A satirical Korean eco-thriller with a fierce feminist sensibility
Yun Ko-eun was born in Seoul in 1980. Her short story 'Piercing' won the Daesan Literary Award for College Students the year she graduated from university. She received the 2008 Hankyorek Literature Award for her novel The Zero G Syndrome and in 2015 her short story collection Aloha won the Kim Yong Ik Novel Prize.
A fresh and sharp story about life under late capitalism ... an
entertaining eco-thriller
*Guardian*
The forces pitched against Yona reveal their true scale and
monstrosity in a frothy-seeming satire that, in the end, shreds the
very idea of commerce to bleeding tatters. I'd say this was a
perfect short novel for reading on the beach, but given what's in
store . . .
*The Times*
An endlessly surprising and totally gripping read, The Disaster
Tourist is as hilarious as it is heartbreaking. It questions every
aspect of life we so often take for granted, smashing apart any
easy distinctions between natural and artificial, normal and
abnormal, peaceful and violent, personal and political. There could
not be a more prescient moment for this too-real fiction about how
we create our own disasters on every scale and what resilience
might mean in the face of catastrophe.
*Elvia Wilk, author of Oval*
Throughout The Disaster Tourist, there is a sense of impending
catastrophe, of something huge and uncontrollable swallowing up
those who spend their lives packaging, controlling and creating
these macabre tours ... Phenomenal
*Spectator*
An exciting up-and-coming writer tackling gender ... these themes
aren't unique to South Korea, but ones that resonate with women
globally.
*i-D*
A gripping literary thriller about disaster, adventure, and a
crisis of conscience that will resonate with any traveller.
*Jennifer Croft, author of Homesick and winner of the Man Booker
International Prize for her translation of Olga Tokarczuk's
Flights*
A labyrinth of catastrophes and cataclysms, The Disaster Tourist is
a precisely penned novel that lays bare the human condition.
Mysterious, evocative, and rich.
*Sarah Rose Etter, author of The Book of X*
A mordantly witty novel that touches on everything from the rise of
"dark tourism" to sexual predators in the office to climate change
... a highly literary, ultra-incisive thriller
*Refinery29*
Excellent ... a plain rendering of the extraordinary
*The Irish Times*
Cleverly combines absurdity with legitimate horror and mounting
dread. With its arresting, nightmarish island scenario, this work
speaks volumes about the human cost of tourism in developing
countries.
*Publishers Weekly*
Bizarre but intriguing, The Disaster Tourist will make you feel
content with the prospect of staycations for the forseeable
*Manchester Evening News*
A searing critique of capitalism, the impact of tourism on poor
countries and our complicity in it. Gripping.
*Writes of Womxn blog*
One of the best new books of August 2020
*TIME Magazine*
All the upheavals of 2020 perhaps make now the perfect time to read
Yun Ko-eun's latest novel, The Disaster Tourist ... it brings too
close to home the disasters that we like to believe are far away,
separate from us.
*LA Review of Books*
Fascinating
*SheerLuxe*
An intriguing read about capitalism's ability to monetise
everything including climate disasters ... challenges the reader to
more robustly evaluate our curiosity about traumatised communities
and landscapes that appear exciting for their unpredictability and
history of ruin
*Firstpost*
Ultimate pandemic reading
*South Coast Today*
A dystopian novel that reads like, well, next year
*InsideHook*
A tale of human impact on nature, and the terror nature can inflict
back ... A slim book, it packs a hell of a story into a small but
thrilling package.
*The Skinny*
An extravagant, clever, unpredictable story that walks the razor
edge of horror-comedy
*White Review*
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