Moon Tides: Jeju Island Grannies of the Sea, Brenda Paik Sunoo

Moon Tides: Jeju Island Grannies of the Sea

Brenda Paik Sunoo

Publisher: Seoul Selection
PubDate: 7/7/2011
ISBN: 9788991913783
Binding: CLOTHBOUND
Price: $65.00
Quantity Available: 11
Pages: 240
 

Literary Nonfiction. Southeast Asia Studies. Photography. Interpreted and translated from the Korean by Youngsook Han. Imagine strolling along the windy shores of Jeju Island, off the southwest coast of Korea. Suddenly, you hear whistling echoing from the sea. Turning to the water, you spot weathered faces bobbing to the surface, and you realize that the sound is the exhaled breath of sea women, known as haenyeo. With a sigh of gratitude, the aging divers have returned to the surface to replenish their aching lungs. Jeju Island's haenyeo are a dying breed—perhaps the last of their generation. As their maternal ancestors did for centuries, they have scoured the island's sea floor, harvesting seaweed, octopuses, sea urchins, turban shells, and abalone. Their numbers have dwindled from 15,000 in the 1970s to approximately 5,600 in recent decades. Driven by economics, these free-divers continue to labor well into their eighties—the hardier ones often plunging 65 feet while holding their breath for two minutes or longer. Brenda Paik Sunoo gathered these women's stories while living in their diving villages for a total of seven months between 2007 and 2009. MOON TIDES is the first book by an American journalist to document the lives of these rare divers through intimate interviews and photographs. Their stories will appeal to those of us desiring a life of purpose—undulating and infinite as the sea.

Author City: Hanoi VIE

Brenda Paik Sunoo is a third-generation Korean American writer and photojournalist. She received her Bachelor of Arts degree in sociology at University of California, Los Angeles, and her Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing degree at Antioch University. Her memoir on loss and healing, "Seaweed and Shamans: Inheriting the Gifts of Grief," has been published in English, Korean, and Vietnamese. She and her husband, Jan, have been living in Hanoi, Vietnam, since 2002. They have one son, David, and a granddaughter, Jolena.

Reviews and Other Links
Katherine Yungmee Kim @ KoreAm
Video @ The Korea Society's Book Café


New Arrivals

Music for Porn
Rob Halpern

Transcendental Telemarketer
Beth Copeland

The Posthumous Affair
James Friel

the relational elations of ORPHANED ALGEBRA
Eileen R Tabios and j/j hastain

Crow-Blue, Crow-Black
Chip Livingston

Three Ways of the Saw: Stories
Matt Mullins