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Everything Was Forever

Author

Jung Jidon

Publisher

Moonji Publishing Co., Ltd.

Categories

Literature & Fiction

Audience

Adult

Overseas Licensing

Keywords

  • #Korean literature
  • #exhibition novel
  • #full-length novel
  • #Jung Jidon

Copyright Contact

Yun SeoHee

  • Publication Date

    2021-12-07
  • No. of pages

    212
  • ISBN

    9788932038124
  • Dimensions

    120 * 188
Overview

A book of the future that shows yesterday, or a book of yesterday that thinks of today. A story that Jung Jidon links together using quotations, questions, humor, and irony.

Book Intro

"Everything was Forever revolves around the life of the historical figure Wellington Jung, son of the communist Alice Hyun who herself was at one time mistaken for an American spy.

 

Few known records about Wellington Jung exist: Son of independence activist and communist Alice Hyun. Born and raised in Hawaii in October 1927. Joined the merchant marine in 1945. Enrolled briefly in the pre-medical program at UCLA in 1947. Arrived in Cheb, Czech Republic in 1948 via France and Germany. Attended Charles University in Prague the following year. Married Anna Šoltýsová, a Czech woman of Soviet origin, in 1958 and had a daughter, Tabitha, with her. Gave up his US citizenship in October of that year and applied for a Czech one. Became a naturalized Czech citizen in April 1959. Appointed the head physician of anatomical pathology and chief of the municipal hospital laboratory in Cheb in November 1962. Took his own life by consuming poison in the hospital’s autopsy unit in November 1963. 

 

Wellington Chung was a child of first-generation immigrants to Hawaii and a US citizen, but he was also an Asian and had to often face racial prejudice. He was a communist who wished to go to North Korea but the North rejected him as an American citizen. His own mother was executed by the North on charges of being an American spy. He collaborated with the Czech State Security Service but they didn’t trust him because he was a communist. Wellington Chung was not accepted anywhere, not by the US, North Korea, or the Czech Republic.

 

Everything was Forever is based on these facts, but there is not much meaning in a linear life. Among the trajectories of Chung’s life outlined here, the main focus of the novel is his life in the Czech Republic, beginning in Cheb and ending there. Jung Jidon thinks through Wellington Chung, filling in the gaps in the few meagre facts with conjecture and imagination and by mixing time periods. “Time lost its distance in memory, and fourteen years ago and fourteen years later overlapped on the horizon of consciousness like a paper folded in half and punctured with a pen.” As his last period in the Czech Republic intersects with the time when he first arrived there, Chung’s memories and thoughts pour down with stories of other characters or texts drawn from outside by the author. That Wellington Chung was a victim of history and an outlier of his times is an indisputable fact, but what Jung Jidon attempts in his novel is not offering comfort to him (and them) or revealing hidden truths or generating catharsis. The Wellington Chung the author envisions is in a different world from reality. However, regardless of the author’s intentions, the fictional reality lived by a figure who left behind only faint footprints on history is oddly sad, funny, and surprisingly heartwarming.

 

“People who have done nothing are not incompetent, rather they have the power of denial. If competence is the kind of ability that can prove oneself, then incompetence is the ability to prove the world.” We can understand Jung Jidon’s fiction by following the dilemma of Wellington Chung, the “incompetent man” who was not accepted by the times or by the world.

About the Author

Jung Jidon



(English) A self-identified "analrealist" inspired by Bolano's infrarealism, Jeong Jidon states, "Ideas divide us and dreams unite us. What I do best is citation. Literature is like citing the world. Literature is the citation of the world... Analrealism is the citation of literature." Jeong began his literary career in 2013 as the recipient of the New Writer's Award from Munhakgwa Sahwe. A prolific writer, his publications include the short story collections "Like How I Fight", "We Will Live in the Memories of Others", "People Who Hate Jokes", the novella "Journal of a Nighttime Guard", the novels "Tiny Coward Coward New Party" and "Everything was Eternal", and the essay collections "The Joy of Literature" (cowritten), "Film and Poetry", "Something that's For You But Not Yours". He won the Munji Literature Prize in 2016, and the Munhakdongne Young Writers' Award in 2015. 

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