
White Mulberry
A Novel
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Narrated by:
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Michelle H. Lee
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By:
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Rosa Kwon Easton
“A beautiful and deeply researched novel…If you loved Pachinko, you’ll love White Mulberry.” —Lisa See, New York Times bestselling author of The Island of Sea Women
Inspired by the life of Easton’s grandmother, White Mulberry is a rich, deeply moving portrait of a young Korean woman in 1930s Japan who is torn between two worlds and must reclaim her true identity to provide a future for her family.
1928, Japan-occupied Korea. Eleven-year-old Miyoung has dreams too big for her tiny farming village near Pyongyang: to become a teacher, to avoid an arranged marriage, to write her own future. When she is offered the chance to live with her older sister in Japan and continue her education, she is elated, even though it means leaving her sick mother—and her very name—behind.
In Kyoto, anti-Korean sentiment is rising every day, and Miyoung quickly realizes she must pass as Japanese if she expects to survive. Her Japanese name, Miyoko, helps her find a new calling as a nurse, but as the years go by, she fears that her true self is slipping away. She seeks solace in a Korean church group and, within it, finds something she never expected: a romance with an activist that reignites her sense of purpose and gives her a cherished son.
As war looms on a new front and Miyoung feels the constraints of her adopted home tighten, she is faced with a choice that will change her life—and the lives of those she loves—forever.
©2024 Rosa Kwon Easton (P)2024 Brilliance Publishing, Inc., all rights reserved.Listeners also enjoyed...




















Critic reviews
“Narrator Michelle Lee transports listeners with this historical debut based on the life of the author's grandmother.… Lee's measured yet fluent delivery effectively depicts the well-researched political and social climate of that era. [T]his is an engaging listening experience.”—AudioFile Magazine
“In straightforward prose, Easton novelizes events that will compel readers seeking themes of identity, ‘passing’ in a different culture, immigration, and occupation.”—Booklist
“This is a unique historical novel with many well-knit threads.”—Historical Novels Review
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Fascinating story
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Great Book
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Sweeping Tale of Bravery and Family Devotion
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Understanding survival
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Struggles and her unwavering determination
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The setting- a Korean during the occupation by Japan, following her footsteps from Korea to Japan and back
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What a lovely story. I was captivated immediately & loved the education about Korea & Japan.
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I ought to sue Lisa See for writing a blurb recommending this crap. I hope they paid Ms See a gob of ₩. But I'm glad this rag was free and I didn't waste my money on the ebook. I did spend $2 for the audiobook which is $2 I can't get back either. Amazon has zero refund policy on this one...they knew! Well played Amazon, well played.
Based on a true personal history, the author clearly took huge"creative license" to try and make a palatable tale, and it fell far from the mark. I hope NOT too many trees were killed to make this book - we could save the planet by not printing more copies of this...we are under a CLIMATE CHANGE WATCH, just saying.
If you got it for free, there's a reason why Amazon gave it away to Prime members for free. It's not the worst book I've read, but if I can save one person from wasting their time, then I did my job by writing this review. However, I encourage everyone to read it for themselves to know how terribly written this turned out. Readers who like simple will love this mush. I only read to the end to see how incredibly bad it could be, and this book aimed to fail-I was not let down.
I will keep trying to return the audiobook to get my $2 back....
Writing - POOR - grade school level, basic, "told" vs "shown" writing style
Plot - ridiculous, unrealistic because there's barely any context, drags, repetitive (loads of other reviewers mention this and they are not wrong)
Characters - barely on the believable scale, one-dimensional, not worth caring about. The Main Character is pure fantasy. She acts and behaves like someone who walked the NYC streets in 1980 and not 1930-40s Japan & Korea.
Best quote - she "now" loves the guy who knocked her up because he gave her a handkerchief.
Dialogue - forced, unbelievable, historically inaccurate for the phases and nuances
Complexity - zero, "told" vs "shown" writing style
Readability - simple, you don't need to concentrate, skip a few paragraphs, and you'll have missed nothing important. It should be labeled "FANTASY" and not historical fiction.
Off to share my highlights of the ebook of the most nonsensical lines. I'd rather play & lose in Squid Games than read this again....
DUPED
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Instead I got Christian propaganda that pretended to be about promoting a woman’s rights and did heavy proselytizing, with a dash of martyrdom.
Having went to a Christian school for some time, I can honestly say that they are not pro-women’s rights and choice. The man is the head of the household, “thou shalt not suffer a woman to be above you,” and you just need to look at the agenda and laws the Christian party is passing to see that what they stand for runs counter to the original premise of this book.
If you’re not already brainwashed into the religion, I absolutely would not recommend this book. DNF and I do that pretty rarely.
Religious Christian propaganda camouflaged as a feminist novel
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very repetitive
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