This story collection shows the beauty of the author’s writing, which captures life’s ups and downs and blows a bright breath into diverse emotions that words cannot express.
Cho Haejin puts color in the lives of people who are in the darkest place of
society, such as immigrants, adopted children, laborers, and poor people who
are neglected. This book also puts a lens on the lives of society’s marginalized,
including a middle-aged woman battling with cancer with no one to rely on,
underage laborers who work without knowing what mercury poisoning is, and
young people who spend their youth without obtaining any visible achievements.
Incidents like an end of romance are variated into a death of a friend from
school(“Bright Tree Top”), a miserable factory accident that causes an underage
laborer to lose consciousness(“Bright Breath”), and a shameful incident that
forces a father to run away and leave his daughters at home(“High and Slow
Forgiveness”). The author catches the tail of a story that is nearing a conclusion
and blows a breath into the hidden stories of individuals who are crouching
behind the scenes.
In “Bright Breath,” ‘I’ is a contract teacher at a specialized high school. One day,
when ‘I’’s contract is coming to an end, ‘I’ hears that a student named Hana has
gotten into a serious accident at the factory where she had gone for practical
training and has lost consciousness. Along with Hana’s tragedy, the death of
boys who were poisoned by mercury in “Sowing Night,” and the inner conflict of a
novice reporter who takes the position of a reporter dismissed without cause in
“Between Boundary Lines” embody the social evils that are still prevalent today.
In “A Person in Snow,” ‘I’ and Yeo-jin conduct oral history research of a publishing
company and come to meet Choi Gil-nam, who took part in the killing of North
Korean soldiers by the U.S. Army during the Korean War. Choi Gil-nam has lived a
life of guilt for having killed others to protect his own life. He secretly confesses
a sincere moment: amid bombardment and shivering in fear, he had risked his
own life to save “a feeble life with short limbs and a thin torso.” This handful of
brilliant moments unveils another aspect of Choi Gil-nam, who is an easy target
of an outpouring of criticism.