Hong Sok-jung


Hong Sok-jung is a North Korean writer. He is the grandson of novelist Hong Myong-hui.
Sok-jung moved to North Korea with his family after the Second World War. He served in the Korean People's Navy, and obtained a degree in literature at Kim Il Sung University. His first published work was a short story, "Red Flower", in 1970. In 1979, he joined the Central Committee of North Korea's official literary organisation, the Joseon Writers' Alliance.
In 1993, he published his most successful work, Northeaster, an epic novel. In 2002, he published Hwang Jin-i, a historical novel set in the Joseon Dynasty of the sixteenth century, which depicts kisaeng Hwang Jin-i's discovery of the people's starvation and her encounters with corrupt officials. Hwang Jin-i was awarded South Korea's Manhae Literary Prize in 2005, the first time it had been awarded to a North Korean writer. An excerpt from the novel was translated into English and published by Words Without Borders in Literature from the "Axis of Evil" in 2006.