Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
Two young women of vastly different means each struggle to find her own way during the darkest hours of South Korea s economic miracle in a striking debut novel for readers of Anthony Marra and Chimamanda Ngozie Adichie.
Seoul, 1978. At South Korea s top university, the nation s best and brightest compete to join the professional elite of an authoritarian regime. Success could lead to a life of rarefied privilege and wealth; failure means being left irrevocably behind.
For childhood friends Jisun and Namin, the stakes couldn t be more different. Jisun, the daughter of a powerful business mogul, grew up on a mountainside estate with lush gardens and a dedicated chauffeur. Namin s parents run a tented food cart from dawn to curfew; her sister works in a shoe factory. Now Jisun wants as little to do with her father s world as possible, abandoning her schoolwork in favor of the underground activist movement, while Namin studies tirelessly in the service of one goal: to launch herself and her family out of poverty.
But everything changes when Jisun and Namin meet an ambitious, charming student named Sunam, whose need to please his family has led him to a prestigious club: the Circle. Under the influence of his mentor, Juno, a manipulative social climber, Sunam becomes entangled with both women, as they all make choices that will change their lives forever.
In this sweeping yet intimate debut, Yoojin Grace Wuertz details four intertwining lives that are rife with turmoil and desire, private anxieties and public betrayals, dashed hopes and broken dreams while a nation moves toward prosperity at any cost.
Advance praise for Everything Belongs to Us
If South Korea transformed in a generation, this is the generation that transformed it: rich and poor, reckless and disciplined, loyal and faithless. Yoojin Grace Wuertz s fierce and unforgettable characters embody every contradiction as they do everything they can to ensure their own, and their nation s, survival. In Everything Belongs to Us, Wuertz has given us a Middlemarch for modern South Korea. She s woven the whole social tapestry, and made us care about every last thread. Susan Choi, author of My Education
I found myself engrossed in the difficult choices faced by Wuertz s nuanced, engaging characters as they navigate college politics and romance in 1970s Seoul. I m thrilled to have experienced their inner lives in these pages to have celebrated their victories and commiserated in the pain of their mistakes and would happily have stuck with them for hundreds more. Emily Barton, author of The Book of Esther
What a story Everything belongs to this terrific debut: love, family, friendship, and politics. I especially loved the two strong-willed and passionate heroines. Their ideals, choices, and struggles make this an utterly rapturous literary page-turner. Samuel Park, author of This Burns My Heart
Historic in scope yet eerily contemporary, Everything Belongs to Us is a stirring debut that immerses readers in a society where some quietly hope for change and others must demand it. In Yoojin Grace Wuertz s capable hands, characters come alive with desire for a different kind of life, and heartbreak is the price of longing. Jung Yun, author of Shelter"