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Bae Suah

    Bae Suah stands as a leading voice in contemporary Korean literature, celebrated for her distinctive literary style and profound explorations of the human psyche. Her prose delves into themes of identity, memory, and alienation, artfully navigating the intricate connections between the individual and the world. Suah masterfully employs language to craft dreamlike atmospheres, immersing readers in a labyrinth of thoughts and emotions. Her writing is lauded for its originality and its ability to probe the depths of human experience.

    Nowhere to Be Found
    Untold night and day
    Unknown Night and Day
    • 2020

      Unknown Night and Day

      • 160 pages
      • 6 hours of reading
      3.5(701)Add rating

      Twenty-eight-year-old Kim Ayami has just been made redundant and thinking about the future feels like staring into the unknown. Open to anything, Ayami spends a night in the company of her former boss, searching for a mutual friend who has disappeared, and the following day looking after a visiting poet who turns out to be not what he seems. But in the sweltering heat of Seoul at the height of the summer, order gives way to chaos and the edges of reality start to fray, with Ayami becoming an unwitting guide to its increasingly tangled threads

      Unknown Night and Day
    • 2020

      Finishing her last shift at Seoul's only audio theatre for the blind, Kim Ayami heads into the night with her former boss, searching for a missing friend. The following day, she looks after a visiting poet, a man who is not as he seems. Unfolding over a night and a day in the sweltering summer heat, their world's order gives way to chaos, the edges of reality start to fray, and the past intrudes on the present in increasingly disorientating ways.

      Untold night and day
    • 2015

      Nowhere to Be Found

      • 103 pages
      • 4 hours of reading
      3.3(836)Add rating

      A nameless narrator passes through her life, searching for meaning and connection in experiences she barely feels. For her, time and identity blur, and all action is reaction. She can’t quite understand what motivates others to take life seriously enough to focus on anything—for her existence is a loosely woven tapestry of fleeting concepts. From losing her virginity to mindless jobs and a splintered, unsupportive family, the lessons learned have less to do with the reality we all share and more to do with the truth of the imagination, which is where the narrator focuses to discover herself.

      Nowhere to Be Found