Man Asian Literary Prize-winner Shin Kyung-sook came over from Seoul to be our guest of honour at the launch of our Korea issue. We were also joined by a full and enthusiastic audience at the Asia Society Hong Kong Centre's Miller Theatre. The former Explosives Magazine proved a fitting location for the launch of an explosive magazine, and we hope that our Korea issue and Shin's achievement will help to bring contemporary Korean literature to a wider audience.
Press
Korea Herald
Korea Times
Yonhap (see below)
Time Out Hong Kong
Asia Society Hong Kong Centre (with video of the event)
Korea Literature Translation Institute (KLTI)
The South China Morning Post and other media will be featuring the launch and Shin's visit shortly. Watch this space for links, video footage and more.
Novelist Shin Brings Korea to Forefront of World Literature: Critic
By Kim Young-gyo
HONG KONG, May 9 (Yonhap)
SOUTH KOREAN NOVELIST Shin Kyung-sook has opened doors for Korean literature
to the world audience, marking the start of the Korean wave in the literary
community, a critic has said.
"(Shin is) a great winner who has
brought Korea to the forefront of world literature," Martin Alexander, editor in
chief and poetry editor for the Hong Kong-based Asia Literary Review, said in a
discussion with Shin late Tuesday, which was hosted by the Asia Society Hong
Kong Center.
In March, Shin became the first woman and the
first South Korean to win the Man Asian Literary Prize for her novel, "Please
Look After Mom." The prize is an annual literary award given to the best novel
by an Asian writer, either written in English or translated into English, and
published in the previous calendar year.
The novel
depicts a family's search for their mother, who goes missing one afternoon amid
the crowds of a Seoul subway station.
The English translation of
Shin's novel entered the coveted New York Times best seller list last year,
ranking 21st on the New York Times Hardcover Fiction Best Seller
List.
"When I read that book, I was overwhelmed by the mystery
of it, thinking they are going to find their mother and the mother has to be
found, because that's the happy ending. What I realized is this is not about
finding a mother," said Alexander.
"I discovered that it's not
about physically getting the mother back in the house. It's about finding out
about your own mother. That idea about the identity of the lost is something so
powerful in that book, making it universal."
The Asia Literary
Review, a quarterly literary journal published in Hong Kong and distributed
internationally, launched Tuesday a special issue on Korean literature.
Alexander said the issue will mark a watershed for Korean
literature, celebrating the identity of Korea and of its writers.
"Apart from Hyundai or Samsung, people had not really known
about Korean culture or Korean literature," the editor in chief said.
"K-pop and Korean soap operas are viewed with passion from Iran
to Mongolia, but Korean literature had not really hit the world. We hope
that with the help of Shin Kyung-sook and this edition, it
will."

This event was held in association with the Asia Society Hong Kong Centre