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Paik Gahuim
Paik Gahuim (b. 1974) made his literary debut in 2001 when he won the Seoul Shinmun New Writer’s Award. He is the author of the short story collections, The Cricket Is Crying, Manager Jo’s Trunk, and The Hint is “Brother-in-law,” as well as the novel, Naphthalene.
Pak Mogwol
Pak Mogwol
Park Bum Shin
Putain de pupitres!
Park Hyoung su
Nana im Morgengrauen (Nana at Dawn)
Park Hyunju
Park Hyunju is a writer, essayist, and translator. Her published works include the novels My Daily Occult Life: Spring Summer Edition, My Daily Occult Life: Fall Winter Edition, and Searching for Honeyman; the essay collections Romance Pharmacy, and The Safe Distance Between You and I; and the translations of Raymond Chandler: Selected Works, Miss Smilla’s Feeling for Snow, Truman Capote: Selected Works, Charles Bukowski’s novels and poetry, and the nonfiction work, Barbarian Days. She received the 2018 Yoo Yeong Translation Award for her translation of Hausfrau by Jill Alexander Essbaum. She is currently serializing a column in the Hankyoreh titled “Reading Genre Fiction with Park Hyunju.”
Park Jongsik
Досужие беседы на постоялом дворе: КОРЕЙСКИЕ РАССКАЗЫ ΧΙΧ ВЕКА (Nineteenth Century Korean Short Stories: Leisurely Conversations at the Inn)
Park Joon
Park Joon is a poet and editor at Changbi Publishers. His poetry collection I Took Your Name as Medicine was a bestseller, ranking ninth among bestselling poetry collections in the last five years by Interpark Books. He has received the Sin Dong-yup Prize for Literature.
Park Keum-san
Park Keum-san is a novelist. Park made his literary debut with “Accomplice” for the literary journal Munye Joongang in 2001. Kim’s novels include Island Table and Pretending to Exist, Not to Exist. He has also published a serialized novel Body Painting and the short story collections A Birthday Present and Did She See My Toes?
Park Kyung-Ri
Park Kyung-Ri was born in Tongyeong, Gyeongsangnam-do Province in 1926 and died in Wonju, Gangwon-do Province in 2008. Park studied at Jinju Girls’ High School and went on to teach at many different schools. She was at Yeonan Girls’ Middle School in Hwanghae-do Province when the Korean War broke out in 1950. Her husband died in the war. After the war, she devoted her life to her writing. She made her debut by publishing a short story in Hyundae Munhak at the recommendation of Kim Tong-ni, a prominent Korean writer. Park Kyung-Ri’s representative work, Land, is an in-depth portrayal of the relationship between the fates of people from various classes and times as Korea went from a feudal monarchy to a Japanese colony. Land became part of the UNESCO Collection of Representative Works. Her novel has thus been critically acclaimed both in Korea and abroad.
Park Mikhail
Born in 1949 in Uzbekistan, Mikhail Park is a writer and painter currently based in Moscow, Russia. Park graduated from the Dushanbe College of Fine Arts in Tajikistan, and made his literary debut in 1976. He writes in Russian and is a member of the Russian Authors’ Society (RAO) and the Artists’ Association of Russia. He has written seven full-length novels, six novellas, twenty short stories and two plays. Three of his short stories were published in Germany in 1992. Then, in 2003, four of his poems were introduced to readers in Canada. More recently, his novella Still Life with Apples was published in China in 2018. Several of his works have been translated into Korean and published in Seoul, including Sunflower Petals Carried Away by the Wind (1995), Naked Photographer (2007), Night, Another Sun (2012), City of Ants (2015), Helen’s Time (2017), and Still Life with Apples (2018). He was twice the winner of the Valentin Kataev Award (2001 and 2007), and won numerous other awards including the Korean PEN Award (2001), KBS Art & Literature Award (2006), and Kuprin Literature Award (2010). As a successful painter, he has held solo exhibitions in Moscow, Seoul, Paris and Almaty. In addition, he has translated the following works of Korean literature into Russian: Son of Man (2004) by Yi Mun-yol, Don Juan’s Love (2010) by Yun Hu-myong, volumes 1 (2016) and 2 (2018) of the epic novel Land by Pak Kyongni.