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      • Fiction

        Sequel to The Only Child​

        by Seo Mi Ae

        This is the 2n​ d​ book in the trilogy which also can be read as a stand alone. ​The Only Child 2​ is a psychological thriller compared to Thomas Harris’ Silence of the Lambs.Unkyung, who’s married to a surgeon and just found out she’s pregnant with his child, feels like a tightrope walker at all times. Her stepdaughter, Hayoung, is one unnerving mystery that flails a knife at a stray bat. Her husband has also proven to be a tough nut to crack, even more so when he insists on moving against her will, supposedly for the wellbeing of her and their unborn child. While she tries to adapt to her new life in a small seaside village, terrifying truths from the past, one by one, surface—about her stepdaughter, her husband, his dead ex-wife, and the house they’ve moved into.

      • Fiction

        Where are the Bodies?​

        by Park Yeon-sun

        Musun, a twenty-year-old college drop-out is left to care for her 80-year-old Grandma Kang, after the death of her grandfather. Marooned in a tiny mountain village, with no TV, cable, internet or phone service, Musun feels doomed to have the worst summer of her life. That is, until she happens across an old map which causes her to embark on an unsolved mystery that has hung over the village: what happened to four young girls who disappeared fifteen years ago? With her irascible Grandma Kang, and a young village boy, this unlikely threesome solves the mystery that has plagued the village andMusun ends up having a summer to be remembered! With the humor of Un-su Kim’s The Plotters,​ a Korean Nancy Drew, and like an Agatha Christie.

      • Fiction

        The Cabinet

        by Un-su Kim

        THE CABINET IS A STORY ABOUT THE DOCUMENTS that record these symptomers and the man who manages the documents in Cabinet 13. This seemingly ordinary, old cabinet is filled with stories that are peculiar, strange, eye-popping, disgusting, enraging, and touching. However, the fast changing world is also full of all sorts of unbelievable things. Perhaps symptomers exist not only in the novel but also in the real world. Perhaps some of us do not accept our past and instead, erase our memories and create new ones. Some of us might want to become a wooden doll or a cat rather than live in pain as a human. And if you look around, you can find those who can love no one but themselves or their alter egos.The narrator is an office worker in his 30s, as ordinary as the cabinet. But he once spent 178 days drinking nothing but cans of beer. And his colleague Son Jeong-eun is a quiet, chubby girl who draws nobody’s attention. But she also has a strange habit of devouring more than 100 pieces of sushi at once. In this novel, the cabinet is a container that holds all the truths of the world. Kim Un-su puts truth into the cabinet “as it is” and keeps it fresh under proper temperature and moisture, utilizing his precise prose and rich style. Each episode, preposterous and weird, is intricately interwoven with the narrator’s story piles atop each other like Lego blocks that form a perfectly assembled structure. Unfolding peculiar and heart-freezing episodes, the author tells us that this is an ‘ordinary’ story and at the same time, the truth “as it is,” as natural as the wind blowing, flowers blossoming and snow falling. The moment you turn the last page of the book, you will come to think about which strange stories are inside your own cabinet. And you will be also curious about what story the author will pull out of his cabinet next time.

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