Rice Paper Window

Christabel Choi enters South Korea as a student in 1989 with a copy of the Communist Manifesto among the books in her bag. She doesn't realize that it could get her-or anyone she might lend it to-arrested or disappeared.

She soon finds herself the only woman in the company of men in a Buddhist temple boarding house: as an honorary little brother. At the university over the mountain, she realizes her classmates lead the dangerous fight to eliminate the remnants of dictatorship and bring a decisive end to martial law.

The next eight months pass in a contrast between the fight for democracy and the peace of the mountain and temple. Every week the campus erupts with demands for political freedom, fair pay for workers, as well as apology and reparations for US and Korean government atrocities like the Gwangju Massacre and the April Uprising.

Recognizing this is an historic moment-both for Korea as a nation, and for herself newly immersed into a Korean life-Christabel keeps a careful journal of her days. She records her frequent brushes with soldiers on the roads and mountain trails between her house, the campus, and throughout the city of Seoul. She shares a fresh glimpse of food, places, friendships, and customs as she encounters them for the first time.

This unforgettable memoir is both the coming-of-age story of a sensitive young woman, and the portrait of a country struggling to emerge from decades of occupation, war, and authoritarian rule into one of peace, democracy, and prosperity.

1147507287
Rice Paper Window

Christabel Choi enters South Korea as a student in 1989 with a copy of the Communist Manifesto among the books in her bag. She doesn't realize that it could get her-or anyone she might lend it to-arrested or disappeared.

She soon finds herself the only woman in the company of men in a Buddhist temple boarding house: as an honorary little brother. At the university over the mountain, she realizes her classmates lead the dangerous fight to eliminate the remnants of dictatorship and bring a decisive end to martial law.

The next eight months pass in a contrast between the fight for democracy and the peace of the mountain and temple. Every week the campus erupts with demands for political freedom, fair pay for workers, as well as apology and reparations for US and Korean government atrocities like the Gwangju Massacre and the April Uprising.

Recognizing this is an historic moment-both for Korea as a nation, and for herself newly immersed into a Korean life-Christabel keeps a careful journal of her days. She records her frequent brushes with soldiers on the roads and mountain trails between her house, the campus, and throughout the city of Seoul. She shares a fresh glimpse of food, places, friendships, and customs as she encounters them for the first time.

This unforgettable memoir is both the coming-of-age story of a sensitive young woman, and the portrait of a country struggling to emerge from decades of occupation, war, and authoritarian rule into one of peace, democracy, and prosperity.

28.99 In Stock
Rice Paper Window

Rice Paper Window

by Christabel Choi
Rice Paper Window

Rice Paper Window

by Christabel Choi

Hardcover

$28.99 
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Overview

Christabel Choi enters South Korea as a student in 1989 with a copy of the Communist Manifesto among the books in her bag. She doesn't realize that it could get her-or anyone she might lend it to-arrested or disappeared.

She soon finds herself the only woman in the company of men in a Buddhist temple boarding house: as an honorary little brother. At the university over the mountain, she realizes her classmates lead the dangerous fight to eliminate the remnants of dictatorship and bring a decisive end to martial law.

The next eight months pass in a contrast between the fight for democracy and the peace of the mountain and temple. Every week the campus erupts with demands for political freedom, fair pay for workers, as well as apology and reparations for US and Korean government atrocities like the Gwangju Massacre and the April Uprising.

Recognizing this is an historic moment-both for Korea as a nation, and for herself newly immersed into a Korean life-Christabel keeps a careful journal of her days. She records her frequent brushes with soldiers on the roads and mountain trails between her house, the campus, and throughout the city of Seoul. She shares a fresh glimpse of food, places, friendships, and customs as she encounters them for the first time.

This unforgettable memoir is both the coming-of-age story of a sensitive young woman, and the portrait of a country struggling to emerge from decades of occupation, war, and authoritarian rule into one of peace, democracy, and prosperity.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781967547623
Publisher: Paper Angel Press
Publication date: 06/25/2025
Pages: 312
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.81(d)

About the Author

Christabel Choi's writing is inspired by treks over snowy mountain passes, tall ships on the high seas, transcontinental trains, and at least one circumnavigation of the globe. She grew up in rural Oregon, in a close family hailing from four continents.Christabel is settled in the San Francisco Bay Area with her husband, her father, and alternately one or all of her three children. Her office is filled with bows, arrows, horse tack, piles of paper and books, scattered projects, a dog, and a cat. Her life motto is to leave it better than she found it-except for her office, where maintenance is a noble enough goal.
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