- Overview
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A world of dreams and horror spreads out from a plant; a story of two different worlds—of hatred and, perhaps, empathy—unravels.
- Book Intro
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『Rootless Stars』 is a compilation of “Colors Inside a Well” by writer Silverforest and “In the Mountain Range of Empathy” by writer Bak Seong-hwan.
“Colors Inside a Well” begins in Arkham, which became a cursed wasteland after a meteorite fell from the sky. No one could live in the polluted zone anymore, with its spooky stories of strange life forms and mutations, and the area was scheduled to become a reservoir. Hope, a female botanist, entered Arkham to write a report on the deformed plants soon to be flooded. Hope discovers that the plants where the meteorite crashed have mutated into splendid forms and colors, and she begins to carefully collect them. As she is about to collect a cluster of mushrooms swaying in a golden light before her, she gets the feeling that they could be the small tentacles of a humungous being, invisible beneath her feet. Just then, colorful spores shoot up and hundreds of tentacles from beyond the fog wrap around Hope’s body. When she wakes up, she finds herself with two men from the waterworks office. What happened? Hope returns to the school with the samples and concentrates on her research. Then she realizes that she hasn’t had her period for quite a long time.
“In the Mountain Range of Empathy” is set in Antarctica in 1909. Nine women scattered throughout South America embark on an expedition to Antarctica to celebrate their winning the lottery. The closer they get to the South Pole, the more they begin having hallucinations and visions in which time is all mixed up, and they encounter a mysterious being resembling a sea lily. The sea lily has something oozing from several places, as if it were wounded. The expedition team, instead of cutting and parting the sea lily open with a scalpel, plant the sea lily in some topsoil they manage to gather. They let it grow, and they remain by its side, trying to understand it. They may be hallucinating in the extreme cold, but they can sympathize with the sea lily. One day, they discover some wonderful yet mysterious pieces in the greenhouse built for the sea lily. It is a language that combines carvings on the wall and shapes sculpted on the floor. And there is an amazing truth in what the sea lily wants to convey in its language....
- About the Author
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Silverforest, Bak Seong-hwan
Silverforest is a novelist, editor, illustrator and a producer of occult cards. Silverforest was awarded the Golden Dragon Literary Award for two consecutive years with 『Grandma Tree』 and 『Hearty No』. She published a collection of short stories, 『Singing Forest』, and published 『Ten Thousand Pieces of Gold』 in Naver’s Today’s Literature. She participated in the anthologies 『Collection of Korean Fantasy Short Stories (vol. 1 & 2)』,『Wind Dreamer』, 『Fantasy Library』, and 『Today’s Genre Literature』.
Bak Seong-hwan won the first Science and Technology Writing Contest in the Short Story category for 『Ready-Made Bodhisattva』. This story was produced as an episode titled “The Heavenly Creature” in the film Doomsday Book. Bak participated in the anthologies 『A Million Light Years of Solitude』 and 『SF Cross Future Science』.