2.5 stars
An entire month has already passed since I finished this weird, disturbing collection of short stories. Mostly what stuck with me since then are the first two stories – “The Head” and “The Embodiment” (and a couple of others.) I thought I was in for a wild, thought-provoking ride after these two! If you are a thrill seeker and have ever frequented amusement parks, then you may know that it’s best to save your favorite, most exhilarating rides for the end. Otherwise, what could have been a day full of fun memories turns into a hot, grumpy kind of day when all the best things happened when the gates first opened and the heat of the sun didn’t burn your skin and suck you dry. By closing time, you have a wicked headache and a queasy stomach. You can’t even remember what the fuss was all about and wish you had spent the day doing something else instead.
“What hour could be so dark? And where in the world…”
Okay, maybe I’m getting carried away with this silly analogy, because Bora Chung does have a clever mind and quite the imagination. Many of these stories will appeal to those who enjoy moral tales and a strange cocktail of horror-science fiction-magical realism. I’m just not that kind of reader, no matter how hard I try. Having said that, I had some wickedly entertaining discussions with my buddy and two of my co-workers who were enticed to read the first two stories when I wouldn’t shut up about them! The side effect is that weeks later we are still running around calling each other “Mother”. (You have to read “The Head” to find out what I’m talking about.) Chung has a lot to say about capitalism, the patriarchy, greed, motherhood, feminism, and body image. There’s also a story about robots, “Goodbye, My Love”, that I enjoyed quite a lot that spoke to the process of aging.
“The human body begins to decline dramatically at the age of sixty, but they live on for ten, twenty, even thirty more years. We were developed to aid such humans and enhance their quality of life… Just a few replacement parts or a software upgrade could help us serve you for a decade longer, but we’re treated like trash as soon as there is a new model.”
Lovers of offbeat, somewhat eerie tales will likely have a ball with this collection. Overall, the discussions were much more memorable than the actual stories themselves, but for all that Bora Chung deserves a bit more than my tongue-in-cheek comparison to a bunch of carnival rides! I’ll round up for the lively chats this generated. Check out some more reviews of this one to make an informed decision.
“Those who are unaware of their lives slipping away while they are ensnared in the past… are in the end, whether alive or dead, ghosts of the past.”