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No One Writes Back (2009)

door Jang Eun-jin

Andere auteurs: Zie de sectie andere auteurs.

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Communication--or the lack thereof--is the subject of this sly update of the picaresque.
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Toon 3 van 3
I can't remember where I found this little gem, or more likely where I read about it before buying it.

Obviously this is not written by a westerner, but the impression of reading it is something like being put on a Japanese train for a long journey. Yes, I know the author is not Japanese but you get the idea. Nothing about the train would be familiar or the signs or the announcements but looking out the window would make perfect sense, trees, fields, clouds, hills, these are things that everyone understands.

Reading this book is like being taken on a very foreign journey by complete strangers. Very little of what they say and nothing of what they do makes any sense whatsoever but that peripheral vision is what keeps you in there. I don't know if people do lead stranger lives than us in Korea but then maybe they wonder the same thing about us.

Simple every day events are described like scenes from Mars. It is a very sparse story, only 148 pages but that is not what I mean, it is as if the 60 or 100 words on a page only describe about 12 words to us. You read a page and all you are left with is gaps and odd details and some strange feelings without names.

It's about a man and a dog who go on a journey and meet a woman, no two women, but only one of them matters, at least in the beginning, and no one has any sex, at least not directly, and the man writes a letter or two and no one dies except anyone that matters or something like that. Oh and it is in English.

That's about it really, except It is much much better than it sounds. ( )
  Ken-Me-Old-Mate | Sep 24, 2020 |
This novel was recommended to me by a friend (who is of Korean descent), after discussing my enjoyment of Han Kang's The Vegetarian. The Library of Korean Literature brings modern Korean novels to an English-reading audience (much like the Japan Library). This novel was translated by Jung Yewon.

The protagonist reminds me of the main character in The Rosie Project, but this is a more serious work. The paragraphs are numbered, and I found the structure to be unusual.

I recall in high school English how we would map the trajectory of a novel's plot, from the build up to the climax and the anti-climax. This novel builds up slowly, and I recall thinking it wasn't very good. The basic story line is a seemingly autistic man in his thirties who has broken up with his girlfriend, quit his job as a postman, and travels randomly from town to town with his late grandfather's seeing-eye dog who is old and blind.

As he meets people on his journey, the protagonist asks them for their address, he then assigns them a number (he is much better at numbers than names), and sends them a letter during his journey. He meets a woman he wishes to be rid of but he helps her sell her novels on the various subways and they stay in motels as they both travel around. He will end his journey when one of his travelling numbers writes back.

After a while, this becomes a bit tedious, but interesting in that one has to know where it is going. The lead-up to the climax is long and drawn out but in the last few pages, the climax brings a tsunami of emotion that still haunts me. I was stricken with sadness, grief, bliss (in the religious sense), and wonder.

Had I given up on the novel, I would have missed out on a wonderful story, the likes of which I have never read in Anglo literature.

I am pleased that organisations such as Japan Library and the Korean Library of Literature are bringing contemporary works from these countries to English readers. There is a long list of other contemporary Korean novels that I am sure are worth a look.

It is not so much that there is much difference in the lives of Korean towns (indeed, I often thought of similar experiences in places like Hong Kong), but the way the story unfolds. It edges towards suggestive at times, but is never lewd, it is close to grunge but not in a dark, Bukowskian (or even Carverian) way, it touches on poverty, but you never feel the characters lack anything.

The more I think about it, the lead up to the climax is all middle ground. There are no real humps or bumps, it just flows along like a three-year long journey. But when something brings the journey to an end, all is revealed in a matter of pages.

It is like being lulled into a false sense of security that is suddenly pulled out from under you. Like a flash flood or an unexpected tsunami. This is a powerful story, and the second contemporary Korean novel I have read. There is much to be gained from reading outside of the Anglo-European tradition, and from what I have read so far, Korean literature is fast becoming a new favourite genre for me. ( )
  madepercy | Dec 26, 2018 |
I discovered this book after a friend requested it as a birthday present, and I decided to read it as well. I am so glad I did! I found the story to be unique and fascinating. It's a very quick read, but I found myself wanting to delay finishing it because I was enjoying it so much and didn't want it to end. This is one of those books that I can only hope would have a sequel so I can spend more time with these characters. I doubt that it ever will, and the ending is satisfying and does not require any additional exposition, but a man can dream. It has also made me consider reading more titles from this publishing company that I had never heard of but has a good reputation given what I've read about it online.

I highly recommend this book! ( )
  LSUTiger | Jul 25, 2015 |
Toon 3 van 3

» Andere auteurs toevoegen (7 mogelijk)

AuteursnaamRolType auteurWerk?Status
Jang Eun-jinprimaire auteuralle editiesberekend
Yewon, JungVertalerSecundaire auteursommige editiesbevestigd

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I left home with an MP3 player and a novel in an old backpack. And with Wajo.
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