Han Kang was born in 1970 in South Korea. She is the author of The Vegetarian, winner of the International Booker Prize, as well as Human Acts, The White Book, Greek Lessons, and We Do Not Part. In 2024, she was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.
“Stunning . . . Han Kang has an ambition as large as Milton’s
struggle with God: She wants to reconcile the ways of humanity to
itself.”—NPR
“Human Acts is unique in the intensity and scale of this brutality.
. . . The novel details a bloody history that was deliberately
forgotten and is only now being recovered.”—The Nation
“Exquisitely crafted.”—O: the Oprah Magazine
“Human Acts speaks the unspeakable.”—Vanity Fair
“The long wake of the killings plays out across the testimonies of
survivors as well as the dead, in scenarios both gorily real and
beautifully surreal.”—Vulture
“Engrossing . . . Unnerving and painfully immediate . . . [Human
Acts] is torturously compelling, a relentless portrait of death and
agony that never lets you look away. Han’s prose . . . is both
spare and dreamy, full of haunting images and echoing language. She
mesmerizes, drawing you into the horrors of Gwangju; questioning
humanity, implicating everyone.”—Los Angeles Times
“Revelatory . . . nothing short of breathtaking . . . What
Han has re-created is not just an extraordinary record of human
suffering during one particularly contentious period in Korean
history, but also a written testament to our willingness to risk
discomfort, capture, even death in order to fight for a cause or
help others in times of need.”—San Francisco Chronicle
“Where Kang excels is in her unflinching, unsentimental
descriptions of death. I am hard pressed to think of another novel
that deals so vividly and convincingly with the stages of physical
decay.”—Boston Globe
“Absorbing . . . Han uses her talents as a storyteller of subtlety
and power to bring this struggle out of the middle distance of
‘history’ and into the intimate space of the irreplaceable human
individual.”—Minneapolis Star-Tribune
“Pristine, expertly paced, and gut-wrenching . . . Human Acts
grapples with the fallout of a massacre and questions what humans
are willing to die for and in turn what they must live through.
Kang approaches these difficult and inexorable queries with
originality and fearlessness, making Human Acts a
must-read.”—Chicago Review of Books
“Though her subject matter is terrifying, her prose is too
beautiful, her images too perfectly crystallized to wince and turn
away from them. . . . Human Acts is a slim novel weighted with
philosophical and spiritual inquiry, but if offers no consolations.
Rather, it grapples with who we are, what we are able to endure,
and what we inflict upon other people.”—St. Louis Post-Dispatch
“Reading about human acts like these can be excruciating. But true
to the urgency conveyed through its frequent use of second-person
narration, Han’s book is also filled with human acts involving
profiles in courage that inspire hope.”—Milwaukee
Journal-Sentinel
“Inventive, intense and provocative . . . a work of considerable
bravery . . . Human Acts is a profound act of protest in
itself.”—Newsday
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