 |
 |
Return to Previous Page

|

A former Korean movie star, now an expatriate in Hawaii,
unravels the tangled lives of her family.

APRIL | Fiction
$23 Hardcover
ISBN: 1-56947-420-6
Rights: Soho Press
|
 |
“McKinney vividly recreates
Seoul during the Korean War from the beat-up cars made of beer cans to the
affluent homes lined with fish ponds and grape vines…. It’s
a technically skillful achievement in a story deceptively disguised as a
slim, fast read.”
—Honolulu Weekly |
“[An] interesting cast
of Korean, Korean American, and Hawaiian characters.... [McKinney] has
a keen eye for details of places and people. The storyline is well developed....
McKinney is pitch-perfect on the social and racial climate of Hawaiians,
Asians, immigrants, mixed-bloods, and whites.... The frequent dialogues
are crisp and pointed.”
—Korean Quarterly |
“McKinney’s portrait of a besieged
woman within a multicultural, multigenerational family saga poignantly
and powerfully dramatizes the troubles women face, the pan-Asian melting
pot of Hawaiian culture, and the conflicts inherent in Americanization.”
—Booklist |
“McKinney vividly recreates Seoul during the Korean War from the beat-up cars made of beer cans to the affluent homes lined with fish ponds and grape vines…. It’s a technically skillful achievement in a story deceptively disguised as a slim, fast read.”
—Honolulu Weekly |
“McKinney demonstrates a talent for restraint and tight pacing.”
—Publishers Weekly |
|
By age fourteen she was on her own, fleeing the communists, a waif living in the streets of Seoul, begging from American soldiers and stealing food. Then fate intervened: she was hit by a car driven by a prominent filmmaker. He mentored her into an acting career. By age nineteen, Park Soong Nan was the brightest star of Korean cinema. They called her “The Queen of Tears.”
Many years later her three grown children are settled in Hawai’i. She comes to visit. Soong’s presence is catalytic, setting off smoldering jealousies, dormant longings, and the unending contest for primacy in her affection.
CHRIS MCKINNEY is the author of The Tattoo and Bolohead Row. He received both his BA and MA in English from the University of Hawai’i and currently teaches at Honolulu Community College. He resides in Honolulu.
Back to top
|
|
|