Lost Seoul

Lost Seoul
Author: Jin Stearns
Publisher: Lulu.com
Total Pages: 156
Release: 2013-03-01
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1300808640

The true story of six-year-old Jin Soo, who, after getting lost in a crowded train station in Seoul, South Korea, hides under a bench to wait for his family to come and save him. His family never comes. Jin Soo realizes this is the first step in a journey that will take him halfway across the world to a new family and then back again to search for the family he never meant to lose.

Lost in Seoul

Lost in Seoul
Author: Michael Gregory Stephens
Publisher: Random House (NY)
Total Pages: 264
Release: 1990
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

Korea, the First War We Lost

Korea, the First War We Lost
Author: Bevin Alexander
Publisher:
Total Pages: 634
Release: 1986
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

Alexander shows the causes and effects of the Korean War and demonstrates how the United States could have avoided the confrontation with the Red Chinese if it had correctly interpreted signals from them.

Lost in Seoul

Lost in Seoul
Author: LOST IN THE CITY GMBH.
Publisher: Lost in City Guides
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2019-06-15
Genre:
ISBN: 9783000629396

Drinks in a former printing house, interactive art, a disappearing district, galleries hiding among electronics and inventive cuisine on every corner... Get lost in the city of bubbling expansion. LOST iN Seoul is-- 68 technicolour pages filled with tips on: Eating Drinking Shopping Partying Outdoor activities & wellness - Includes 5 long-form interviews with celebrated locals on their relationship with Seoul and their absolute favourite spots - A selection of the hottest places to visit in two of the city's most charismatic neighbourhoods - A selection of our top picks for the entire city - An in-depth story on the culinary heritage of Korea - A photo showcase on gender roles by Sunmin Less - An original piece of fiction by award-winning author Heinz Insu Fenkl -Shopping guide - Recommended books, films & music to get you in the Seoul state of mind

My Summer In Seoul

My Summer In Seoul
Author: Rachel Van Dyken
Publisher: Van Dyken Enterprises Incorporated
Total Pages: 478
Release: 2021-12-14
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781946061980

From #1 New York Times bestselling author Rachel Van Dyken comes a standalone new adult romance set in the competitive world of K-pop. It's not all K-dramas and happily ever afters. Intern with Korea's number one record label? Yes, please. Find out there's a huge scandal I need to help "manage"... not so much. Add in the fact that I don't recognize the "superstars" of the label and think they're interns... And my dream job quickly becomes more of a nightmare. But I'm in Seoul, the one place that is beginning to feel more and more like home... Except it isn't home, and the drama surrounding the biggest K-pop group in the world, SWT, is consuming my every moment. Spoiler alert. They hate me. Everything I do is wrong: wrong clothes, wrong honorifics, wrong manners. Till the leader of SWT takes pity on me. But pity is dangerous when it comes from someone as beautiful as him. Every SWT member is gorgeous, perfect, and cultivated to be an idol... lethal to a girl's heart. And sanity. But fame plus a perfect face and voice don't equal an easy life. As their comeback nears, the stakes rise higher. Suicide watch... Angry fans... Threats... All I want to do is survive. But the price for survival might mean losing my heart. And like a character in a K-drama, I'm not sure if there will be an actual happily ever after... Or simply a lesson learned.

Rebel Seoul

Rebel Seoul
Author: Axie Oh
Publisher: Tu Books
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2023-01-10
Genre: Young Adult Fiction
ISBN: 9781643796659

Pacific Rim meets Korean action dramas in this mind-blowing sci-fi novel set in New Seoul in the year 2199.

Losing South Korea

Losing South Korea
Author: Gordon G. Chang
Publisher: Encounter Books
Total Pages: 35
Release: 2019-03-26
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1641770694

What would happen if the maniacal tyranny in Pyongyang took over the vibrant democracy of South Korea? Today, there is a real possibility that the destitute North Korean regime will soon dominate its thriving southern neighbor, with help from the government in Seoul itself. More than any South Korean president before him, Moon Jae-in is intent on achieving Korean union, even if it’s done on Pyongyang’s terms. To that end, he has been making South Korea compatible with the totalitarian North, and distinctly less free. He is also removing defenses to infiltration and invasion and taking steps to end his country’s only real guarantee of security, the alliance with the United States. If Moon’s policy results in handing Kim Jong Un a “final victory” and South Korea falls to despotism, America will lose the anchor of its western defense perimeter, and the free world will be at risk.

