![]() ![]() It is only when the secret is revealed that Beccah comes to some kind of understanding of her mother’s strange ways… ![]() When most teenage girls are having fun, Beccah is haunted by her mother’s absurd kowtowing to the spirits of the dead. This deeply hidden secret manifests itself in Akiko’s often insane - and embarrassing - behaviour that plagues Beccah for much of her childhood. What Beccah does not know is that her mother was once a comfort woman. Through twin narratives, which jump backward and forward in time, we learn the secrets and private struggles of two women: Akiko, a Korean refugee living in Hawaii, who has the unnerving ability to channel spirits and Beccah, Akiko’s daughter by an American missionary, who loves her mother deeply but is unable to fully accept her cultural and ethnic heritage. Young, often ethnic, women were kept prisoner in special camps where they were employed as “comfort women”, a euphemism for being systematically raped and beaten.Īmerican-Korean writer Nora Okja Keller explores this abhorrent practise in her astonishing debut novel Comfort Woman, which, upon its release in 1997, attracted critical acclaim from far and wide. Fiction – paperback Penguin 240 pages 1998.ĭuring the Second World War the Japanese military introduced a programme to provide sexual services for its troops. ![]()
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