cover image This Burns My Heart

This Burns My Heart

Samuel Park. Simon & Schuster, $25 (320p) ISBN 978-1-4391-9961-9

An unflappable heroine anchors Park's epic post%E2%80%93Korean War love story (after Shakespeare's Sonnets). Having grown up in a privileged home in Daegu, Soo-Ja, a brilliant and ambitious 22-year-old woman, has dreams of being a diplomat in Seoul. After her father refuses to let her leave home, however, she sets out to find and marry a weak man who will allow her to make her own decisions. The first candidate is Min, a young revolutionary, who pursues her from afar, writing her letters from Seoul, one of which puts her on a path to meet a charismatic student leader, Yul. Although her feelings for Yul are strong, she marries Min and is immediately faced with the cold realities of his corrupt and hateful family and the realization that she isn't any closer to getting to Seoul. Her responsibilities and, soon, a daughter, keep her trapped in a loveless marriage as she longs for Yul, now a doctor, and a better life. But this is no quiet tale of yearning: the plot kicks in with an unexpected fierceness, and the ensuing action%E2%80%94a kidnapping, fist fights, blackmail%E2%80%94make for a dramatic, suck-you-in chronicle of a thrilling love affair. (July)