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b, Book, and Me

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Best friends b and Rang are all each other have. Their parents are absent, their teachers avert their eyes when they walk by. Everyone else in town acts like they live in Seoul even though it's painfully obvious they don't. When Rang begins to be bullied horribly by the boys in baseball hats, b fends them off. But one day Rang unintentionally tells the whole class about b's dying sister and how her family is poor, and each of them finds herself desperately alone. The only place they can reclaim themselves, and perhaps each other, is beyond the part of town where lunatics live—the End.

In a piercing, heartbreaking, and astonishingly honest voice, Kim Sagwa's b, Book, and Me walks the precipice between youth and adulthood, reminding us how perilous the edge can be.

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    • Kirkus

      December 15, 2019
      In this coming-of-age novel by South Korean author Kim (Mina, 2018, etc.), two high school girls navigate violent bullies and absent, uncaring parents in an unnamed city on the coast. "The city we lived in was ridiculous," Rang announces to the reader, "because it was a city that imitated Seoul." "Everybody who lived there was pretty much the same....Except there was one kid who wanted to be a fish." This is Rang's best friend, b. Rang points out that being a fish would mean having scales and being ugly, but b sticks to her guns: "I'll go into the water and I'll never come back out." Rang's parents show no interest in her while b's are overwhelmed by poverty and her sister's illness. Rang's beloved Grandma is drifting toward senescence. Don't ever get lost, she insists, or you'll wind up at the End, a place north of the hill where "the abandoned people" live. Rang and b play at the beach, struggle to fit in at school, and hang out at a cafe called Alone ("Adults thought the name was ridiculous...b and I thought it was cool"), where they meet a bookish loner. Rang is targeted by bullies at school, boys identified only by their baseball hats who regularly kick and hit her until she bleeds, and no one but b ever steps in. The girls are straddling childhood and young adulthood without guidance or help. And when Rang inadvertently exposes b's poverty, their friendship ends with devastating abruptness and pushes them separately toward the dreaded End. Told alternately from Rang's and b's points of view, the text is broken into short, sometimes-dreamlike sections that capture their teenage angst and moods. "I feel agony and I'm getting even more boring." "I was incredibly hungry." A dark, dystopian view of South Korean adolescence, hopelessness, and the cruelties children are capable of inflicting on each other.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from December 1, 2019
      Although set in a coastal suburb outside Seoul, the cycle of neglect by stressed or careless adults can and does happen anywhere. In such an all-too-familiarly indifferent environment, lauded Korean writer Kim (Mina, 2018) introduces three misfits: two teen girls and a socially-outcast, self-isolated young man, each struggling for their very existence. The titular Me is Rang, whose disengaged parents provide financial privilege but care little about her actual well-being. She's relentlessly abused by the boys in her class, while teachers turn a blind eye. Her only protector and friend is b, whose family's poverty keeps her trapped where people who are ruined live. The pair are rarely parted, avoiding boredom and responsibility by wandering the city, drinking coffee at a downtown caf� ironically named Alone, where they meet a strange guy named Book?who does nothing but, well, read books. When Rang inexplicably exposes b's private tribulations during a writing class, b severs their friendship and disappears. The cycles of abuse resume, but power shifts prove inevitable. At turns raw and piercing, dreamy and surreal, Kim's latest import?urgently Anglophone-enabled by scholar/editor/Seoul-based translator Jeong?is a pressing indictment of today's too-often onerous transition toward uncertain adulthood.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

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