MIJA
Mun-gyeong, 1935. Choi MiJa is getting ready for her first day at the Elementary Good Citizen School in Japanese occupied Korea. The Choi family are wealthy landowners and have been for nineteen generations, but all that is about to change. Their privileged lifestyle will soon disappear forever, and burgeoning love is put on hold as the family have to endure hardship and loss of the Japanese Occupation, the Second World War, and the Korean War. When peace finally arrives, there is great hope for the future, and Korea has a chance to build a just and fair society. Would it succeed?

MiJa is a timeless story that sweeps the reader from the gated town of Mun-gyeong, a mountain pass so high that even the birds cannot fly through it, to the besieged war-torn city of Pusan where they have to live in the shantytown of Ami Dong built from reused gravestones. One day MiJa finds herself in the remote fishing port of Mukho, on the border with North Korea, where she joins the Hae-nyeo: a matriarchal group of fisherwomen.

MiJa is a tale of un-blossomed love, female sacrifice, and how a family's hopes and dreams are crushed by the weight of historical events that still resonate in modern-day Korea.
1148023559
MIJA
Mun-gyeong, 1935. Choi MiJa is getting ready for her first day at the Elementary Good Citizen School in Japanese occupied Korea. The Choi family are wealthy landowners and have been for nineteen generations, but all that is about to change. Their privileged lifestyle will soon disappear forever, and burgeoning love is put on hold as the family have to endure hardship and loss of the Japanese Occupation, the Second World War, and the Korean War. When peace finally arrives, there is great hope for the future, and Korea has a chance to build a just and fair society. Would it succeed?

MiJa is a timeless story that sweeps the reader from the gated town of Mun-gyeong, a mountain pass so high that even the birds cannot fly through it, to the besieged war-torn city of Pusan where they have to live in the shantytown of Ami Dong built from reused gravestones. One day MiJa finds herself in the remote fishing port of Mukho, on the border with North Korea, where she joins the Hae-nyeo: a matriarchal group of fisherwomen.

MiJa is a tale of un-blossomed love, female sacrifice, and how a family's hopes and dreams are crushed by the weight of historical events that still resonate in modern-day Korea.
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Overview

Mun-gyeong, 1935. Choi MiJa is getting ready for her first day at the Elementary Good Citizen School in Japanese occupied Korea. The Choi family are wealthy landowners and have been for nineteen generations, but all that is about to change. Their privileged lifestyle will soon disappear forever, and burgeoning love is put on hold as the family have to endure hardship and loss of the Japanese Occupation, the Second World War, and the Korean War. When peace finally arrives, there is great hope for the future, and Korea has a chance to build a just and fair society. Would it succeed?

MiJa is a timeless story that sweeps the reader from the gated town of Mun-gyeong, a mountain pass so high that even the birds cannot fly through it, to the besieged war-torn city of Pusan where they have to live in the shantytown of Ami Dong built from reused gravestones. One day MiJa finds herself in the remote fishing port of Mukho, on the border with North Korea, where she joins the Hae-nyeo: a matriarchal group of fisherwomen.

MiJa is a tale of un-blossomed love, female sacrifice, and how a family's hopes and dreams are crushed by the weight of historical events that still resonate in modern-day Korea.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940184422633
Publisher: Mark Atkinson
Publication date: 01/05/2023
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

MARK D. ATKINSON was born and raised in York, England but has spent much of his life living, studying and working in South East Asia, and has spent over a decade in South Korea. It took him four years to research and write his first novel, MiJa. You can find more about the author, join his book-club, and download a Korean language version by visiting: www.bookmark-publications.com

JANG HYUNJU was born and raised in Mukho, South Korea and has lived in the United States and England. She edited the novel for cultural authenticity and added the feminine touches.
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