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Cover for 9781931907415 Cover for 9781931907125 Cover for 9780824821920 Cover for 9780824826390 Cover for 9781931907040 Cover for 9781885445612 Cover for 9781885445018 Cover for 9789231034299 Cover for 9780765601360 Cover for 9780765601377
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Somewhere on the periphery of Seoul, between the modern metropolis and the traditional farming communities, lies a "distant and beautiful place," the neighborhood of Wonmi-dong. Here, a young couple from the city struggles to make a home for themselves; a hapless "salary man" is forced into door-to-door sales after losing his job; a precocious seven-year-old questions the meaning of friendship and community. Everyone seems to be chasing the intangible dream of a better life. Set against the backdrop of South Korea's breakneck drive for industrialization and economic development in the 1980s, these compassionate and often humorous stories capture the essence of modern South Korean life-including the ubiquitous atmosphere of violence and fear that clouded the country prior to democratization in 1987. They also depict the Korean people's unfailing optimism and love of life. A Distant and Beautiful Place first appeared as a series of linked stories in literary journals between 1985 and 1987. It was published as the collection Wonmi-dong saramdul in 1987 and quickly became a best seller. Yang Kwija, one of South Korea's most respected and popular authors, has since published dozens of novels and shorter pieces.

Hardcover:

9780824821920 | Univ of Hawaii Pr, December 1, 2002, cover price $41.00

Paperback:

9780824826390 | Univ of Hawaii Pr, December 1, 2002, cover price $16.00 | About this edition: Somewhere on the periphery of Seoul, between the modern metropolis and the traditional farming communities, lies a "distant and beautiful place," the neighborhood of Wonmi-dong.

cover image for 9781931907040
By Julie Pickering (trans), Han Sung-Won and Yu Young-Man (trans)

Paperback:

9781931907040 | Homa & Sekey Books, August 1, 2002, cover price $17.95

cover image for 9781885445612
Yi Ch'ông-Jun has long been recognized as one of Korea's most prolific and demanding authors. Since his debut in 1965, he has enjoyed consistent critical and commercial success. His characters are ordinary people--writers, farmers, photographers and artisans--all struggling to survive in an increasingly materialistic and complicated society. They search for life's significance in the whirlwind change of modern Korea only to discover that the answers to their questions run deep beneath the surface of reality. This collection provides a cross-section of Yi's work, beginning with the haunting novella, The Falconer (1968) and ending with The Fire Worshipers, which won the National Literary Award from the Korean Culture and Arts Foundation in 1986. (view table of contents)

Hardcover:

9781885445612 | Cornell Univ East Asia Program, April 1, 1999, cover price $20.00

Paperback:

9781885445018 | Cornell Univ East Asia Program, April 1, 1999, cover price $10.00 | About this edition: Yi Ch'ông-Jun has long been recognized as one of Korea's most prolific and demanding authors.

Hwang Sun-won, perhaps the most beloved and respected Korean writer of the 20th century, based this extraordinary novel on his own experiences in his North Korean home village between the end of World War II and the eve of the Korean War when Korea had been divided into North and South by its two "liberators" - the United States and the Soviet Union. In this story the Soviet-backed communist party, using the promise of land reform, sets people at each other's throat. Portrayed here is an entire community caught in the political and social firestorm that brings out the selfishness, cruelty and ignorance of simple people, but also shows their loyalty and nobility. Compelling here, too, is a heroine who represents the "eternally feminine" for all Korean men, and the setting, the harsh political, psychic and physical landscape of rural postwar North Korea rarely glimpsed by the outside world. Hwang Sun-won is an artist of consummate delicacy and subtlety, and his writing is marked by keen psychological insight and steely asceticism. While three collections of his short stories have appeared in Hong Kong and the West, "The Descendants of Cain" is the first English translation of a Hwang Sun-won novel.
By Julie Pickering (trans) and Ji-Moon Suh (trans)

Paperback:

9789231034299 | UNESCO, May 1, 1997, cover price $30.00 | About this edition: Hwang Sun-won, perhaps the most beloved and respected Korean writer of the 20th century, based this extraordinary novel on his own experiences in his North Korean home village between the end of World War II and the eve of the Korean War when Korea had been divided into North and South by its two "liberators" - the United States and the Soviet Union.

Miscellaneous:

9780765633958, titled "Descendants of Cain" | M E Sharpe Inc, July 11, 1997, cover price $12.99 | also contains The Descendants of Cain

Hwang Sun-won, perhaps the most beloved and respected Korean writer of the 20th century, based this extraordinary novel on his own experiences in his North Korean home village between the end of World War II and the eve of the Korean War when Korea had been divided into North and South by its two "liberators" - the United States and the Soviet Union. In this story the Soviet-backed communist party, using the promise of land reform, sets people at each other's throat. Portrayed here is an entire community caught in the political and social firestorm that brings out the selfishness, cruelty and ignorance of simple people, but also shows their loyalty and nobility. Compelling here, too, is a heroine who represents the "eternally feminine" for all Korean men, and the setting, the harsh political, psychic and physical landscape of rural postwar North Korea rarely glimpsed by the outside world. Hwang Sun-won is an artist of consummate delicacy and subtlety, and his writing is marked by keen psychological insight and steely asceticism. While three collections of his short stories have appeared in Hong Kong and the West, "The Descendants of Cain" is the first English translation of a Hwang Sun-won novel.

Hardcover:

9780765601360 | M E Sharpe Inc, July 1, 1997, cover price $158.00 | About this edition: Hwang Sun-won, perhaps the most beloved and respected Korean writer of the 20th century, based this extraordinary novel on his own experiences in his North Korean home village between the end of World War II and the eve of the Korean War when Korea had been divided into North and South by its two "liberators" - the United States and the Soviet Union.

Paperback:

9780765601377 | M E Sharpe Inc, July 1, 1997, cover price $47.95

Miscellaneous:

9780765633958, titled "Descendants of Cain" | M E Sharpe Inc, July 11, 1997, cover price $12.99 | also contains The Descendants of Cain

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