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TABLE FOR ONE by Yun Ko-eun

TABLE FOR ONE

by Yun Ko-eun ; translated by Lizzie Buehler

Pub Date: April 9th, 2024
ISBN: 9780231192033
Publisher: Columbia Univ.

Nine tales illustrate the absurdities of modern life.

Korean author Yun explores themes of anxiety and alienation in this wide-ranging collection. Some entries are a bit woolly and take surreal turns to underscore their messages. “Hyeonmong Park’s Hall of Dreams,” for example, is about a struggling businessman who finally makes his fortune charging customers to wear their pajamas and dream their dreams, ostensibly to save them time and stress. Meanwhile, “Roadkill,” a Kafkaesque commentary on capitalism, is set during an extended blizzard at a remote, unstaffed motel where vending machines roll through the halls, selling seemingly everything and allowing guests to temporarily revoke their identities in exchange for cash. Other entries rely on a strong, distinct voice and subtle satire to get their points across. Such is the case with the incisive, empowering title story, wherein a woman tires of being excluded from her co-workers’ lunch plans and enrolls in a three-month course to learn how to comfortably, confidently, dine out alone. “Invader Graphic,” a wryly funny standout, intercuts narration from a young writer who uses a department store powder room as her office with excerpts from her novel-in-progress about a depressed banker who finds joy in guerrilla street art. And the paranoia-fueled “Sweet Escape” sees a man join a travel club in preparation for a European vacation only to develop a pathological fear of bedbugs. Repeated elements appear throughout, amplifying the collection’s resonance. Boldly drawn characters abound, but Yun renders women, in particular, with an empathy and complexity that enrich the entries in which they are the focus.

Weirdly wonderful and wonderfully weird.