- Overview
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"Lady, want to know a secret?" By exploring the mind of a serial killer, this psychological thriller attempts to identify the root of evil.
- Book Intro
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Lee Byung-do is a serial killer who has refused all interviews and remained in total silence. One day, the convicted death row inmate requests an interview with the criminal psychologist Sunkyung, whom he'd never met. Sunkyung doesn't know how Lee knows her, or why he asked to talk to her. Meanwhile, another person intrudes into her life. After a sudden fire incident, her husband brings Hayoung, his daughter with his former wife, to live with them. Sunkyung finds it uncomfortable being around Hayoung, with whom she feels a sense of tension.
But that is not where the story ends.
The Only Child is a psychological thriller that looks into the mind of a serial killer through the eyes of Lee Sunkyung, a criminal psychologist. Due to an unexpected opportunity, Sunkyung gets the chance to interview the serial killer Lee Byungdo. While learning more about his mind, readers also get to wonder whether serial killers are born serial killers, or if they're bred as such. Sunkyung feels a wave of confusion as she identifies commonalities and differences between the serial killer Lee Byungdo and her 11-year-old stepdaughter Hayoung.
- About the Author
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Seo Mi-ae
As a child, the author loved reading more than playing with friends; in the end, she grew up to become a writer. While in college, at the young age of 20, her work was selected in a Spring Literary Contest, which launched her career as an author. She also became involved in TV broadcasting.
When Suh turned 30, she began writing for TV dramas and mystery novels; her somewhat shockingly titled Thirty Ways to Kill Your Husband garnered her a Spring Literary Contest award. Since then, for over 20 years, she has worked in various media including TV, mystery novels, and film before establishing herself as a professional mystery author. She prefers Miss Marple over Sherlock Holmes, and psychological crime thrillers over tricks. These preferences are evident in her works.
Suh’s major works include The Night Your Star Disappeared; The Only Child; and the short story collections A Welcome Murderer; Thirty Ways to Kill Your Husband; and The Orbit of the Stars. For The Doll’s Garden, she received the 2009 Korea Mystery Literature Award. Some of her works including A Welcome Murderer and Thirty Ways to Kill Your Husband have been adapted for television, film, and theater.