Stingray
Hailed by critics, Stingray has been described by its author as "a critical biography of my loving mother." With his father having abandoned his family for another woman, Se-young and his mother are forced to subsist on their own in the harsh environment of a small Korean farming village in the 1950s. Determined to wait for her husband's return, Se-young's mother hangs a dried stingray on the kitchen doorjamb; to her, it's a reminder of the fact that she still has a husband, and that she must behave as a married woman would, despite all. Also, she claims, when the family is reunited, the fish will be their first, celebratory meal together. But when a beggar girl, Sam-rae, sneaks into their house during a blizzard, the first thing she does is eat the stingray, and what follows is a struggle, at once sentimental and ideological, for the soul of the household.
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Stingray
Hailed by critics, Stingray has been described by its author as "a critical biography of my loving mother." With his father having abandoned his family for another woman, Se-young and his mother are forced to subsist on their own in the harsh environment of a small Korean farming village in the 1950s. Determined to wait for her husband's return, Se-young's mother hangs a dried stingray on the kitchen doorjamb; to her, it's a reminder of the fact that she still has a husband, and that she must behave as a married woman would, despite all. Also, she claims, when the family is reunited, the fish will be their first, celebratory meal together. But when a beggar girl, Sam-rae, sneaks into their house during a blizzard, the first thing she does is eat the stingray, and what follows is a struggle, at once sentimental and ideological, for the soul of the household.
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Overview

Hailed by critics, Stingray has been described by its author as "a critical biography of my loving mother." With his father having abandoned his family for another woman, Se-young and his mother are forced to subsist on their own in the harsh environment of a small Korean farming village in the 1950s. Determined to wait for her husband's return, Se-young's mother hangs a dried stingray on the kitchen doorjamb; to her, it's a reminder of the fact that she still has a husband, and that she must behave as a married woman would, despite all. Also, she claims, when the family is reunited, the fish will be their first, celebratory meal together. But when a beggar girl, Sam-rae, sneaks into their house during a blizzard, the first thing she does is eat the stingray, and what follows is a struggle, at once sentimental and ideological, for the soul of the household.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781564789938
Publisher: Deep Vellum Publishing
Publication date: 11/16/2013
Series: Library of Korean Literature Series , #1
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 88
File size: 216 KB

About the Author

Kim Joo-Young was born in 1939, and graduated from the
Sorabol Art College majoring in creative writing, and made his literary début with Resting Stage, which won the 1971
New Writer’s Award. A leading and popular exponent of “documentary” fiction,
set in meticulously researched historical periods, Kim has also served as the director of the Paradise Culture Foundation in Seoul since 2005.

Translator, teacher, and artist Inrae You Vinciguerra graduated from Seoul National University of
Education and was a schoolteacher for many years in South Korea, Japan, and
America. She and her husband the artist Louis Vinciguerra have together translated numerous Korean novels and short stories into English.

Translator, teacher, and artist Inrae You Vinciguerra graduated from Seoul National University of
Education and was a schoolteacher for many years in South Korea, Japan, and
America. She and her husband the artist Louis Vinciguerra have together translated numerous Korean novels and short stories into English.

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