Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Poet recalls childhood adventure

- By Jae-Ha Kim For more from the reporter, visit www.jaehakim.com.

With her first full-length collection of poetry, “A Cruelty Special to Our Species” (Ecco, $25.99), Emily Jungmin Yoon takes readers inside the world of war, colonialis­m and sexual slavery. Born in Busan, South Korea, and currently a Ph.D. student at the University of Chicago, Yoon’s critically acclaimed work conveys lyrical beauty, even as it tackles brutal and political subject matter.

An edited version of our conversati­on follows.

A: Most tourists go to the glamorous beaches of Haeundae and Gwangalli, but I would also recommend checking out the quieter ones of Songdo, Songjeong and Taejongdae. They are beautiful and perfect for taking nice walks by the water.

A: We must have taken other trips within Korea before this, but my family went to Australia and New Zealand when I was 5 or so, and this trip is the one I can remember the most. I didn’t speak English back then, but I knew the phrase, “Oh, my God,” and kept saying it. I pronounced God as “gya,” because I thought that’s how it sounded. I remember my mother thought it was hilarious. We went on a helicopter ride and fed lambs. I was scared, so I held my milk bottle perpendicu­lar to the ground, though my mom kept telling me to hold it at an angle. (We) swam and just had a fantastic time.

A: Tokyo, maybe. I had the best tonkotsu ramen somewhere near Odaiba back in 2010 or 2011. I don’t even remember what the restaurant was called. It was a place that I just stumbled into one evening. Even if I don’t find that restaurant, I want to go for the ramen, udon, yakitori, donburi, takoyaki, the desserts and sake!

A: Vancouver, British Columbia, reminds me of Busan, because Vancouver also has the mountains, the ocean and the city. It also has a big Korean population and thus lots of Korean restaurant­s and stores. I love it. It’s a ferry ride away from Victoria, where I lived when I was in Canada, and it’s absolutely gorgeous. Victoria is another home.

A: I would love to visit Taiwan for the food and the shopping, but also nature walks and temple visits. I’m also interested in how Japanese colonialis­m might have influenced the city and townscapes in ways similar to and different from Korean ones.

A: I usually prefer to go somewhere more urban, but right now, I would really like to go somewhere where the pace is slow, the weather is warm and the beaches are calm. I want to lie in a bed overlookin­g the ocean and read, take very long walks in the woods or on the beach, look at wild animals, go swimming and eat something scrumptiou­s for every meal. I’d probably want to be busy again in a week, but this trip would be a dream. Where can I go to do this?

A: That’s a lot of cancellati­ons in a short amount of time. I’m not sure if I’d trust Flixbus after that.

Flixbus describes itself as a “young mobility provider” that combines the best elements of a tech startup, e-commerce platform and sustainabl­e transporta­tion company. Translatio­n: It uses technology (like text messaging customers when there’s a delay) to run a more efficient bus carrier. That sounds like a terrific idea — except when it doesn’t work.

I mean, I can understand one cancellati­on, maybe

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JEAN LACHAT PHOTO

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