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THE THINGS I THOUGHT ABOUT OVER BREAKFAST

Author

Dahye Lee

Publisher

ScienceBooks

Categories

Literature & Fiction

Audience

Adult

Overseas Licensing

Keywords

Copyright Contact

Song Ji-young

  • Publication Date

    2020-03-23
  • No. of pages

    188
  • ISBN

    9791190403535
  • Dimensions

    115 * 180
Overview

Starting your morning with breakfast means you have your life under control, just as you planned it.

Book Intro

First up on Semicolon’s Ding Series of food essays is THE THINGS I THOUGHT ABOUT OVER BREAKFAST, a collection of riveting and exciting stories featuring all kinds of breakfast. Are you a breakfast person who eats breakfast every morning or do you usually skip your morning meal, always rushing out the door with wet hair to get to work on time? Whichever is fine. Because writer Lee often skips her breakfast although she loves it, just like we do. She knows what fun it is to open up your lunchbox—with homecooked food still warm inside—as soon as arriving to school; she wonders why morning sleep is so much sweeter than night sleep. This book isn’t some guide or manual on breakfast. Rather, it depicts scenes from life that involve the kitchen or the table—how all those mornings used to look and what their related memories are. One’s entire life is embodied in breakfasts, which come in many forms: Granny’s gimbap, street breakfast sandwich toast-u, Busan Codfish Stew, Jeonju Beansprout Soup, oatmeal—which may look easy to make but really isn’t—or something you force yourself to eat just so you can take your medicine afterwards. As a journalist for the film magazine Cine21 as well as an avid reader and book columnist, writer Lee cites morning scenes from movies and literary works that touch upon feelings of love, affection, compassion, frustration, anger, exhaustion, the temptation to run away, or even pressure. What’s more, readers will be able to look back on their own breakfast memories and add more fun to the reading experience.

About the Author

Dahye Lee



(English) Dahye Lee discusses books and movies as a film journalist, essayist, and book columnist. She has been exploring ways to enjoy reading without letting it consume her after realizing that reading books, even as an act of resistance, has helped her adapt to the demands of the world. She has authored works like Words of Travel; My Work for the Future; Incantations on the Way to Work; and No Matter What, Thriller.

Recommendation

"Selected as a Recommended New Book by a Major Korean Newspaper The Hankyoreh "


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