Latest Review: "Nowhere to Be Found" by Bae Suah
The latest addition to our Reviews section is by Pierce Alquist on Nowhere to Be Found by Bae Suah, published in 2014 by AmazonCrossing.
Just a side note, that if you’ve been itching for more from Bae Suah since this one came out, there are THREE more forthcoming titles of hers making their way into English: A Greater Music (Open Letter, October 2016), Recitation (Deep Vellum, 2016), and The Owls’ Absence (Open Letter, ~2018), all three in translation by Deborah Smith. So get your reading hats on, because it’s about to get amazing out here.
Here’s the beginning of Pierce’s review:
It鈥檚 been almost a year since the publication of Nowhere to Be Found by Bae Suah, but despite being included on the 2015 PEN Translation award longlist, and some pretty vocal support from key indie presses, the book has been widely overlooked. I鈥檝e found this to be largely because Nowhere to Be Found is published by AmazonCrossing.
If you鈥檝e overlooked Bae Suah out of some desire to punish Amazon, or because of a general indifference to the AmazonCrossing imprint, you鈥檙e only doing yourself a disservice. With three upcoming books translated into English鈥擾A Greater Music_, The Owls鈥 Absence, and _Recitation_鈥擝ae Suah will continue to establish herself as one of the hottest voices coming out of South Korea. list: Books from Korea named her as 鈥渙ne of the most risk-taking, experimental writers active in Korea鈥濃攁nd with the fiction that is coming out of South Korea right now (see: Han Kang and others), that is high praise.
For the rest of the review, go here.

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