The Year of Impossible Goodbyes

by Sook Nyui Choi

Paperback, 1991

Status

Check shelf

Call number

J CH

Publication

Dell Yearling paperback (1991)

Description

A young Korean girl survives the oppressive Japanese and Russian occupation of North Korea during the 1940s, to later escape to freedom in South Korea.

Local notes

8093

User reviews

LibraryThing member t1bclasslibrary
This book describes a young girl's life in North Korea when it is first controlled by the Japanese and then by the Russians. Both groups impose a state of slavery and misery on her family, only relieved by her escape to South Korea with her mother and little brother. I get the impression that this
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is semi-autobiographical.
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LibraryThing member gkuhns
Sookan and her family endure the occupation of their North Korean homeland by the Japanese during WWII. Then, the war ends, and the Russians bring even more suffering. Sookan and her little brother attempt to escape this Communist savagery by fleeing to the free south. Sookan and her family must
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survive the arbitrary cruelty of the Japanese. In addition, they must also struggle to maintain their own sense of dignity and honor in the face of repression. Buddhist ideals and recurring images in the book, such as a mighty tree, chopped down as punishment, root the novel in an East Asian reality. This book explores the themes of family love and of the value of determination and hope against all odds. This book is a worthy addition to a multicultural collection, adding information about an important portion of world history that is sadly neglected.
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LibraryThing member jakdomin
“Year of the Impossible Goodbyes” is definitely a book that should be used in class for kids to reflect on the human spirit. Although the setting is Japanese-occupied Korea during WW2 and plays an important part in the story line, kids should be able to relate to the characters in a generalized
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sense, knowing what is is like to be part of a family and how one might feel if their own family was torn apart like the one in the story. The story line is vivid and descriptive of the times, but lacks the type of depth that could be further explored in class with a self-reflection-type exercise. The book also serves to teach about an important time in history from a perspective other than that of the U.S. Books like this where the main characters are foreign help in teaching kids tolerance, compassion, understanding, and humanity, while American-only perspectives can sometimes inhibit these important lessons.
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LibraryThing member elpowers
Sookan's family is terrorized by Cpt. Narita during WWII. Town is conforming from one oppressive regime to another. Sookan finally flees with the rest of her family (grandpa, aunt and cousin die).
LibraryThing member ALelliott
For students:

World War II contains infinite stories. Some we have heard many times, and others we haven't. Take a peek into a story that perhaps you haven't heard before, of Sookan, a young girl living in Northern Korea during and right after World War II. Sookan lives with her mother, grandfather,
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and younger brother in a small house in Pyongyang, producing socks for the Japanese military. As they wait for Sookan's father and older brothers to return, they endure many hardships at the hands of the Japanese occupiers. At last, the war is over, but it seems that their troubles are not.

Told with strength and grace, this is a wonderfully told story of a family's fight for survival, even in the face of terrible cruelty and oppression. The author lived in Korea as a child during this time, enduring some of the same suffering Sookan endures.

You will enjoy this book if you like realistic historical fiction, books about people overcoming terrible hardship, or if you enjoy reading about people in faraway places.

For educators and librarians:

A wonderful addition to your collection, this book is heartbreaking, but ultimately full of hope. While a few students may be familiar with the Japanese occupation of Korea during World War II, many more are not, and will find this story enriching and exciting.

Reading level: 11 and up
Appropriateness: some of the violence is graphic, but never superfluous
Kids who would like this book: students interested in World War II, especially looking beyond the often Eurocentric domination of such literature

Highly recommended.
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LibraryThing member KimReadingLog
Times are tough for 10 year old Sookan and her family. They live in North Korea, and their region has been taken over by the cruel Japanese military during WWII. Close to starvation, the residents work to the bone and are constantly terrorized. Their possessions have been taken and destroyed, along
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with their traditions. Sookan has to go to a Japanese school where she will get in trouble if she speaks Korean. When the war ends, things don’t improve. Now the Russians have moved in, and brainwash residents into a revival, asking for converts to Communism, and to report anyone who speaks against the regime. Sookan and her remaining family members make plans to sneak away to the south, where they think Sookan’s father must be. This account, based on the life of the author, is full of the horrible details of war – oppression, starvation, death, loss, and seemingly no hope. Readers will hold their breath to find out if Sookan and her brother make it through the barbed wire fences and into South Korea!
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LibraryThing member Phill242
historical fiction, WWII, Korean occupation by the Japanese and then the Russians. Told from one family's point of view.
LibraryThing member wealhtheowwylfing
A haunting tale of Japanese-occupied Korea, and one family's attempt to survive political upheaval.

Language

Original publication date

1991

ISBN

0440900247 / 9780440900245

Barcode

34747000047916
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