• Hardcover: 338 pages 
  • Publication Date: June 2004
  • ISBN: 0743483561
  • Atria Books, Simon & Schuster

 

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Translations of Beauty

 

Chosen byTHE NEW YORK TIMES as "A New Immigrant Classic!"  The New York Times

 

 

A USA Today pick
 for Summer 2004
Reading

A Book-of-the Month/Quality Paperback Book Club Selection

 

Reviews

Read an Excerpt of Translations of Beauty in the WNYC Reading Room

Listen to Mia Yun's Interview on The Leonard Lopate Show (WNYC)

Contact: Atria Books Publicist: 

Thomas Semosh thomas.semosh@simonandschuster.com


  A deeply affecting and emotionally charged novel that explores the true meaning of beauty, family, home, and race, Translations of Beauty radiates with raw wit, heartache, and universal truths. It not only reaffirms the unbreakable ties that bind all families but also lays bare the boundaries and pitfalls of the American dream.

Mia Yun, whose first novel was hailed by Kirkus Reviews as a "superlative" debut, maps the relationship of twin sisters Inah and Yunah from their early childhood in South Korea to growing up in Queens, New York. At the center of Translations of Beauty is the terrible childhood accident that disfigured Inah for life, and the overwhelming sadness and guilt Yunah feels at having been spared. It opens with Yunah, now twenty-eight, flying out to Italy to "rescue" Inah who, in her struggle to find herself, has drifted away from her family. Thrown together again after so much time, long ago joys and heartaches are stirred, and the twins find their relationship tested as they are forced to confront unresolved issues. We learn their story through Yunah's eyes, moving back and forth through time.

It is the account of growing up in America as immigrant children, dealing with the painful reality of Inah's disfigured face and trying to find their individual identities while negotiating their relationship with each other; of their family's struggle to stay whole as years of collective struggles and colliding dreams and values take a toll on each of them and of its effort to find dignity amidst the constant jockeying for respect, acceptance and loyalty.

Peppered throughout this darkly poignant novel are colorful, vividly drawn, ethnically and socially diverse secondary characters: Uncle Shin, the loyal family man and avaricious businessman; Cousin Ki-hong, a rebellious KISS fan in his youth who gloats in domestic bliss as a married man; Auntie Minnie, an irrepressible, loud and bawdy beautician; and, finally, Uncle Wilson, Aunt Minnie's African-American husband who divorces her to marry a woman of his own race.

With an unerring eye for details, Mia Yun brilliantly charts the physical and psychological landscape of the immigrant world. Thought-provoking and uncommonly honest, this story of one Korean family's heartbreaking journey in America will resonate powerfully with every reader.