Lee Hyun-su


Lee Hyun-su is a South Korean writer. She is the recipient of the Hahn Moo-Sook Literary Prize and the Mu-young Literary Prize.

Early life and education

Lee was born in Yeongdong, Chungcheongbuk-do in 1959. She graduated from Yeungnam University in textile studies.

Literary career

Lee began her literary career when her short story The Sign of Disaster Came From The Finger won the 1991 Chungcheong Ilbo New Writer's Award. Later, she won the 1997 Munhakdongne Winter Literary Contest with her short story Between Dry Days and began to commit to writing full-time. She published story collections Taro, and The Rose Tree Cupboard, as well as novels New Tales of Gisaeng, The Woman From the House on the Road, and 4 Days.

Writing

In her commentary for winning the Munhakdongne Winter Literary Contest in 1997, Lee voiced her thoughts on the definition of a novel.
Lee's thoughts on fiction that spoke of a cheating husband was a conservative stance that was both alien, and a challenge. Her work New Tales of Gisaeng, which narrates the lives of gisaengs in Gunsan and 4 Days, which chases after the hidden history of the No Gun Ri Massacre, can be seen as her literary self-confirmations.
Critic Jang Eunsu, in describing the characters of New Tales of Gisaeng described Lee's fiction: “The high achievements of Lee Hyun-su’s fiction are at times hidden by the ‘tastes of her sentences’. The author's focused interest due to her unwillingness to leave out even the smallest detail of the lives of her characters, actually becomes an obstacle in entering that character's life and its vivid reality. Our pitiful minds that must adapt to the fast pace and rhythm of civilization, are surprised and startled by the excitement of the sentence that rises within our body like a somewhat familiar monster. As a traditional artist of language, Lee Hyun-su ties fantastic descriptions and rich dialogue, and tenaciously tells the life journey of the people of the Buyonggak. The gisaeng house culture, now being helplessly forgotten within the tides of modernization, is depicted in a rich miniature. And she carefully records the life of the gisaeng, who has “learned the feeling of pain before even coming of age.” As Jang Eunsu states, Lee Hyun-su is our generation's “traditional artist of language."

Works

Short story collections

Toran, Munidang, 2003.Jangminamu sikgijang, Munhakdongne, 2009.

Novels

Gilgatjib yeoja, Iroom, 2000.
  • , Munhakdongne, 2005.Naheul, Munhakdongne, 2013.

Works in translation

Awards