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Book Review: ‘The Vegetarian’ byHan Kang

Book Review: ‘The Vegetarian’ byHan Kang
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Updated 23 sec ago

Book Review: ‘The Vegetarian’ byHan Kang

Book Review: ‘The Vegetarian’ byHan Kang
  • Han’s imagery draws heavily from Asian folklore, in which people often dream of merging with trees, flowers or mountains in acts of punishment, transcendence or return

South Korean writer Han Kang’s “The Vegetarian” tells the story of Yeong-hye, a mild-mannered woman who abruptly decides to become a vegetarian — a decision that baffles her husband and sparks a family fallout.

The novel explores how the protagonist’s life begins to unravel as her refusal to eat meat deepens into obsession, and she endures severe physical and emotional abuse at the hands of those closest to her.

First published in Korean in 2007, the novel earned Han the 2016 Man Booker International Prize for its English translation by Deborah Smith. In 2024, Han became the first South Korean author to win the Nobel Prize in Literature.

At a recent Kalimat Book Club meeting at Alkhobar’s Marfa cafe, readers discussed both the Arabic and English translations. The consensus seemed to be that the English version was more lyrical and poetic, while the Arabic seemed to be truer to the spirit of the original, with more rigid sentences and organic dialogue.

The book club also explored the novel’s three-part structure — told mostly from the male characters’ perspectives — with some suggesting this made Yeong-hye seem like a secondary character in her own life. Discussion also focused on the validity of some scenes and how each narrator framed the overall story.

Han’s imagery draws heavily from Asian folklore, in which people often dream of merging with trees, flowers or mountains in acts of punishment, transcendence or return.

Like the classic Japanese tale retold in Koji Yamamura’s 2002 Oscar-nominated animation “Mt. Head” — in which a grumpy old Japanese man unknowingly grows a cherry tree from his skull and morphs into a plant — “The Vegetarian” channels the animist belief that humans and nature are intertwined.

The question that lingers after reading and discussing the book is: Was the central character’s act one of empowerment or powerlessness?


What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Disease of Boredom’ by Josefa Ros Velasco

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Disease of Boredom’ by Josefa Ros Velasco
Updated 23 October 2025

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Disease of Boredom’ by Josefa Ros Velasco

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Disease of Boredom’ by Josefa Ros Velasco



Boredom visits all of us at some point. Sometimes it is fleeting. Other times it is deep, lasting, or profound. We even experience it in groups. Boredom can be so intolerable that some are willing to do almost anything just to escape it. In this provocative and eloquently argued book, Josefa Ros Velasco invites us to listen to the voice of boredom, explore the reasons behind it, and allow it to guide our actions and return us to a place of satisfaction. Shedding light on a universal yet misunderstood aspect of the human experience, Ros Velasco shows how boredom is a phenomenon that torments us when reality does not meet our expectations.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Life in Sync’ by Philippa Gander

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Life in Sync’ by Philippa Gander
Updated 22 October 2025

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Life in Sync’ by Philippa Gander

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Life in Sync’ by Philippa Gander

All of life is profoundly shaped by the daily, monthly, and yearly cycles of our planet, and all creatures have internal timekeeping systems that rely on cues from the surrounding environment.

With modern technology, we are changing our environments — and by proxy, the ecosystems around us— to override these innate rhythms of life.

But at what cost? “Life in Sync” reveals how Earth’s rotations shape our biology, what human sleep cycles looked like before the advent of artificial light, and why technology can’t free us from the constraints of our circadian clocks.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Brain, In Theory’ by Romain Brette

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Brain, In Theory’ by Romain Brette
Updated 21 October 2025

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Brain, In Theory’ by Romain Brette

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Brain, In Theory’ by Romain Brette

Mainstream theories of the brain are often expressed through engineering concepts—computation, code, control, reverse-engineering, optimization.

These theories cast the living organism as a machine and the brain as a computer. The fact that cognition is a biological phenomenon seems merely anecdotal; biology is considered just “implementation.”

“In The Brain, In Theory,” Romain Brette argues that the brain is not a “biological computer” because living organisms are not engineered. 


What We Are Reading Today: ‘On Truth in Politics’ by Michael Patrick Lynch

What We Are Reading Today: ‘On Truth in Politics’ by Michael Patrick Lynch
Updated 20 October 2025

What We Are Reading Today: ‘On Truth in Politics’ by Michael Patrick Lynch

What We Are Reading Today: ‘On Truth in Politics’ by Michael Patrick Lynch

Do any of us really care about truth when it comes to politics? Should we? In a world of big lies, denialism, and conspiracy theories, democracies are experiencing two interlocked crises: a loss of confidence in democracy itself and the growing sense among many that politics is only about power—not truth. 

In this book, Michael Patrick Lynch argues that truth not only can — but must — matter in politics. He shows why truth is an essential democratic value — a value we need to sustain our democratic way of life — and how it can be strengthened.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Calculus 2 Simplified’

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Updated 19 October 2025

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Calculus 2 Simplified’

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  • Oscar Fernandez provides a “Goldilocks approach” to learning the mathematics of integration, infinite sequences and series

Author: OSCAR E. FERNANDEZ

Second-semester calculus is rich with insights into the nature of infinity and the very foundations of geometry, but students can become overwhelmed as they struggle to synthesize the range of material covered in class.

Oscar Fernandez provides a “Goldilocks approach” to learning the mathematics of integration, infinite sequences and series, and their applications—the right depth of insights, the right level of detail, and the freedom to customize your student experience.