Your Utopia by Bora Chung & Anton Hur (trans.)
I didn’t think this was possible, but Bora Chung’s latest short-story collection, Your Utopia, is even better than her acclaimed Cursed Bunny. Though still steeped in the horrific and the gory – elements of writing that Chung has already shown she excels at – her newest collection is instilled with relevant political and personal rigour that captivated me straightaway, with each story commenting on and questioning an abundance of issues such as corporate greed and discrimination, terse relationships, climate change, the rise of technology and what this means for humanity, and in true Chung style, cannibalism, crime, and morality.
In addition to grappling with such an array of themes, across her collection Chung also tackles multiple genres with delightful precision. One of my favourite stories, ‘The End of the Voyage’, is playful yet uniquely grounded in science-fiction and dystopian tropes as it reminisces on the effects of a cannibal plague (yes, you read that right) on humanity and morality. In other stories, Chung speaks from the voices of a robot left to die on an abandoned Earth; an elevator trying to combat human mortality; a husband who is suspicious of his wife’s hushed midnight phone-calls; an employee using new technology to find out the truth of a crime; and many more. Each of her characters is unique, yet so believable and relatable that I found myself really caring about them.
Meticulously crafted, each story feels just the right length, with the perfect pacing to make me want to read more (one of my only qualms with Cursed Bunny) and each ending packed a punch that left me feeling heartbroken, longing and inspired. Your Utopia is a thought-provoking delight to read, and you’ll be missing out if you don’t go and grab your copy.