It is 1426, five years after the events in the ancient Gotjawal Forest. Eighteen-year-old Hwani is travelling to Nowon village on Jeju Island, a penal island for political prisoners. She is disguised as a man and is travelling with her father's badly burned five-stitched black notebook. It was sent to her by a stranger named Boksun. How does Boksun know her father and why has she sent her the journal?
Hwani's father, Detective Min has disappeared on the island.Commander Ki told Hwani that her father had gone to Jeju to investigate the disappearance of several girls.On the boat travelling from Mokpo port to Jeju, Hwani meets a middle-aged man who questions her about her journey. Without revealing her identity, she tells him that relatives of Detective Min have asked her to investigate his disappearance. He warns Hwani that she shouldn't listen to the rumours from the peasants in the village about their missing daughters. Hwani learns that this man is Magistrate Hong. He tells her that he told Detective Min that they girls were all pretty, tired of poverty and likely ran away to escape their lives.Hwani wonders if she's been foolish in coming to Jeju. Commander Ki had declared her father dead after a twelve month investigation in which only the left sleeve of his outer robe had been recovered in Gotjawal Forest. She wonders though, why her father would care about this case since it's outside of his jurisdiction. But the note left in his chamber, questioning if a man can "undo his errors? Undo his sins?" bothers her.
Hwani becomes lost trying to find her way across Jeju Island to Nowon village. After asking an old woman for directions, Hwani asks about the village. The old woman tells her that thirteen girls have gone mission in the past four years but that recently an elderly resident saw the missing thirteenth girl running through the woods near Seonhul village. The girl, Hyunok did not return back to her parents ask expected and the woman thinks she may be dead.
With the old woman's directions, Hwani is able to remember the location of the shaman's hut. Hwani lived in Nowon for the first thirteen years of her life. She would visit Shaman Nokyung, the woman whom her sister Maewol was taken to by their father five years earlier at age ten.
When Hwani arrives at the jeomjip, the shaman tells her about a witness claiming to have seen one of the girls being taken by a man in a white mask. This immediately calls to mind the Forest Incident in which Hwani and her sister were found in the forest unconscious next to a dead girl. While Hwani remembers nothing, her sister saw a man in a white mask. The shaman tells Hwani that her father returned to Jeju because he believed that Maewol as a witness, from the Forest Incident might be in danger. He hoped to solve the case. The shaman advises Hwani to return home, get married and live her life, that her father is dead.
However, later that evening the villagers arrive at the shaman's hut, asking that Shaman Nokyung come with them to Mount Halla where the body of the missing thirteenth girl has been found. Instead, Maewol and Hwani go. The victim's sister, Koh Iseul tells Hwani that a villager named Chul discovered Hyunok. They find her at the base of a cliff, face up. When Hwani and a man named Scholar Yu examine the body they find that Hyunok had been bound at the wrists and ankles.
As Hwani continues to investigate she learns from Maewol what really happened in the forest five years previous. She also begins to develop a list of potential suspects that include Convict Baek who was tied to Hyunok's family through a debt they owed him, Shaman Nokyung, Village Elder Moon who seems to have not been able to find enough evidence to convince the magistrate to act and Magistrate Hong who refuses to act.
But when Hwani with the help of Maewol begin to close in on the truth, events turn deadly. Can Hwani save herself, her sister and the missing girls?
Discussion
The Forest of Stolen Girls is the sequel to Hur's first novel, The Silence of the Bones. Set in fifteenth century Korea, the novel has as its basis the practice of human tribute, a practice in Asia of acknowledging a country's preeminence (usually but not restricted to China) through the payment of tribute. Hur explains the concept and practice very well in her Historical Note at the back of the novel. In thirteen-century Goryeo dynasty-era Korea, tribute was paid to the Mongol empire who ruled the country. Horses, fur and over two thousand Korean maidens were taken against their will as a form of tribute. When Mongul rule was followed by the Ming Dynasty in China, countries wishing to have a formal relationship with China were required to continue the tradition of paying the tribute. Korea was one of several countries who entered the tribute system. Once again, young Korean girls and women were taken against their will to the Ming dynasty. This practice in Korea ended in 1435.
Hur uses the practice of tribute as the event that triggers a series of disappearances and murders, including that of Hwani and Maewol's father, Detective Min. The story is a complex one that Hur adeptly weaves, leading readers to a thrilling resolution.The story is told by Hwani, a determined, intelligent young woman who amazingly survives attempted murder, poisoning by arsenic and a kidnapping.
Set against the main story of Hwani attempting to determine her father's fate and unravel the connection between the missing girls and her family's encounter in the forest five years previous, is the devastating effect the tribute had on families in Korea. Families hid their young daughters, especially those who were considered very beautiful, father's scarred the faces of their beautiful daughters as Village Elder Moon had done, and bribes were offered to emissaries to save beloved daughters from the terrible fate. This later situation resulted in another girl being chosen to take her place. This is the situation Hwani uncovers in the village of Nowon.
A subplot is the sibling rivalry between Hwani and her younger sister, Maewol, supposedly abandoned by their father twice; once in the Forest Incident and then subsequently when it is believed she has a calling to be a shaman. This abandonment has resulted in the sisters not trusting one another when they are first reunited with Hwani's visit to Nowon. However, as they spend more time together, Hwani and Maewol begin to accept each other. Hwani, always believing their father loved her more, begins to realize that her father also deeply loved his younger daughter Maewol too. Together they solve the case of the missing girls and discover the fate of their father.
The Forest of Stolen Girls is highly recommended to fans of historical fiction as it explores a historical period in a country not often written about. As with her first novel, Hur does an excellent job of portraying fifteenth century Korea, populating her story with believable characters and creating exciting situations that engage the reader. The Forest of Stolen Girls has been nominated for the White Pine Award.
Book Details:
The Forest of Stolen Girls by June Hur
New York: Fiewel and Friends Book 2021
369 pp.
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