Heart and Seoul

Heart and Seoul
Author: Erin Kinsella
Publisher: Tychis Media
Total Pages: 359
Release: 2020-02-04
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1988931037

She's living her very own K-drama. Beside herself with excitement, best-selling author Tessa Hale flies to the vibrant city of Seoul, South Korea, where she's meeting the cast and crew of the film adaptation of her book. The thrill shifts to star-struck panic when she discovers the actor cast as the lead is the idol she's been high-key crushing on for years. The last thing he wants is more real-life drama. Baek Eun Gi is part of one of the biggest K-pop groups in the business. Music has lost its lustre, and he's hoping a shift in focus will bring back that connection he craves. Although he's estranged from his family, he has his friends, a thriving career, and a healthy respect for the dating restrictions imposed upon him. Meet cute, scandal...wedding? When their paths collide in the most unexpected--and embarrassing-- of ways, they try to put it behind them. Too bad there are photos. The music company is irate and offers them a way out of the scandal--a marriage of convenience. Their lives are about to turn upside down, but it just might be the best thing that's ever happened to them.

Living Dangerously in Korea

Living Dangerously in Korea
Author: Donald N. Clark
Publisher: Pacific Century Press
Total Pages: 455
Release: 2003
Genre: Aliens
ISBN: 9781891936111

?Clark thoroughly evaluates a wealth of primary sources to provide an extraordinary monograph about Westerners and their arduous experience in Korea?illuminates major historical events of modern Korea as seen through foreign eyes, and narrates Western residents? tacit assistance in the underground Korean nationalist movement. He explains the influence of colonial rule on the Korean people, Western experience in a divided Korea after WWII, and the dynamics for the Korean War?s eruption. With original in-depth analysis, this book offers and unusual addition to the Western literature of Modern Korea. Highly recommended.??Choice ?Living Dangerously in Korea gives a grand, panoramic view of the events of the Korean Peninsula in the first half of the 20th century. Clark has provided many unique insights into Korean history while retracing his family?s missionary life back to the era of his grandfather. This really is an extraordinary book with great depth and a feeling for the importance of many historical events in Korea that impacted the world at large.??Korean Quarterly ??the book?s wealth of anecdotes and vignettes will enrich anyone?s understanding of Korea. Clark?s vast knowledge and familiarity with modern Korea and with the Western community is apparent. We are reading the distillation of a lifetime of study informed by his own upbringing as a 'Korea Kid.? This book should be accessible to most undergraduate students, and should be on the reading list of anyone with an interest in modern Korean history or the story of Westerners and Asia.??Education About Asia

Heart and Seoul

Heart and Seoul
Author: Jen Frederick
Publisher: National Geographic Books
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2021-05-25
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 059310014X

One woman learns that the price of belonging is often steeper than expected in this heart-wrenching yet hopeful romantic novel and first in the Seoul duology by USA Today bestselling author Jen Frederick. As a Korean adoptee, Hara Wilson doesn’t need anyone telling her she looks different from her white parents. She knows. Every time Hara looks in the mirror, she’s reminded that she doesn’t look like anyone else in her family—not her loving mother, Ellen; not her jerk of a father, Pat; and certainly not like Pat’s new wife and new “real” son. At the age of twenty-five, she thought she had come to terms with it all, but when her father suddenly dies, an offhand comment at his funeral triggers an identity crisis that has her running off to Seoul in search of her roots. What Hara finds there has all the makings of a classic K-drama: a tall, mysterious stranger who greets her at the airport, spontaneous adventures across the city, and a mess of familial ties, along with a red string of destiny that winds its way around her, heart and soul. Hara goes to Korea looking for answers, but what she gets instead is love—a forbidden love that will either welcome Hara home…or destroy her chance of finding one.