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129 pages, ebook
First published January 14, 2022
Story OverviewThe Man in Black by Yoonhee Oh is a haunting, lyrical, and visually compelling tale that draws from the deep wells of Korean folklore and urban legend. With its minimalist style and emotionally resonant themes, the story weaves old myth with modern unease, delivering a narrative that lingers like a whisper from another realm.
Set against the shadowed backdrop of rural Korea, the story follows a young girl and her strange encounter with a silent, looming figure—the titular "man in black." Though spare in dialogue, every page drips with atmospheric tension. Yoonhee Oh crafts a world where the veil between reality and myth is thin, and every still moment feels like the breath before something terrible—or transcendent—unfolds.
What begins as an eerie encounter spirals into a meditation on grief, superstition, and the unseen forces that may walk among us. The narrative relies heavily on visual cues, silence, and suggestion rather than exposition, making the book feel more like a cinematic experience than a traditional novella.
Folkloric ContextTo fully appreciate The Man in Black, it helps to understand its roots in Korean folklore. The character archetype is reminiscent of traditional spirits such as the cheonyeo gwishin (virgin ghost), jaesin (house gods), and more modern iterations like the mujigae gwishin (ghosts who appear dressed in black and white). These beings often appear to those in spiritual turmoil or transition, symbolizing death, memory, or unresolved sorrow.
The eerie figure in this story echoes the Jeoseung Saja—the Korean "Reaper" or afterlife envoy—dressed in black robes and tasked with escorting the dead. Unlike Western portrayals of death as brutal finality, Korean myth imbues such figures with melancholy and inevitability, themes reflected powerfully in Oh's storytelling.
Art and AestheticYoonhee Oh’s illustrations are central to the narrative’s impact. Rendered in shadowy hues and stark lines, the artwork evokes a sense of creeping dread and ethereal beauty. The pacing is deliberate, encouraging the reader to sit in the stillness—an echo of Korean horror’s unique rhythm, which favors slow-building dread over sudden terror.
Fans of graphic novels like The Arrival by Shaun Tan or Through the Woods by Emily Carroll will find a similar resonance here, though Oh’s work leans more toward metaphysical ambiguity than narrative closure.
Comparative AnalysisCompared to other Eastern horror-tinged tales such as The Hole by Pyun Hye-young or The Vegetarian by Han Kang, The Man in Black is more visually abstract but no less emotionally potent. It may not delve as deeply into social commentary, but its quiet examination of grief and mystery places it within the same thematic lineage.
Against Western counterparts like Neil Gaiman's The Sandman or Stephen Gammell’s illustrations in Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark, Oh’s style is subtler, but arguably more poetic and culturally steeped.
Final ImpressionsThe Man in Black is a quiet triumph—a ghost story that doesn’t scream but whispers. It's a rare example of how minimalism, when executed with emotional precision and cultural sensitivity, can speak volumes. This is not merely a tale of fear, but one of memory, liminality, and the spaces between worlds.
Rating: ⭐⭐⭐☆ ☆ (3 out of 5 glowing stars)
Recommended for:
Readers of literary horror or visual storytelling Fans of Korean folklore and supernatural fiction Those seeking quiet, atmospheric narratives over jump scares or gore