Kyung-Sook Shin is one of South Korea's most widely read and acclaimed novelists. She has been honored with the Manhae Grand Prize for Literature, the Dong-in Literature Prize, and the Yi Sang Literary Prize, Mark of Respect Award (2012), and Ho-Am Prize for an Art (2013) as well as France's Prix de l'Inaper u and Man Asian Literary Prize (2011). She is the author of many prior works of fiction in addition to PLEASE LOOK AFTER MOTHER, which has been published in 41 countries, and was on the New York Times bestselling list. Shin was a visiting scholar at Columbia University from 2010 to 2011. She currently lives in Seoul.
This is a book which reminds us that we all suffer from the same
wounds, that no individual is free from the pains of their
geography and that the greatest losses can only be healed where
they all begin
*Defne Suman*
A book that makes you hurt all over and smile at the same time. The
experience being shared is so immediately relatable, so universal
yet Korean, so beautiful and powerful at the same time
*Kim Hyesoon*
I Went to See My Father features the author's hallmark emotional
richness combined with a precision of language that pierces the
soul. Just as Shin's Please Look After Mother gives a voice to the
forgotten mother, this novel vividly shows the father as a figure
whom we often overlook. Shin guides us on a journey of heartache to
literary catharsis
*Sang Young Park*
Shin threads together a lyrical family drama and the multi-layered
spectrum of Korean history in a compelling epic. It is not only a
story of love and pain between father and daughter, but of how
memories can heal tragic wounds and restore damaged relationships.
A powerful, elegant, page-turner
*J.M. Lee*
Gentle yet piercing . . . [I Went to See My Father is a]
sensitively crafted family portrait that's both specific and
universal and, above all, humane
*Kirkus Reviews*
Once more, Shin masterfully glides between quotidian details and
astounding feats of survival revealed through multiple voices
(older brothers, their mother, a wartime friend) and formats
(letters, recordings, long chat messages) to create another
universally empathic masterpiece
*Booklist, starred review*
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