Showing posts with label Korea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Korea. Show all posts
Thursday, 14 March 2013
When my name was Keoko
When my name was Keoko by Linda Sue Park (University of Queensland Press)
PB RRP $16.95
ISBN 9 780702 249 747
Reviewed by Jo Antareau
Imagine living in a country that has been invaded by, then taken over by another. All of a sudden, you are no longer allowed to speak your language, tell stories passed down through generations, or even use the name you were born with. Years before Gangnam Style and K-pop, this was Korea’s reality. A country occupied by the Japanese and its people forced to do whatever Japanese invaders told them to.
Written for children over 9 years, this story is based on events that the author’s parents lived through. Both sad and funny, Linda Sue Park tells the story of Kim Sun-hee, a girl who never forgot her name even when forced to take on a Japanese name, Keoko. Park details the everyday outrages that were perpetrated on ordinary people, such as when Sun-hee’s brother Tae-yul had to give up the bicycle he painstakingly rebuilt because a Japanese soldier took a fancy to it.
The tone of the novel changes half way, as World War two commences. Koreans were expected to support Japan’s war effort by giving up their valuable possessions. Then Sun-hee’s beloved uncle disappears and although the family suspect he has joined the resistance movement, they have no way of knowing whether he is still alive.
With food and goods scarce, the families of Koreans who enlist with the Japanese army are rewarded with larger rations, older brother Tae-yul (who dreamed of being a pilot) joins up, to the outrage of the family. However Sun-hee never loses faith in him, believing he had a plan to sabotage any mission he took part in. Written in alternating viewpoints, tension mounts as Park drops hints about what Tae-yul feels he must do, and the final twist caught me by surprise.
I found this story well written and engrossing to read. American author, Linda Sue Park won the Newbery prize with her previous novel, A Single Shard.
Labels:
Jo Antareau,
Korea,
Linda Sue Park,
Newbery Medal,
Older Readers,
UQP,
When my name was Keoko,
World War Two
Wednesday, 30 May 2012
A Single Shard
PB RRP $16.95
ISBN 9780702239373
Reviewed byJo Burnell
Reviewed by
A Single Shard won the Newbery Award for the Most
Distinguished Contribution to American Literature for Children in 2002. Fancy
words for a simple tale that will touch the hearts of all who hear or read it.
Linda Sue Park has woven historical facts from 12th
century Korea and Korean Celadon pottery with unlikely heroes. The result is a
warm, enticing tale for all.
Tree Ear was orphaned as a toddler. Monks asked Crane
Man, homeless, disabled and living under a bridge, to mind the child as they
searched unsuccessfully for relatives. When they return ready to take the child
to a nearby monastery, Tree Ear would not be parted from Crane Man.
So began the pair's happy struggle for survival under
the bridge. Together they eked out a simple but honourable existence on the
edge of starvation, adhering to Crane Man's philosophy: 'there are many ways to
garner a meal, but stealing and begging make a man no better than a dog'.
A Single Shard is the tale of how, amid this fight for
survival, ten year old Tree Ear's hopes and dreams of being a Celadon Potter
rise and fall in a village filled with potters. Tree Ear's longing collides
with the cantankerous Min, Master Potter, and his kind-hearted wife.
Join Tree Ear as his efforts to be a trustworthy
assistant are met with obstacles and resistance. I could't put the book down as
I cheered him on, only to find him fall once more. Tree Ear is not the sort to
give up easily, but the peaks of tiny triumphs wrestled time and again with
difficulties and tragedy.
Will Tree Ear ever reach his dream? A Single Shard touched me to my core, revealing my own real life fears and hopes. Sometimes
life blocks us on our journey to fulfilment, or does it?
Labels:
A Single Shard,
Jo Burnell,
Korea,
Linda Sue Park,
Newbery Medal,
UQP,
YA,
younger readers. junior fiction
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