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The Magical Language of Others

A Memoir

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A tale of deep bonds to family, place, language―of hard-won selfhood told by a singular, incandescent voice.

After living in America for over a decade, Eun Ji's parents return to Korea for work, leaving fifteen-year-old Eun Ji and her brother behind in the family's new California home. Overnight, Eun Ji finds herself in a world made strange in her mother's absence. Her mother writes letters over the years seeking forgiveness and love―letters Eun Ji cannot understand until she finds them years later hidden in a box.

The letters lay bare the impact of her mother's departure, as Eun Ji gets to know the woman who raised her and left her behind. Eun Ji is a student, a traveler, a dancer, a poet, and a daughter coming to terms not only with her parents' prolonged absence, but her family's history: her grandmother's Jun's years as a lovesick wife in Daejeon, the horrors her grandmother Kumiko witnessed during the Jeju Island Massacre. Where, Koh asks, do the stories of our mothers and grandmothers end and ours begin? How do we find words―in Korean, Japanese, English, or any language―to articulate the profound ways that distance can shape love?

The Magical Language of Others is a fearless and poetic mind grappling with forgiveness, reconciliation, legacy, and intergenerational trauma―conjuring an epic saga and love story between mothers and daughters spanning four generations.

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    • Library Journal

      November 1, 2020

      That she's fluent in Korean, Japanese, and English ensures a smooth double debut--as memoirist and narrator--for poet Koh (A Lesser Love), the child of immigrants. Her languid delivery is a lulling invitation into emotional intimacy. Koh's father went to graduate school while her mother supported the family. Her father's degree and the 1990s Silicon Valley boom made the family comfortable, until her father received "a baffling job offer" from a Korean firm that made him "a top-tier executive" and reunited her mother with her beloved siblings after 17 years apart. Fifteen-year-old Koh was left in her 19-year-old brother's care for a three-year separation that extended to five, then seven years. Her mother's letters were their tenuous bond. As a young adult, Koh rediscovers 49 of those missives; amid her painstaking translations, she intertwines her own memories, as if only now is she able to address the unbearable separation. What she unearths is "a constant dispensation of love." VERDICT Admirers of resonating memoirs enhanced by their authors' narration--Ta-Nehisi Coates's Between the World and Me, Trevor Noah's Born a Crime, Patti Smith's Just Kids--will want to listen in.--Terry Hong, Smithsonian BookDragon, Washington, DC

      Copyright 2020 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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