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June 24, 2011 - 18:07 By 이다영
Miracle told by late Park’s chief

From Despair to Hope
By Kim Chung-yum
(KDI)

The right-hand man of late President Park Chung-hee uncovered inside the brainstorming of Korea’s macroeconomic policies of the 1960s and 70s ― process widely believed to have brought the country’s remarkable development.

The memoirs by former chief presidential secretary Kim Chung-yum is reorganized and translated by the Korea Development Institute in a book titled “From Despair to Hope: Economic Policymaking in Korea 1956-1979.”

The firsthand account in English chronicles the economic plans implemented by Park starting from the first and second Korean currency and stock exchange reforms to creation of the expressway connecting Seoul and Busan.

“I dedicated myself to various issues in which President Park showed an interest, such as agricultural development, the reforestation of the mountains, the Semaul Undong, the construction of express ways and the establishment of national healthcare system,” Kim said in the preface of the book.

The updated version of 2006 text in Korean aims to help non-Korean readers understand Park’s leadership that laid groundwork for the Korean economy amidst controversies caused by his authoritarian regime.

Kim served as vice minister of finance and vice minister of commerce and industry before becoming minister of both agencies. He was Park’s chief of staff from 1969 to 1978.

(cynthiak@heraldcorp.com)


Introspective look at marriage

The Astral
By Kate Christensen
(Doubleday)

At the start of Kate Christensen’s sharp, perceptive novel, poet Harry Quirk has been thrown out of his apartment in The Astral in the northern Brooklyn neighborhood of Greenpoint by his wife, Luz, who suspects he’s having an affair.

He‘s not, but Luz has found a number of seemingly incriminating poems that fuel her suspicions, and Harry can say nothing to convince her otherwise. Harry’s poetry is at best old-fashioned, favoring traditional meter and rhyme schemes, and at worst, so hopelessly out-of-date that it cannot even be considered retro-hip. It’s a crafty move on Christensen’s part to have these poems, which Luz destroys, be the catalyst for Harry to rebuild his life.

And as Harry reflects on his marriage‘s trajectory, deconstructing its fabric to find out what went wrong and how to fix it, he’s also endeavoring to engage meaningfully with his grown children. Karina is a levelheaded freegan (or trash-bin diver, in simplistic terms) living in Crown Heights; Hector has recently joined up with a commune that Harry and Karina suspect is really a religious cult. And in another sly twist, it’s only when Harry seeks help for Hector that he’s provided fresh insights that prompt him to completely reassess his relationship with Luz.

As an introspective look at what makes a marriage work, and what doesn’t -- Harry’s interactions with his married friends provide a number of perspectives on this topic -- Christensen’s “The Astral” is provoking and at times profoundly moving. But it also succeeds in its fond descriptions of a neighborhood virtually unknown outside of New York (and all too often written off within it), an area that even in its perhaps inevitable gentrification persists in holding on to its gritty “Old World” ways. So-called hipster interlopers live amid Polish immigrants and old-timers, and Christensen captures it all magnificently, down to the decaying majesty of the once-grand building honored in her title. 

(AP).