JENNY HEIJUN WILLS was born in Seoul, South Korea and was adopted and raised in a white family in Southern-Ontario, Canada. In 2008 she reunited with her family in Asia. She's lived, studied, and worked in Toronto, Montreal, Boston, and Seoul and holds a PhD in English Literary Studies. She currently teaches at the University of Winnipeg in Manitoba.
* Finalist for the Hilary Weston Writers' Trust Prize for
Nonfiction
* Winner of the Eileen McTavish Sykes Award for Best First Book (a
Manitoba Book Award)
* One of Globe and Mail's Best Book of 2019
* A CBC Best Canadian Non-Fiction of 2019
* A Winnipeg Free Press choice for top 10 best Manitoba
books of last decade Finely observed, meticulous, and candid, this
memoir offers its subjects no easy redemptions, only the chance to
grow together towards greater understanding. Older Sister. Not
Necessarily Related. captures Canada at its richest, deeply
rooted in home while also very much part of the world. --2019
Hilary Weston Writers' Trust Prize for Nonfiction Jury "Reflecting
on that which families, in various incarnations, might owe to each
other, Older Sister. Not Necessarily Related forges and
mourns familial bonds in necessarily relatable and devastatingly
exceptional ways."--Nyala Ali, Winnipeg Free Press "One of
the most courageous, moving and achingly beautiful memoirs I've
ever read. Jenny Heijun Wills brings uniquely to voice the complex
emotional landscapes of transnational adoption. Her book represents
an urgent and wide-reaching social question in the most luminously
intimate terms. --David Chariandy, author of Brother "In
Older Sister, Wills has made a searching, fearless mix of
memoir and fiction to do the impossible: to put a story together of
her family and herself, made out of the mix of rumor and fact,
lost, found and false left for a Korean adoptee. Much the way she
invented herself, she invents the story here, locating her
authenticity ultimately in herself. An electric meditation on
connection, culture and desire." --Alexander Chee, author of How
to Write an Autobiographical Novel "Adoption is a complex,
provocative issue. Mix it with differences in race, nationality,
and culture, and adoption becomes volatile. Jenny Heijun Wills is
exactly the person we need to write about this volatility. Smart,
critical, and edgy, Wills brings a sensitive, historically
informed, and intersectional consciousness to this topic. The
result is an urgent and necessary book." --Viet Thanh Nguyen,
author of The Sympathizer "Older Sister by Jenny
Heijun Wills will resonate with anyone who has grappled with their
identity, their definition of family, their roots. Who has wondered
who am I and how did I get here? In excavating the common human
condition of not fitting in, Wills's memoir reveals a unique mind,
and more than once I found myself remembering the story of The Ugly
Duckling, and better understanding my own search for belonging and
becoming." --Yasuko Thanh, Mistakes to Run With Jenny Heijun
Wills has no interest in easy answers or comforting fictions. She
sees herself and the world around her with an unsparing, incisive
clarity, rendering her experiences in their full complexity,
horror, and beauty. Older Sister is a memoir of lasting
power, a vivid and intimate story of urgent, far-reaching
consequence. --Kim Fu, author of The Lost Girls of Camp
Forevermore
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