Kirkus Reviews QR Code
THE STONE HOME by Crystal Hana Kim

THE STONE HOME

by Crystal Hana Kim

Pub Date: April 2nd, 2024
ISBN: 9780063310971
Publisher: Morrow/HarperCollins

In the spring of 1980, two pairs of Korean citizens are abducted, their lives forever entwined.

The police snatch up Eunju, 15, and her mother, a young sex worker, as they beg for money in the street. Sangchul and his older brother, both teenagers, are kidnapped by the authorities on their way home from school. In alternating chapters, Eunju and Sangchul reveal the story of their lives at the Stone Home, an institution that’s charged with rehabilitating vagrants into model citizens during a volatile time for Korean politics and the nation’s place on the world’s stage. What really happens is that the two men who run the facility, known only as Warden and Teacher, force their charges into labor, brutal punishments when they don’t meet quotas, vicious physical abuse, and specious religious services. They establish a demeaning pecking order, especially among the boys, that unleashes cruelties among them. The story also unfolds piece by piece in 2011 when Narae, a 30-something Korean American, shows up on Eunju’s doorstep in Daegu. Sangchul was Narae’s father, and his dying wish was for Narae to find Eunju, now in her mid-40s, to learn the truth about the past. Kim has written such a poignant, heartfelt book that the only disappointment is a sense of missed opportunity. By relying on fragments, clipped sentences, and vague descriptions, Kim too often sacrifices clarity for lyricism, particularly in the first half of the book. When she’s willing to tell this story of torment more plainly, narrating the action of the second half with more direct language, it ignites into a searing portrait of survival.

A novel that explores how the historical moment and the nature of power shape our lives.