Author: Kyung-Ran Jo
Translator: Hui-Yeon Kim
Publisher: Bloomsbury USA
224 pages | 8.1 x 5.4 x 0.7 inches
Important! Please read before you order! |
>>>This book is written in English. |
About This Book
An erotically charged, elegantly written novel that marks the first
publication in English of author Kyung-Ran Jo, a literary star in Korea
who has earned comparisons to Haruki Murakami.
Emotionally raw and emphatically sensual, Tongue is the story of the
demise of an obsessive romance and a woman’s culinary journey toward
self-restoration and revenge. When her boyfriend of seven years leaves
her for another woman, the celebrated young chef Jung Ji-won shuts down
the cooking school she ran from their home and sinks into deep
depression, losing her will to cook, her desire to eat, and even her
ability to taste. Returning to the kitchen of the I talian restaurant
where her career first began, she slowly rebuilds her life,
rediscovering her appreciation of food, both as nourishment and as
sensual pleasure. She also starts to devise a plan for a final, vengeful
act of culinary seduction.
Tongue is a voluptuous, intimate story of a gourmet relying on her
food-centric worldview to emerge from heartbreak; a mesmerizing,
delicately plotted novel at once shocking and profoundly familiar.
About the Author
Kyung-Ran Jo was born in Seoul, South Korea, in 1969. She earned a
degree in creative writing from Seoul Institute of the Arts and has
participated in the University of Iowa’s renowned International Writing
Program. Since her fiction debut at age twenty-eight, she has earned
numerous literary awards, including the Today’s Young Artist Prize from
the South Korean Ministry of Culture and Tourism as well as the Dong-in
L iterary Award for her newest shortstory collection, I Bought Balloons.
Tongue, an immediate bestseller in South Korea, is her first novel to be
translated.
"[A] surprising and nuanced novel... reminiscent of Banana Yoshimoto's
cult classic Kitchen... It's a clever debut; a simple-looking dish from
the outside that, once you bite in, reveals hidden layers and complexity
— and a shockingly bitter finish." —NPR.org
"A sumptuous feast."—Kirkus
"Food is a well-traveled literary metaphor, but here, in a translation
by Chi-Young Kim, Jo does marvelous and disturbing things with it,
serving up dishes rich with a variety of feelings... And of course
there's the most powerful of dishes, the one all the recipes say is best
served cold... Buon appetito." —New York Times Book Review (Editor's
Choice)
"There are meals that have the power to seduce your taste buds, then
your imagination. This is how Kyung Ran Jo writes. Tongue's elegant,
erotic tale of heartbreak satisfies just like a perfect meal, then more,
because here the last course isn't dessert, but revenge." —Sharon Krum,
author of The Thing About Jane Spring
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