that he
has helped to destroy. In At Dusk, one of Korea's most renowned and
respected authors continues his gentle yet urgent project of
evaluating Korea's past, and examining the things, and the people,
that have been given up in a never-ending quest to move forward.
From the Shirley Jackson Award–winning author of The Hole,
a slow-burning noir thriller with a touch of horror and the
uncanny A disappearance. A missing brother. A lawyer asking
questions. And a vast forest in the mountains—the western
woods—where the trees huddle close together emanating a crushing
darkness and a chill dampness fills the air. The ranger, In-su
Park, who lives nearby with his family, is a recovering
alcoholic. He claims no knowledge of the man who disappeared, even
though the missing man had worked as the ranger just before him. In
the little village down the mountain, the shopkeepers will do the
same and deny they ever saw or knew the man, though they’re less
convincing; and his former supervisor at the Forestry Research
Center, Professor Jin, dismisses his importance. But when an
accident and a death derail the investigation and someone attempts
to break into his office, In-su Park finds himself conducting his
own inquiry into the goings-on deep in the heart of the western
woods—spurred by the mysterious words he discovers on a piece of
paper beneath his desk: “In the forest the owl cries.†The Owl
Cries is a treat for fans of Stephen King, David Lynch, and the
nightmare dystopias of Franz Kafka.
In 1993, writer and democracy activist Hwang Sok-yong was sentenced
to five years in the Seoul Detention Center upon his return to
South Korea from North Korea, the country he had fled with his
family as a child at the start of the Korean War. Already a
dissident writer well-known for his part in the democracy movement
of the 1980s, Hwang's imprisonment forced him to consider the many
prisons to which he was subject-of thought, of writing, of Cold War
nations, of the heart. In this capacious memoir, Hwang's life is
set against the volatile political backdrop of modern Korea, a
country subject to colonialism, Cold War division, a devastating
war, decades of authoritarian dictatorships, a mass democratic
uprising, and a still-lingering, painful division between North and
South. The Prisoner moves between Hwang's imprisonment and scenes
from his life-as a boy in Pyongyang and Seoul, as a young activist
protesting South Korea's military dictatorships, as a soldier in
the Vietnam War, as a dissident writer first traveling abroad-and
in so doing, braids his extraordinary life into the dramatic
revolutions and transformations of Korean society during the
twentieth century.
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The Hole (Paperback)
Hye-Young Pyun; Translated by Sora Kim-Russell
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R379
R353
Discovery Miles 3 530
Save R26 (7%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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At Dusk (Paperback)
Hwang Sok-yong; Translated by Sora Kim-Russell
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R380
R353
Discovery Miles 3 530
Save R27 (7%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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Princess Bari (Paperback)
Hwang Sok-yong; Translated by Sora Kim-Russell
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R367
R343
Discovery Miles 3 430
Save R24 (7%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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Old Wrestler (Pamphlet)
Jeon Sungtae; Translated by Sora Kim-Russell
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R224
R202
Discovery Miles 2 020
Save R22 (10%)
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Ships in 9 - 17 working days
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Nominated for the PEN Translation Prize and the Best Translated
Book Award A nameless narrator passes through her life, searching
for meaning and connection in experiences she barely feels. For
her, time and identity blur, and all action is reaction. She can't
quite understand what motivates others to take life seriously
enough to focus on anything-for her existence is a loosely woven
tapestry of fleeting concepts. From losing her virginity to
mindless jobs and a splintered, unsupportive family, the lessons
learned have less to do with the reality we all share and more to
do with the truth of the imagination, which is where the narrator
focuses to discover herself.
Beauty Looks Down On Me is a collection of by turns sad and funny
stories about the thwarted expectations of the young as they grow
older. HeeKyung's characters are misfits who by virtue of their
bodies or their lack of social status are left to dream of
momentous changes that will never come. Unsatisfied with work, with
family, with friends, they lose themselves in diets, books, and
blogs. Heekyung's collection humorously but humanely depicts the
loneliness and monotony found in many modern lives.
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