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6.03.2010

what I'm reading: to kill a tiger by jid lee


Finally got around to picking up To Kill a Tiger: A Memoir of Korea by Jid Lee, published earlier this year from Overlook Press. It's been sitting on my shelf for months, and I've just started it, but I think I'm getting into something really good. Here's the synopsis:
Against the backdrop of modern Korea s violent and tumultuous history, To Kill A Tiger is a searing portrait of a woman and a society in the midst of violent change. Drawing on Korean legend and myth, as well as an Asian woman s unique perspective on the United States, Lee weaves her compelling personal narrative with a collective and accessible history of modern Korea, from Japanese colonialism to war-era comfort women, from the genocide of the Korean War to the government persecution and silence of Cold War-era pogroms. The ritual of storytelling, which she shares with the women of her family, serves as a window into a five-generation family saga, and it is through storytelling that Lee comes to appreciate the sacrifices of her ancestors and her own now American place in her family and society.

In To Kill A Tiger Lee provides a revelatory look at war and modernization in her native country, a story of personal growth, and a tribute to the culture that formed her.
The book is at once a vivid memoir of the author's family saga as well as a chronicle of Korea's tumultuous modern history. I'm looking forward to reading on. For more information about To Kill a Tiger, visit the publisher's website here, and Amazon here.