The Young Will Remember
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5.0 • 2 Ratings
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
A sweeping novel about a correspondent trapped behind enemy lines during the Korean War, and the women who help her find her way home, from the national bestselling author of Daughters of Shandong
When I found the courage to lift my head, I expected to stare down the barrel of a gun, but instead there was a woman in front of me, the back of her white skirt embroidered with columns of yellow chrysanthemums.
1950. It’s the coldest winter in decades, and twenty-eight-year-old Chinese American journalist Ellie Chang is on a military flight to cover a battle in the mountains of North Korea when her plane is shot down.
As she emerges from the fallen aircraft onto an icy field surrounded by the enemy, Ellie is sure it’s the end, certain she’ll never make it home to her parents...until a woman pushes her way through the crowd and claims Ellie as the lost daughter that she’s been searching for since the last war ended. Never mind that Ellie doesn’t speak a word of Korean.
Ellie is taken in by her rescuer—a woman who calls herself “Emma”—and the Paks, a pastor’s family. She knows she can’t stay and yet there’s no way she’ll survive on her own.
As the war intensifies, the sky alighting with bombs overhead, Ellie convinces Emma and the Paks to travel south towards an elusive promise of safety, and where Ellie insists they are more likely to find Emma’s real daughter, stuck on the other side of the frontlines.
Emma's decision to claim Ellie, and Ellie’s choice to take her hand will connect their lives forever.
Moving and triumphant, The Young Will Remember sheds light on a “Forgotten War,” the resilience of love within our darkest histories, and the indefatigable determination of mothers to protect their children.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
While covering the Korean War, a Chinese American journalist is stranded behind enemy lines in this stunning and morally complex novel from Chung (Daughters of Shandong). Ellie Chang is onboard a military plane when it's shot down by North Korean forces. What unfolds from there is a disquieting and honest tale of Ellie reckoning with what it's like to see the war from the perspective of the enemy, as she watches American aircraft screaming overhead and fears for her life. She's rescued by an older North Korean woman named Emma, who believes Ellie is her long-lost daughter. Ellie plays along, recognizing it's the only way she'll survive, and moves in with Emma in the home of a local pastor and his family. Ellie is initially met with disdain by Imo, the pastor's wife, which, as Chung reveals later, is tied to a painful secret about Imo's family history. Chung renders the horror of bombardment with devastating precision, and she prompts readers to expand their view of war by insisting that every life caught in the machinery of combat, civilian and military alike, is of equal weight and complexity. This will stay with readers long after the final page. Alexa Stark, Writers House.