
Human Acts
by Han Kang
Based on the 1980 Gwangju Uprising in South Korea, Human Acts traces the aftermath of a massacre through the perspectives of the living, the dead, and those caught between.
Check Price on Amazon (paid link)South Korean · b. 1970
Nobel Prize in Literature (2024), Man Booker International Prize (2016)
Han Kang is a South Korean novelist and Nobel laureate whose works, including The Vegetarian and Human Acts, confront bodily autonomy, political violence, and the limits of endurance with unflinching precision.
Han Kang is among the most important living writers in world literature, and her Nobel Prize in 2024 confirmed a reputation built across a body of fiction of extraordinary formal and emotional intensity. The Vegetarian, the novel that first brought her broad international recognition in Deborah Smith’s English translation, follows a Korean woman whose decision to stop eating meat triggers a spiral of family violence, hospitality, and bodily transformation. The novel is unsettling in ways that are difficult to pin down — it operates on psychological and symbolic registers simultaneously, and its violence is rendered without comment in a way that makes it more rather than less disturbing.
Human Acts returns to the 1980 Gwangju Uprising — a student democracy movement brutally suppressed by the South Korean military — and tells the story of the massacre and its aftermath through multiple perspectives across time. The novel is a meditation on how political violence marks survivors and how societies reckon with atrocity. Han Kang’s prose in this book is perhaps her most direct, and the cumulative weight of the testimonies she constructs is devastating. The White Book, more lyric and formally experimental, meditates on grief, the colour white, and the death of a sister who did not survive infancy.
Han Kang’s work demands real engagement — her novels resist comfort, easy resolution, and the management of difficult feeling. Readers who approach them looking for conventional narrative satisfactions will be frustrated. But for readers willing to sit with genuine literary discomfort, she is extraordinary.

by Han Kang
Based on the 1980 Gwangju Uprising in South Korea, Human Acts traces the aftermath of a massacre through the perspectives of the living, the dead, and those caught between.
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by Han Kang
A novelist travels to Jeju Island in the middle of a snowstorm to care for her friend's injured bird — and confronts the buried history of the Jeju April Third Incident, the 1948 massacre in which tens of thousands of Koreans were killed.
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by Han Kang
A woman who has lost her language — who has gone mute following personal losses — attends a class in ancient Greek taught by a man who is losing his sight. A novel about language, loss, and the possibility of connection when ordinary communication fails.
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by Han Kang
A South Korean woman's decision to stop eating meat triggers a crisis that ripples through her family, her marriage, and her sense of self.
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by Han Kang
A meditation on whiteness, grief, and a sister who died hours after birth — Han Kang's most lyrical and formally experimental work.
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The best Korean literature — from The Vegetarian and Human Acts to Pachinko and The White Book. Essential contemporary and classic Korean fiction.
guide
Where to start with Han Kang — whether to begin with The Vegetarian, Human Acts, or Greek Lessons. A complete reading guide to the Nobel Prize-winning Korean novelist.
list
All Han Kang novels in order — The Vegetarian, Human Acts, The White Book, Greek Lessons, We Do Not Part. Complete guide to the 2024 Nobel Prize winner.
list
Han Kang's triptych about a woman who stops eating meat — and what this decision does to the people around her — is unlike almost anything else in contemporary fiction. These books share its unsettling precision, its focus on the body as battleground, and its willingness to follow transgression to its end.
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