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The Invisible Hotel (Hardcover)

The Invisible Hotel by Yeji Y. Ham

“A surreal, riveting, keep-the-lights-on masterwork of horror . . . I will be haunted by this book for years to come.” —Kim Fu, author of Lesser Known Monsters of the 21st Century

I know this place. The room is too dim to see clearly. It smells like the bones.

Sale Date
ISBN
9781638931379
Page Count
320
Language
English
Dimensions
5¾ x 8⅝
Imprint
Zando
Yeji Y. Ham
“A surreal, riveting, keep-the-lights-on masterwork of horror . . . I will be haunted by this book for years to come.” —Kim Fu, author of Lesser Known Monsters of the 21st Century

I know this place. The room is too dim to see clearly. It smells like the bones.

Yewon dreams of a hotel. In the hotel, there are infinite keys to infinite rooms—and a quiet terror she is both eager to understand and desperate to escape. When Yewon wakes, she sees her life: a young woman, out of her job at a convenience store, trapped in the tiny South Korean village of her birth, watching her mother wash the bones of their ancestors in their decrepit bathtub. Every house has them, these rotting and fragmented ribs, tibias, and femurs, whose constant care and persistent stench serve as reminders of what they have all lost to the Forgotten War that never seems to end.

Now Yewon’s brother is stationed near the North Korean border, her sister has experienced a life-changing tragedy, and her mother is overwhelmed by anxiety, her health declining. When Yewon begins to drive a local woman named Ms. Han, a mysterious and aging North Korean refugee, to visit her brother at a distant prison, Yewon’s dreams intensify. As the line between reality and illusion slowly begins to blur, Yewon is led to an unsettling truth about her country’s collective heritage.

A work of literary horror in the gothic tradition, The Invisible Hotel is a startling, speculative tale of a woman in crisis and in stasis, and a country’s shifting identity in the long afterlife of the Korean War.
  • “Yeji Y. Ham’s debut novel, The Invisible Hotel, is about the inescapable. The conflict between North and South Korea, simmering still beneath a fragile truce, looms as the perpetual backdrop for this contemporary tale about the fears that are dutifully passed from one generation to the next . . . The Invisible Hotel is itself a strange dream.”
    The Chicago Review of Books
  • “This ethereal debut novel, at once a horror story and a bird’s bone–delicate exploration of trauma, is filled with ghosts . . . Yewon’s running monologue is straight-laced, but Ham somehow conjures up a delicious tension among her lead’s longing to become something, the little tragedies unfolding around her, and the spooky aftereffects of the Korean War . . . An intriguing debut.”
    Kirkus Reviews
  • The Invisible Hotel is a deceptively challenging read in how it moves in and out of different registers. At one moment, it’s a realistic coming-of-age tale; in the next, it veers into dreamlike Gothic horror. And yet that dissonance appears to be the point of the story being told: that living in close proximity (both literally and metaphorically) can create its own sort of horror and transform even the most quotidian moments into something best analyzed through dream logic.”
    Tobias Carrol, Reactor magazine

Zando

Where the unexpected lives. Fiction that surprises. Nonfiction that sticks. The Zando imprint publishes weird, wonderful, and culture-shaping stories from authors with something to say . . . and the confidence to say it loudly.

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