Miles From Nowhere
By (Author) Nami Mun
Little, Brown Book Group
Virago Press Ltd
15th January 2009
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
813.6
Short-listed for Orange Broadband Award for New Writers 2009 (UK)
Paperback
256
Width 216mm, Height 137mm, Spine 19mm
286g
Joon is a young Korean immigrant living in the Bronx of the 1980s. Her parents have crumbled under the weight of her father's infidelity and mental illness has rendered her mother nearly catatonic. So Joon, at the age of thirteen, decides she's better off on her own and sets out on a harrowing and sometimes tragic journey, exposing herself to all the pain and difficulty of a life lived on the margins.
Joon's years on the streets take her from a homeless shelter to an escort club, through struggles with addiction, to jobs selling newspapers and cosmetics, committing petty crimes, and, finally, towards something resembling hope.In raw and beautiful prose, Nami Mun tells the story of a young woman who is at once tough yet vulnerable, world-weary yet naive, faced with insurmountable odds and yet fiercely determined to survive. Honest, inventive and profoundly moving, Miles From Nowhere is a dazzling debut novel that will haunt and inspire.** 'Miles from Nowhere is a starkly beautiful book, shot through with grace and lit by an off-hand street poetry. Nami Mun takes a cast of junkies and runaways and brings them fiercely and frankly to life. It's a measure of the artistry of the work that even in their grimmest, darkest moments, rather than being repelled by these characters, we want to stay beside them, as if to care for them, or at least to bear witness to their lives' Peter Ho Davies, author of THE WELSH GIRL ** 'Nami Mun is easily one of the most important new talents in American fiction. The first time I read her work, I thought two things: one, that I knew these characters, people I'd always seen but had never heard from, stories I always knew were there but that until now hadn't been told. And two: that I was in the presence of one of our next great writers. American fiction is a little larger in a way that really matters, now that she's here' Alexander Chee, author of EDINBURGH 'Scams, violence and sudden friendships of street life in New York City... Nami Mun's debut is suspenseful, funny, painful and poetic' Janet Fitch, author of White Oleander
Born in Seoul, Korea and raised there as well as in the Bronx, New York, Nami Mun has been employed variously as an Avon Lady, a dance hostess and a photojournalist before turning to writing.