The Guest

Translated by Kyung-Ja, Maya West
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Product Details

Format Hardcover
ISBN-10 1-58322-693-1
ISBN-13 978-1-58322-693-3
Publication Date Nov 2005
Nb of pages 368

Format Paperback
ISBN-10 1583227512
ISBN-13 978-1-58322-751-0
Publication Date Apr 2007
Nb of pages 234


Description

Based on actual events, The Guest is a profound portrait of a divided people haunted by a painful past, and a generation's search for reconciliation.

During the Korean War, Hwanghae Province in North Korea was the setting of a gruesome fifty-two day massacre. In an act of collective amnesia the atrocities were attributed to American military, but in truth they resulted from malicious battling between Christian and Communist Koreans. Forty years later, Ryu Yosop, a minister living in America returns to his home village, where his older brother once played a notorious role in the bloodshed. Besieged by vivid memories and visited by the troubled spirits of the deceased, Yosop must face the survivors of the tragedy and lay his brother's soul to rest.

Faulkner-like in its intense interweaving narratives, The Guest is a daring and ambitious novel from a major figure in world literature.

Hwang Sok-Yong is arguably Korea's most recognized and renowned author. In 1993 there was international outcry when Hwang was sentenced to 7 years in prison for an unauthorized trip to the North to promote exchange between artists in North and South Korea. In 1998, he was released on a special pardon by the new president. The recipient of Korea's highest literary prizes and shortlisted for the Prix Femina Estranger, his novels and shorts stories are published in North and South Korea, Japan, China, France, Germany, and America.

Read John Feffer, author of North Korea/South Korea, on Hwang Sok-Yong's The Guest here.


Reviews

Press Reviews

Le Figaro Litteraire
Writing that refuses to ignore suffering, but at the same time refuses to let itself be destroyed by destruction—which is a great challenge to any author.

Kirkus Reviews
Expert, idiomatic translation renders visible a story that helps explain the present weirdness in North Korea . . . [T]he story with its great insight into the region, is deeply rewarding.

TimeASIA Magazine
A provocative novel . . . with a subtle power. [Hwang] takes the reader to the edge of a gruesome scene, then steps back and focuses on the sort of mundane detail that sticks in one's mind more firmly than any blood-splattered image.

Publishers Weekly
Vivid snapshots from the Korean War and surreal encounters with ghosts intersect in the first major US release by award-winning Korean novelist Sok-yong . . . an ambitious exploration of a postwar survivor's chaotic psyche.

Liberation
Hwang Sok-Yong is the most committed, politcally active writer of all those who have translated the Korean in recent years.