
Hurt You
Author: Marie Myung-Ok Lee
Narrator: Jolene Kim
Unabridged: 9 hr 41 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Published: 05/16/2023
Categories: Young Adult Fiction, Coming Of Age

Author: Marie Myung-Ok Lee
Narrator: Jolene Kim
Unabridged: 9 hr 41 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Published: 05/16/2023
Categories: Young Adult Fiction, Coming Of Age
Marie Myung-Ok Lee is the author of The Evening Hero, Somebody’s Daughter, the YA novel Finding My Voice (heralded as the first Korean American own voices novel for teens), and middle-grade novels If It Hadn’t Been for Yoon Jun and Night of the Chupacabras. Her books have won awards such as Friends of American Writers, New York Public Library’s Best Books for the Teen Age, and NCTE’s Children’s Choice. She has been a judge for the National Book Awards, a Fulbright Fellow, and one of the few Korean American journalists allowed into North Korea. She currently teaches creative writing as a writer-in-residence at Columbia University’s Center for the Study of Ethnicity & Race. She has an adult son on the autistic spectrum who helped to inspire her latest novel.
In this retelling of "Of Mice and Men", Georgia Kim, see George in Steinbeck's original, is tasked with taking care of her brother Leo, see Lenny, who has a severe disability. After an incident involving Leo in their previous city, their family is forced to move to the suburbs. In this new neighborh......more
In HURT YOU, a YA retelling of Steinbeck’s “Of Mice and Men”, we meet Georgia Kim, a Korean-American high school teen with a neurologically disabled brother named Leo. They leave the City (San Francisco) and move to the suburbs of Sunnyvale to find better services for Leo. In Sunnyvale, Georgia find......more
I specifically read Of Mice and Men before reading this so I’d have context for the retelling, which granted me insight into how differently these stories are told. Steinbeck relied heavily on symbolism, which is my preference when reading. I prefer to think while reading, instead of being told what......more
I think the author's writing when it comes to having and dealing with or supporting a sibling with any form of special needs was well written and very moving. I was moved by all of our protagonist/narrator Georgie's concerns and fears while on the verge of following her dreams. Especially the bond s......more
“Hurt You is a big, brave story of ‘otherness’ juxtaposed with ‘extreme otherness,’ and friendship under fire. The issues, in their sheer number and intensity, could have been taken over the top by a less accomplished storyteller, but Marie Myung-Ok Lee’s protagonist, Georgia Kim, tells it seamlessly. If you’re not swept away by Georgia’s tough and completely honest loyalty, read the book again.” Chris Crutcher, award-winning and bestselling YA novelist
“Hurt You reads like something written by a master’s hand, a powerful and heartbreaking story that resonates with the force of love and legend.” Jeff Zentner, award-winning author of The Serpent King and In the Wild Light
“Marie Myung-Ok Lee wonderfully recasts Of Mice and Men for a new America. Lee is a brave and insightful storyteller, and her words of pain—and hope—seep into our souls.” Ed Lin, multiple-award-winning author of David Tung Can’t Have a Girlfriend Until He Gets into an Ivy League College
“I learned so much from these pages. Marie Myung-Ok Lee’s timely and critical work recasts Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men as Korean American siblings and pushes much-needed conversations on neurodiversity, racism, and what families—and communities—owe to each other.” Patricia Park, award-winning author of Re Jane and Imposter Syndrome & Other Confessions of Alejandra Kim
“This contemporary take on Of Mice and Men tackles numerous heavy issues, including racism, ableism, gun control, and the challenges of caring for a significantly disabled family member, but offers no easy answers…Devastating.” Kirkus Reviews
“Hurt You smartly updates Steinbeck’s classic for a young adult readership, foregrounding issues of class, cultural identity, disability, and gun violence. Each of Lee’s beautifully complex characters reveals a potential not captured by the labels that overtake them in young adulthood…I find Hurt You profoundly relevant right now.” LA Review of Books