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Yeon-sik Hong

Author of Uncomfortably Happily

2 Works 136 Members 12 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Hong Yeon-sik

Works by Yeon-sik Hong

Uncomfortably Happily (2013) 88 copies, 9 reviews
Umma's Table (2015) 48 copies, 3 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Hong, Yeon-sik
Legal name
홍연식
Birthdate
1971
Gender
male
Nationality
South Korea

Members

Reviews

Exceeded expectations.
But long, and the art wasn't always clearly communicative *to me* ... I had to spend time parsing. I love the translation. And the notes by both translator and author.

I love when they learned to forage. And the bits about how all the voices in his head, or on the phone, were made animate. And that she got to spend time away, and he was just plain happy for her (more progressive than many American husbands would be). And the surreal bits when they danced in the air, or had sing-alongs with their animal companions.

Bittersweet ending.
… (more)
 
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Cheryl_in_CC_NV | 8 other reviews | Oct 18, 2024 |
I was a little worried that this book would be really frustrating because the author/protagonist is a mid-30s straight dude cartoonist (who married a woman who was formerly his student) who spends about half of the book freaking out about his career and not being able to Provide As A Husband Should. This is a formula that often leaves me either bored or furious, but Hong writes with such self-awareness and grace that it really worked for me. Also, this is one of the most realistic/relatable/compelling depictions of what it's like to live with and work alongside people as artists that I've read in a long while. Hong's focus on real, grounded detail--from detailing the exhausting stress of being an underemployed artist to the attention paid to the near-daily commutes up and down the mountain to the mountain's changing landscape in different season--lends the book both urgency and a gentle rhythm.… (more)
 
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localgayangel | 8 other reviews | Mar 5, 2024 |
I think my enjoyment of this book suffered a bit for reading it right after Flowers of Fire: The Inside Story of South Korea's Feminist Movement and What It Means for Women's Rights Worldwide. I loved Yeon-Sik's previous work, Uncomfortably Happy, but this one puts the focus on the protagonist's relationship with his mom (Umma), and her life of always putting her kids (and their abusive alcoholic dad) first. Madang is living his life differently in that he does all the cooking and shares in childcare, but he also resents it when under deadline and snipes about "spoiling" his wife. So it comes so close to directly addressing the gender roles he was raised with, but then never really does, which frustrated me. I did enjoy the book overall, especially the focus on gardening and food.… (more)
 
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greeniezona | 2 other reviews | Feb 20, 2024 |
A pair of artists move to a rural mountain home and overcome various struggles. Very enjoyable, interesting, charming. Also a little upsetting at times — it's not all bucolic happiness. Nice mix of very detailed, rendered art, and more impressionistic surreal sequences. Some of those sequences, dealing with the author's struggling to deal with the pressures on him, didn't quite land for me, but overall it was very effective. Recommended, though be prepared it gets a little dark at times.
 
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thisisstephenbetts | 8 other reviews | Nov 25, 2023 |

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Janet Hong Translator

Statistics

Works
2
Members
136
Popularity
#149,926
Rating
4.0
Reviews
12
ISBNs
4
Languages
1

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