Apartment Women
A Novel
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- $16.99
Publisher Description
*INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER*
From the New York Times Notable author of The Old Woman with the Knife comes a bracingly original story of family, marriage and the cultural expectations of motherhood, about four women whose lives intersect in dramatic and unexpected ways at a government-run apartment complex outside Seoul
When Yojin moves with her husband and daughter into the Dream Future Pilot Communal Apartments, she’s ready for a fresh start. Located on the outskirts of Seoul, the experimental community is a government initiative designed to boost the national birth rate. Like her neighbors, Yojin has agreed to have at least two more children over the next ten years.
Yet, from the day she arrives, Yojin feels uneasy about the community spirit thrust upon her. Her concerns grow as communal child care begins and the other parents show their true colors. Apartment Women traces the lives of four women in the apartments, all with different aspirations and beliefs. Will they find a way to live peacefully? Or are the cultural expectations around parenthood stacked against them from the start?
A trenchant social novel from an award-winning author, Apartment Women incisively illuminates the unspoken imbalance of women’s parenting labor, challenging the age-old assumption that “it takes a village” to raise a child.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A group of women navigate the pressure to be perfect mothers in this piercing domestic drama from Gu (The Old Woman with the Knife). The story unfolds in an experimental communal apartment complex outside Seoul, where residents are expected to have at least three children in exchange for government subsidies. Yojin, a pharmacy cashier, moves in with her husband, Euno, a frustrated filmmaker and stay-at-home dad, and their six-year-old daughter, Siyul. They join three other families, all chosen by lottery as part of a pilot program to help boost the country's birth rate. Yojin resents how Siyul, as the oldest among the four families' children, is saddled with watching the younger kids in the communal daycare run by Danhui. Tensions increase as Yojin begins to suspect that Danhui's husband, Jaegang, is hitting on her. Meanwhile, freelance illustrator Hyonae cannot find time to work amid the demands of mothering, and her neighbor Gyowon faces criticism online after she seeks secondhand clothes and accessories for her children. Gu's quick pacing tends to merely skim the surface, but as the women's frustrations reach a boiling point, she keenly portrays the toll taken by gendered expectations. This is a perceptive novel of motherhood's double binds.