Sohn Won-pyung (b.1979) earned BA in social studies and philosophy at Sogang University and film directing at Korean Academy of Film Arts. She won the Film Review Award of the 6th Cine21 in 2001. Her movie script "I Believe In the Moment" won the Science Fantasy Writers' Award in 2006. She also wrote and directed a number of short films including Oooh You Make Me Sick (2005), and A Two-way Monologue (2007). She made her literary debut in 2017 when her first full-length novel Almond won the Changbi Prize for Young Adult Fiction, immediately garnering rave reactions from the readers. A new generation of a storyteller, she wrote her next full-length novel, Born in 1988 which won the Jeju 4.3 Peace Literary Award. She is active in both movie and literary scenes as a film director, screenwriter, and novelist.
"A boldly original piece of fiction, plumbing the depths of the
human condition with plenty of humor along the way." —
Entertainment Weekly
"In her debut novel, film director and screenwriter Sohn Won-pyung
(with the assistance of translator Sandy Joosun Lee) has
created a tender exploration of adolescence — a universal
experience complicated here by extraordinary circumstances. This is
one of those books that deftly straddles the line between
young adult and adult fiction; it has such a gentle heart that
readers of all ages will recognize and sympathize with the
characters' struggles and celebrate when they ultimately
triumph." — Salon
“Won-pyung Sohn understands that those who think, feel, and
communicate differently aren't society's villains, they are its
saviors. Her writing possesses seemingly unlimited empathy and
tenderness.” — Madeleine Ryan, author of A Room Called
Earth
“In what might be the first novel to feature a protagonist with
alexithymia—an inability to identify and express one’s
feelings—Korean novelist Sohn’s affecting debut arrives stateside.
Raised by his grandmother and mother who worked diligently to guide
him through everyday social interactions, Yunjae at 15 is
effectively orphaned…. As Yunjae risks communication and
connection, the eponymous almond—the undeveloped amygdalae of his
brain—takes seed, and gives Yunjae the courage to claim 'an
entirely different story. New and unknown.' Winner of the
prestigious Changbi Prize for Young Adult Fiction in Korea, Sohn
presents a 15-year-old neurodiverse protagonist with much
resonance.” — Booklist (starred review)
“Almond is a tour de force -- deeply engaging, engrossing, and
troubling -- a poignant allegory of the contemporary Korean
condition that marks the debut of a new international talent." —
Heinz Insu Fenkl, author of Memories of My Ghost Brother and
translator of The Nine Cloud Dream by Kim Man-jung
“Delicate and heartbreaking. Like peeling a fruit, Sohn bares human
emotion and questions the human condition with a gentle
hunger.” — Jamie Marina Lau, author of Pink Mountain on
Locust Island
“In her debut novel, director and screenwriter Sohn makes the bold
decision to choose an emotionally constricted first-person
narrator, but the risk pays off. With the aid of a skillful
translation…the novel will appeal fully to adults, but mature young
readers who must cope in their everyday lives with the struggles of
late adolescence will find themselves identifying with Yunjae and
moved by his plight. A sensitive exploration of what it's like to
live at life's emotional poles.” — Kirkus Reviews
"The narration by a young protagonist with a disorder that affects
his ability to identify and express feelings will rightly draw
comparisons to The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by
Mark Haddon, but Sohn's insightful depiction of an outsider's
perspective on society around him will also please fans of other
narrators who sharply consider the world at a remove, such as in
The Sympathizer by Viet Thanh Nguyen. Readers will treasure the
opportunity to see the world through Yunjae's eyes and watch him as
he grows." — Shelf Awareness
"Intense and moving...a phenomenal book that deserves a wide
audience among readers." — Wall Street Journal
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