About this item
Highlights
- Award-winning cartoonist Keum Suk Gendry-Kim demystifies the inscrutable North Korean leaderA woman falls over a thin black line, slicing her in two--half becoming North Korea, the other half becoming South.
- About the Author: Keum Suk Gendry-Kim was born in Goheung in Jeolla Province.
- 147 Pages
- Comics + Graphic Novels, Nonfiction
Description
Book Synopsis
Award-winning cartoonist Keum Suk Gendry-Kim demystifies the inscrutable North Korean leader
A woman falls over a thin black line, slicing her in two--half becoming North Korea, the other half becoming South. From the Island of Ganghwa, a seemingly idyllic rural paradise just an hour outside of Seoul, North Korea sits mere miles away, visible from cartoonist Keum Suk Gendry-Kim's home and studio. It looms over her while she walks her dogs through the rice paddies. Artillery fire, helicopters, and sirens from a nearby military base paint her acoustic landscape. Gendry-Kim has written extensively about the pain and heartbreak experienced throughout Korea's recent history in her award-winning books Grass and The Waiting. In My friend Kim Jong-Un, Gendry-Kim looks not to the past, but to the present--to the man currently responsible for upholding the national divide.
About the Author
Keum Suk Gendry-Kim was born in Goheung in Jeolla Province. She has cartooned the graphic novels Grass, The Waiting, La saison des pluies, Jiseul, Jun, The Naked Tree, and Alexandra Kim, a Woman of Siberia; the autobiographical comic The Song of My Father; the three-volume children's comic Coquinette; the picture books The Baby Hanyeo Okrang Goes to Dokdo and A Day with My Grandpa; and the children's book My Mother Kang Geumsun. Grass (Drawn & Quarterly, 2019) appeared on Best of the Year lists from the New York Times and the Guardian, and received the Cartoonist Studio Prize for the Best Print Comic of the Year, the Big Other Book Award for Best Graphic Novel in 2019, the Harvey Award for Best International Book, and the Krause Essay Prize in 2020.