Photo de l'auteur

Sonya Chung

Auteur de Long for This World

2+ oeuvres 93 utilisateurs 8 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: Sonya Chung

Œuvres de Sonya Chung

Long for This World (2010) 52 exemplaires
The Loved Ones (2016) 41 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

The Late American Novel: Writers on the Future of Books (2011) — Contributeur — 64 exemplaires
This Is the Place: Women Writing About Home (2017) — Contributeur — 38 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Sexe
female
Nationalité
USA
Lieu de naissance
Washington, D.C., USA
Organisations
Columbia University
Courte biographie
Sonya was born in Washington, DC, and raised in suburban Maryland. She has also lived in Seattle and New England.  She loves wandering urban streets, growing vegetables, independent film, Paris, bourbon, good TV, cigars, four-minute poached eggs, baking, boots, her doglets Wallace & Louise, motorcycles, and kindness.  She is passionately DIY and prefers small living spaces to large ones. The book that made her want to be a writer was Annie Dillard’s A Pilgrim at Tinker Creek.

Membres

Critiques

I enjoyed reading this book, but it has some problems. First of all the composition of the book can get very confusing. There are two different families named Lee (each having a different connection to Korea), at many different times (forward flashes and back flashes). It i s difficult to keep it all strait.
The second problem was that people change over the year, but what spurred the changes is not immediately clear. Other life choices were a little too far fetched.
 
Signalé
Marietje.Halbertsma | 2 autres critiques | Jan 9, 2022 |
I'm not sure I'm the most objective judge of this book since Sonya's a friend and colleague and I was an early reader. But I was really moved by how my feelings for the characters deepened and ripened through the course of the novel—which was of course one of its major points, but that progression was done so skillfully, in a way that brought the reader in to a certain kind of complicity without being manipulative. The book has a wonderfully quirky rhythm that, once you fall into it, pulls you along through this often thorny story with a skittery third person POV, and after a certain point I just could not put it down for long. And at the end I teared up even though it wasn't sad or sentimental, I think just leaving the characters—none of whom were so overwhelmingly lovable on their surfaces—behind. Well done.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
lisapeet | 2 autres critiques | Feb 14, 2017 |
This was really lovely, a story of Korean and Korean-American families -- how they come together and pull apart -- and art and loss, all done with a true and light touch and no excess sentimentality. Chung has a great ear for language and an eye for nuance, and pulled me in steadily and surely -- by the end of the novel I was a bit surprised at how much I cared about every single character. There's a lot of heart in this book, and nothing overplayed.

My full review is rel="nofollow" target="_top">here.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
lisapeet | 4 autres critiques | Mar 31, 2013 |
A rare delight of lyrical beauty, skillful structure, and such real characters that I am convinced they are living and breathing on two continents.

Han Hyun-ku travels unannounced to reunite with his family in Korea, having left decades before to make a new life in the States. He has left his alcoholic wife, the formidable Dr. Lee. His eldest daughter, Jane, a photo-journalist, has narrowly escaped being blown to bits in Baghdad. She, too makes her way to her uncle’s home. She has left her alcoholic brother, Henry, a year out of re-hab, but still unable to be his own man on his own.

Han Hyun-ku's sister-in-law receives them all plus her younger brother, Chae Min-suk, a divorced artist. During the visit, Han Hyun-ku’s unhappy and pregnant daughter dies of kidney failure and Henry commits suicide by stepping in front of a speeding cab. Exhausted by her war-torn life, Jane finds a soul-mate in the artist.

They have a one-night stand, from which union, Jane gives birth to a son. Three years later, she returns to Korea with Joony so that he can meet his father, and lives are put back together.

We learn from Jane that life’s decisions must be made in split seconds; her motto is that it is wisest to run toward danger, rather than away from it. The indecisive and those who run away do not survive. Jane, her father, her aunt, and her lover are survivors.

"Some people are not long for this world," Jane remarks. "The rest of us survive."

I will be reading whatever Sonya Chung will be writing.
… (plus d'informations)
1 voter
Signalé
Limelite | 4 autres critiques | Dec 8, 2012 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
2
Aussi par
2
Membres
93
Popularité
#200,859
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
8
ISBN
10

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