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The Surrendered [Paperback]

Chang-rae Lee
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Product details

  • Paperback: 480 pages
  • Publisher: Abacus (3 Mar 2011)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0349122970
  • ISBN-13: 978-0349122977
  • Product Dimensions: 12.8 x 4 x 19.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 145,583 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Chang-rae Lee
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Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

Amazon Exclusive: Chang-Rae Lee on The Surrendered

Chang-Rae LeeThe inspiration for The Surrendered has its roots in a project I worked on more than twenty years ago, while I was still in college. I was taking a seminar on modern Korean history, and I decided that I would conduct an interview with my father to fulfil the writing assignment, conceiving a reporter-at-large-type piece that would offer personal testimony and narrative set against a historical backdrop. I wasn't sure if he would agree. My father was twelve years old on the eve of the Korean War, and although over the years I had asked him a number of times about his experiences, his responses were typically vague and hurried; he never seemed to want to talk about that time, only briefly mentioning that his sister had died during the war from an untreated bout of pneumonia. But since I was taking a course with a special focus on Korea, he agreed to speak in more detail about that period.

My father's family was originally from Pyongyang, now the capital of North Korea, and they had joined the throngs of refugees who were heading south in an attempt to get behind the line of American forces. He first recounted a story about his favourite older cousin, who was pregnant and just about to give birth as the rest of the extended family was frantically packing up and leaving. My father was dispatched to tell his cousin that everyone was departing--explosions could be heard in the distance--yet even though she and her husband desperately wanted to go, she had already started her labours. She couldn't be moved. Everybody soon left, and that was last time the cousin and her husband were seen alive; to this day no one knows what happened to them, whether they perished or survived the war and ended up living in North Korea.

Telling that story of his cousin seemed to break the grip of something on my father. He recounted again that his sister had died of pneumonia during the refugee march, then added, casually, that in fact his younger brother had died during their travels, too. This disclosure surprised me. I knew that he had lost a brother, this from asking him, as children often will, about how many siblings he had, matching the number against my uncles and aunts, but I remembered his saying that his brother had died in a "subway accident." I didn't think there was a subway in either Pyongyang or Seoul during his childhood, so I asked him when his brother had died, and how.

My father told me that in fact his brother had been killed not by a subway car but by a boxcar of a train full of refugees. They were among the hundreds who filled the cars. The car holding the rest of their family was packed tight, so he and his brother had to sleep on top of the boxcar. In the middle of the night the train halted violently, and his brother, who was eight years old, fell off, the train then lurching forward for a short distance. My father jumped down and went back and found his brother, whose leg had been amputated by the wheels of the train. My father carried him back to the car, to the rest of their family, as the blood--and his life--ran out of him.

I've been haunted by that story since I heard it, not only by the horror of the accident but also by the picture of my father as a boy, a boy who had to experience his brother's death so directly and egregiously. I was struck, too, by how unperturbed my father had always seemed to me, this cheerful, optimistic man who certainly didn't appear to be haunted by anything. But of course this was not quite true. The events of the war had stayed with him, and always would.

In recent years I began to consider writing a novel about that time, and what happened to my father and his brother kept coming back to me. I finally decided to try to write that scene, wondering whether a larger story might be instituted. Naturally the details changed quite drastically as I began to write, the story expanding in every direction, developing its own world and aims, and soon enough it was not my father's story at all. But the kernel of what had happened grew to become the first chapter of The Surrendered, which for me is not so much a war novel as it is a story concerned with the effects of mass conflict on the human psyche and spirit, the private odysseys that those who have experienced conflict must endure.

(Photo of Chang-Rae Lee © Michelle Branca Lee)


--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review

** 'Masterful . . . THE SURRENDERED bursts with drama and human anguish . . . Powerful, deeply felt, compulsively readable and imbued with moral gravity, the novel does not peter out into easy redemption. It's a harrowing tale: bleak, haunting and often heart-breaking - and not to be missed (PUBLISHERS WEEKLY )

** 'Gripping, bravura . . . characteristically elegant prose (Sarah Churchwell, GUARDIAN )

** 'Chang-rae Lee has created such a tour de force that its images and narrative linger for a long time after reading (BOOKSELLER'S CHOICE )

** 'A major achievement, and likely to be remembered as one of this year's best books (KIRKUS STARRED REVIEW ) --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
This The Surrenderedis an remarkable novel. A powerful, complex narrative of epic scope dealing with big subjects- war, love, loss, alienation and the limits of human endurance - it is also difficult to overstate the simple unstoppable narrative drive of Chang-Rae Lee's story, and the unshowy brilliance and great beauty of his writing.

