For Kim Sun-hee's whole life , Korea has belonged to Japan. Sun-hee and her brother, Tae-yul, have grown up studying Japanese and speaking it at school. Their own language, Korean, can be spoken only at home, and some Korean things-like the flag-are not to be spoken of at all. When the Emperor of Japan decrees that all Koreans must take Japanese names, Sun-hee and Tae-yul become Keoko and Nobuo. It is just one more step in a familiar process, but somehow it changes everything. Then World War II comes to Korea. No battles are fought on Korean soil, yet soldiers are everywhere. At school, the students have war preparation duties instead of classes. But making Koreans take Japanese names has not turned then into loyal subjects, ready to fight for Japan. When Tae-yul sees a chance to help his beloved uncle, whom the Japanese suspect of aiding the Korean resistance, he leaves home. Sun-hee stays behind, entrusted with the life-and-death secrets of a family at war. Whe My Name Was Keoko is a Wold War II novel with a difference: two parallel stories seamlessly interwoven into a taut, compelling narrative that illuminates the wartime experience in occupied Korea.
When My Name Was Keoko -
Linda Sue Park
Clarion Books
2002
200 páginas
6h 40m
ISBN-10: 0618133359
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