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Book Club: Let’s Talk About Han Kang’s ‘We Do Not Part’ This Korean novel by the 2024 winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature turns a pet-sitting mission into a haunting reflection on ...
Last year, South Korea made headlines around the world for two reasons. The first was writer Han Kang’s celebrated Nobel prize for literature win in October; the second was far less positive ...
Nobel laureate Han Kang. Credit: Getty Images The blank, frozen landscape serves as a canvas for Han, a space where history becomes as vivid as the present.
In March, the Book Review Book Club will read and discuss “We Do Not Part,” the Nobel laureate Han Kang’s novel about history, tragedy and the work of remembering.
Han Kang’s characters have looked squarely at histories of state-sanctioned murder and carry the wounds of those histories. In We Do Not Part, Han Kang faces unbearable historical traumas with ...
We Do Not Part. By Han Kang. Translated by e. yaewon and Paige Morris. Hogarth; 272 pages; $28. Hamish Hamilton; £18.99 MOST VISITORS to Jeju island arrive by plane. The sea foams as you descend ...
Before Han Kang, we have to go back to the Chinese Mo Yan in 2012, the Japanese Kenzaburo Oe in 1994, the Egyptian Naghib Mahfuz in 1988 and again the Japanese Yasunari Kawabata in 1968. Born on ...
We Do Not Part is the latest book by Korean writer Han Kang, who won the Nobel prize in literature in 2024. The book begins in fragments that ebb between dark dream, waking nightmare and memories ...
The Nobel laureate’s new novel “We Do Not Part” grapples with an atrocity and the difficulties of bearing witness.
When she wakes up, we learn that this dream is not new to her. In fact, it’s among the nightmares that have haunted her for years. Kyungha, the protagonist of Han Kang’s novel We Do Not Part ...
Grade: 4.5/5.0 “We Do Not Part” comes to us as the most recent work from 2024 Nobel Prize winner Han Kang. Originally published in 2021, the English translation by e. yaewon and Paige Aniyah ...
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