The Hive and the Honey by Paul Yoon (Simon & Schuster)
In a world full of displaced people who search for home, Paul Yoon creates one for them in his universe of words. Whether he writes about an imaginary Korean island where war and progress have turned its inhabitants into exiles in Once the Shore (Asia by the Book, November 2023), about orphans in Laos who live in a derelict hospital and carry messages through a maze of landmines in Run Me to Earth (Asia by the Book, December 2020), or a Korean newly released from a POW camp in what was once his country and finds a tentative life in Brazil in Snow Hunters, he evokes heartbreak and hope as he unfolds his characters.
Yoon is a novelist even when he writes short stories, perhaps especially in his latest book, The Hive and the Honey. Each of the seven stories that fill this collection gives full measure to the glimpses of the lives revealed in them. Each feels as if it’s a chapter in a story that will never be fully told, but will remain alive in the imaginations of those who read them.
The stories range from rural New York to the coast of Spain, from 17th Century Japan to a dusty shop in a 20th Century English town, from a Korean mountainside to Siberian prison camps, tracing a pitiless diaspora. In each of them is a boy, all of them in different stages of development, all far from any home they’ve ever known. The worlds they inhabit are brutal and the currency they use to survive is pain and loneliness. Only one of them seems to be on the brink of happiness as he stands in a hayfield with a farm girl, “light on his heels.” The others are adrift in sadness, running, fighting, surviving.
A boxer with a broken nose and hands as “thick as mallets” clings to the hope of finding his Korean birth mother. A boy who has known only the companionship of Japanese soldiers is turned over to his Korean countrymen whose language he no longer speaks. A Korean couple have the stillness of their lives disrupted when a young Korean boy bursts into their little corner shop, bleeding and confused. A man who has made a tentative sanctuary alone on a deserted mountain is threatened by the appearance of strangers who change him in ways that cling to him like scars. Near a Russian penal colony on an island, a boy is forced by starvation to search for the father who left him years ago while in another lifetime a Russian cossack who is barely out of his teens is steeped in the supernatural as he guards a Korean prison settlement.
All of these stories exist like spiderwebs in the rain, their intricate patterns glowing in an evanescent light. With brilliant words and unforgettable characters, Paul Yoon has created worlds of abstract expressionism, elusive, enthralling, and everlasting. The Hive and the Honey is a book for our time, when those who have homes in the world need to understand what it is to have none.~Janet Brown