Sad Peninsula
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
A Canadian ex-pat and a Korean former "comfort woman," each scarred by their pasts, seek redemption.
Two separate lives become connected in South Korea: traumatized former Korean "comfort woman" Eun-young, who struggles with her past of rape and violence; and Michael, a troubled young Canadian arriving in Korea to teach ESL, whose principles and humanity are tested by Seoul’s seedy expatriate underbelly. A world away and two generations apart, their lives collide through the fiery Jin, who challenges stereotypes of her race and gender as well as Michael’s morality.
Through meticulously crafted and heart-wrenching prose, Sad Peninsula takes the reader across oceans and decades, outlining the boundaries between seduction and coercion, between love and destruction, between a past that can’t be undone and a future that seems just out of reach.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
"This will hurt immensely," a brutal doctor tells Korean teenager Meiko in his office at a so-called comfort station in northeastern China circa 1943. In order to cure the girl of a sexually transmitted disease from the Japanese soldiers that rape and torture her each and every day, the doctor's about to inject Meiko with an arsenic compound that causes painful side-effects. The harrowing and deeply moving sections of Sampson's (Off Book) sophomore novel describe the traumatized life of Meiko, born Eun-young, as she survives atrocities and spends later decades "barren as a rock" as well as mutely suffering, poor and ashamed, on the margins of conservative, male-dominated Korean society. Alternating but equally engaging chapters describe Michael, a disgraced journalist from Halifax fleeing personal failures and squandered opportunities while "slinging English like hamburgers" at ABC English Planet, a rigid ESL school in neon-lit Seoul. Quiet and thoughtful, he wrestles his own demons as he observes the questionable antics of his fellow male teachers, who regard the young women of Seoul in the early 2000s as gifts to open and discard. Michael's awkward romance with Jin, a relative of Eun-young, bridges the two eras and gives the author ample opportunity to illustrate the enduring consequences of history.