![]() ![]() She’s surprised how easy it is to speak with him as they share moments from their lives they’ve never told anyone before. She is drawn to Hanji, a new volunteer at the monastery who is a veterinarian from Nairobi. In “Hanji and Youngju,” 27-year-old Youngju lives in a monastery for seven months and thinks about life passing her by, feeling guilty over abandoning grad school to be there. Soyu notes how her grandfather’s talking with Shoko in Japanese makes him and her mother come alive (“I used to think they were like grandfather clocks that had stopped ticking, that gathered dust and faded in color each year”). In the title story, 10th-grader Shoko stays with Soyu during a week-long exchange program between South Korea and Japan, hoping to lay the groundwork for her dream of one day leaving Japan. Eunyoung’s engaging debut collection examines her protagonists’ interior lives in moments of longing, connection, and familial rift. ![]()
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