The Surrendered tells of the ruined life of June Han, a survivor of the Korean war facing her own death in modern New York, and her search for first an old lover - washed-up deserter Hector, living in obscurity in an industrial backwater - and then her estranged son in Italy. It is a remarkably supple narrative, able to replay a child's experience of a brutal war with harrowing truthfulness while also finding the space and emotional range for the most fragile and tenderly evoked of love stories. Intensely involving and structured with exemplary skill, the action moves with ease from the missionary stations and paddyfields of 1950s Korea to June's lonely existence in modern Manhattan, and back again.

Chang-rae Lee has the assurance and agility to plot a completely gripping narrative, delineate unforgettable characters - his fragile, tenacious, unloveable but profoundly sympathetic June is a masterpiece - and evoke the subtleties of a complex conflict as at the same time he articulates the fine detail of human longing and a delicate, doomed eroticism. The Surrendered is intelligent, beautiful, unsparing and absolutely unputdownable.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful
Living in the past 30 Mar 2010
By Keris Nine TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
The incident told at the start of Chang-rae Lee's latest novel was inspired by the experience of the author's father as a child in 1950, a North Korean citizen evacuated as the war intensified between North and South. His father's experience here transmogrified into the attempt of June Han to flee with her younger brother and sister, it's a heart-wrenching episode that sets the tone for what is to follow. Unexpectedly however, much of the remainder of the novel relates to an older June living in New York in the 1980s, who is suffering from a terminal illness and has just sold up her antique business, planning to go searching not for any of her lost siblings during the war, but for her son Nicholas - a young boy with a troubled childhood who has disappeared and is suspected to be living a life of fraud and petty crime in Italy.

The location and time period may change, but essentially the characteristics set out at the beginning of the novel remain constant. This is a book about damaged people - people who have seen things and undergone experiences that no-one can be expected to come through unscathed. There are several other characters who would appear to be peripheral to June in their shared experience of the war - Hector, an American GI posted on the unenviable duty of grave detail in the Korean war, and Sylvie, the wife of the minister running a Korean refugee camp with a traumatic experience of the war in China - but in reality their stories and backgrounds are just as important, opening out the story considerably, examining their own troubled backgrounds that bring them all together at one point in the same refugee camp. It's the coming together of the people with their own individual personalities, past experiences, problems and expectations that creates a dangerous powder-keg of complex emotions that are to have a huge importance on the direction of their lives.

The Surrendered consequently is certainly complicated, the author having to navigate and interweave the personalities of each of the main characters and their backstory experiences, but Chang-rae Lee handles this masterfully, structuring the novel brilliantly. There's no simplified alternate chaptering system here between past and present, from character to character and, barring one central incident (an unnecessary and bizarrely staged accident that reunites two of the characters), the author lays everything out in the most natural way possible. The present often gives way to memories of the past, since everything is of course interrelated - which is evidently what the author wants to show. It's not June's story, and her condition and experiences are not standalone experiences - they involve others and the experience of others dictate how they relate to her.

The Surrendered can be tough going then, the author taking on quite a lot in his in-depth examination of several personalities, their back stories and their interconnectedness - particularly when those stories are highly traumatic ones that have left the characters permanently damaged. But any difficulties with reading the novel lie not within the fine writing or the expert structuring, but within the weight of horrendous wartime experiences of the characters and their struggles to adapt to a normal life. This is such a powerful and well-written book however that the misery is something worth enduring for the dazzling and inspirational rays of light that ultimately shine through the gloom.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful
By J. Cameron-Smith TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
June Han has forged a life thousands of miles from her birthplace: she has built a business in New York, borne a child, and survived a husband. Thirty years after her escape from war-ravaged Korea, and dying, it is time for her to confront aspects of her past. June's story in Korea involves two others: Hector Brennan, an American soldier who saved June's, and Sylvie Tanner a missionary's wife, whom they both adored.

This is a complex novel, which shifts between Korea, the USA and Europe. June, terminally ill at 47, enlists the help of Hector to find her son Nicholas. Their shared journey is supplemented by their individual lives both in Korea and since. For me, the Korean aspects of the novel worked best: the cost of the war in physical and emotional terms, the lottery of life in an orphanage. Both the reality of life and the finality of death clearly depicted. And, in the case of Sylvie Tanner, the limbo of a life being endured rather than embraced.

Aspects of the near-present story did not work for me. There were elements of coincidence (including a convenient car accident and an issue with a passport) that interrupted the flow of the story. By then, while I had invested too much into the novel to stop reading, I was less trusting of the narrative.

This is not a comfortable novel, but what story about war and its consequences ever is?

Jennifer Cameron-Smith
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