![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Reader's familiar with Korea's twentieth century history will probably already have some idea of the rough outlines that this narrative will take, but we'll nevertheless refrain from giving them away here, so as to not take away any of the impact. Keum Suk Gendry-Kim’s second book, The Waiting, offers a compelling case in point it’s vividly rendered graphic fiction with roots in autobiography. ![]() While the story focuses on one extended family, it can easily be read as a stand-in for the experience – and tragedy – of Korea as a whole. Starting with the mother's harsh yet still bucolic childhood under the Japanese occupation, which was filled with its own sorrows, the story takes an abrupt turn with the start of hostilities between the Soviet and Chinese-backed North and the US-backed South, and the mother is forced to flee, along with her own, newly formed family. Told through a framing bracket of the daughter/author's relationship (á la Maus) the mother's story gradually unspools in page after page of well composed comics, affectingly employing bold brushwork. Talk about a story that pulls at the heart-strings! While The Waiting is "fictional," it is loosely based on that of the author's own family history focused particularly on that of her mother, who fled to what is now South Korea during the onset of the Korean War that divided the country. ![]()
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