- Overview
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An interstellar terror infiltrates a quiet mountainside village in postwar Korea.
- Book Intro
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In the isolated mountain village of Umori lives the Mistress from Deuran, a mysterious woman who founded the secluded and secretive hamlet during the Japanese occupation. Each inhabitant of the village had been rescued by the Mistress as they ran from their unspeakable past lives. All of the land in the village belongs to the Mistress but she collects no tithe—on the surface, a perfect little community. Then one year, on a night when the rain falls hard as if the sky had split open, something crashes near the village and sets off a strange chain of events. The village teacher is found drowned, and odd lights floating around the mountain. The Mistress looks up at the alien sky and makes a decision, only letting the little girl Mari, the narrator of the novel, know her past and what is at stake.
What would happen if you took Lovecraft’s interstellar terror and combined it with earthly terror? This novel repurposes two different traditions to come up with a new narrative where early 20th-century Korea mixes with alien horror. In the midst of it all is the Mistress, who turns out to be an “agriculturally inclined vampire” who cultivates humans like humans cultivate the land. While she is technically a bloodsucking leader, she never sucks enough blood to kill, and only uses the power from the blood to protect the community. In this exceptional community, power relations are thrown aside to collectively deal with the invasion of outsiders. A story of two different horror subgenres, but in the end, what really makes it work are these scenes of trust and humanity in the face of crisis.
- About the Author
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Song Kyungah
Song Kyungah was born in 1971. After graduating from Yonsei University with a major in computer science, she studied at Yonsei’s graduate school for Korean literature and debuted as a fiction writer in 1994. Her published works include the novel Whether My Sister Loved or I Loved and the short story collections Excerpts from a Research on the Effects of Conjugal Relations between Two Humans, Terrorist, Book, and Elevator, as well as contributing to anthologies such as In Search of Lost Minds. She has also worked as a translator of books such as Agatha Christie’s A Caribbean Mystery, Scott Westerfield's Pretty and Ugly, Charlaine Harris's Club Dead and Dead to the World, Angie Sage's Septimus Heap, Stanislaw Lem's Cyberiad, Fritz Lieber's Conjure Wife, Jasper Fforde's The Eyre Affair, and others.